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Social software encompasses a range of software systems that allow users to
interact and share data. This computer-mediated communication
has become very popular with social sites like MySpace and Facebook, media sites like Flickr and YouTube as well as commercial sites like Amazon.com and eBay. Many of these applications share characteristics
like open APIs,
service-oriented design and the ability to upload data and media. The terms
Web 2.0 and (for
large-business applications) Enterprise 2.0 are also used to describe
this style of software.
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Bereti DóraSocial software encompasses a range of software systems that allow users to interact and share data. This computer-mediated communication has become very popular with social sites like MySpace and Facebook, media sites like Flickr and YouTube as well as commercial sites like Amazon.com and eBay.
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Trisha GaoSocial software encompasses a range of software systems that allow users to interact and share data. This computer-mediated communication has become very popular with social sites like MySpace and Facebook, media sites like Flickr and YouTube as well as commercial sites like Amazon.com and eBay.
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Mike LeonardSocial software
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia-
Social software encompasses a range of software systems that allow users to interact and share data. This computer-mediated communication has become very popular with social sites like MySpace and Facebook, media sites like Flickr and YouTube, and commercial sites like Amazon.com and eBay. Many of these applications share characteristics like open APIs, service oriented design, and the ability to upload data and media. The terms Web 2.0 and (for large-business applications) Enterprise 2.0 are also used to describe this style of software.
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Many advocates of using these tools believe (and actively argue or assume) that they create actual communities, and have adopted the term "online communities" to describe the resulting social structures.
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R. Richard HobbsSocial software encompasses a range of software systems that allow users to interact and share data.
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Social software (including Web 2.0 and Enterprise 2.0) is normally defined as a range of web-based software programs. The software allows users to interact and share data with other users. This computer-mediated communication has become very popular with social sites like MySpace and Facebook, media sites like Flickr and YouTube, and commercial sites like Amazon.com and eBay. Many of these applications share characteristics like open APIs, service oriented design, and the ability to upload data and media.
The more specific term collaborative software applies to cooperative information sharing systems, and is usually narrowly applied to the software that enables collaborative work functions. Distinctions among usage of the terms "social", "trusted", and "collaborative" are in the applications or uses, not the tools themselves, although there are some tools that are only rarely used for work collaboration.
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Social software may be better understood as a set of debates or design choices than any particular list of tools. Broadly conceived, there are many older media such as mailing lists and Usenet fora that qualify as "social". Most users of this term, however, restrict its meaning to more recent software genres such as blogs and wikis. Others suggest that the term social software is best used not to refer to a single type of software, but rather to the use of two or more modes of computer-mediated communication that result in "community formation".[5] In this view, people form online communities by combining one-to-one (e.g., email and instant messaging), one-to-many (Web pages and blogs), and many-to-many (wikis) communication modes.[6]. Some groups schedule real life meetings and so become physically "real" communities of people that share physical lives.
Common to most definitions of social software, is the observation that some types of software seem to facilitate a more egalitarian and meritocratic "bottom-up" community development, in which membership is voluntary, reputations are earned by winning the trust of other members, and the community's mission and governance are defined by the communities' members themselves[7].
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meilan zhangSocial software
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Others suggest that the term social software is best used not to refer to
a single type of software, but rather to the use of two or more modes of
computer-mediated communication that result in "community formation".[3] In this
view, people form online communities by combining one-to-one
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Martin Koserentry in wikipedia
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Daniel CraigSocial Software entry in Wikipedia
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rendezvous, connect or collaborate
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create actual community
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Roberto UEMThe result is mediawiki being used by community groups more often and those features being more developed, while users who don't embrace the social paradigm and prefer tikiwiki having more content control, less social users
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Social software may be better understood as a set of debates or design choices than any particular list of tools.
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using these tools believe (and actively argue or assume) that these create actual community, and have adopted the term "online communities" to describe the social structures that they claim result.
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Ako Z°omsome interesting links about any social softwares...not exhaustive but useful...
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infers
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QuickD
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Gary BurgeSocial software enables people to rendezvous, connect or collaborate through computer-mediated communication and to form online communities.
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