This link has been bookmarked by 59 people . It was first bookmarked on 07 May 2007, by Courtney P.
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01 Nov 09
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30 Sep 09
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14 Aug 09
Sarah SutterInteresting description of the components of social software and how the parts work together. Good ideas for talking to teachers about how the "social" part of the web works.
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09 May 09
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29 Apr 09
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16 Apr 09
Andrew StewartBrilliant post outlining elements that make up social software.
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08 Mar 09
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- Identity - a way of uniquely identifying people in the
system - Presence - a way of knowing who is online, available or
otherwise nearby - Relationships - a way of describing how two users in the
system are related (e.g. in Flickr, people can be contacts, friends of family) - Conversations - a way of talking to other people through
the system - Groups - a way of forming communities of interest
- Reputation - a way of knowing the status of other people in
the system (who's a good citizen? who can be trusted?) - Sharing - a way of sharing things that are meaningful to
participants (like photos or videos)
a useful list of seven social software elements. These seven building
blocks--identity, presence, relationships, conversations, groups, reputation and
sharing--provide a good functional definition for social software.
They're also a solid foundation for thinking about how social software
works.The original list was assembled by
Matt Webb (who was expanding on a list created
by Stewart Butterfield). Here's a brief definition of each element:Not every social software system has all of these, but most of them have
three or more. - Identity - a way of uniquely identifying people in the
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07 Mar 09
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- Identity - a way of uniquely identifying people in the system
- Presence - a way of knowing who is online, available or otherwise nearby
- Relationships - a way of describing how two users in the system are related (e.g. in Flickr, people can be contacts, friends of family)
- Conversations - a way of talking to other people through the system
- Groups - a way of forming communities of interest
- Reputation - a way of knowing the status of other people in the system (who's a good citizen? who can be trusted?)
- Sharing - a way of sharing things that are meaningful to participants (like photos or videos)
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06 Feb 09
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04 Feb 09
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08 Jan 09
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08 Dec 08
Mathieu PlourdeWhile doing research for a recent workshop, I came across a useful list of seven social software elements. These seven building blocks--identity, presence, relationships, conversations, groups, reputation and sharing--provide a good functional definition for social software. They're also a solid foundation for thinking about how social software works.
web2.0 socialsoftware socialnetworking community honeycomb GeneSmith Flickr Twitter Slideshare LinkedIn culture research twtCHEP software LillyEast09
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03 Dec 08
Miren BerasategiThere are lots of definitions of social software out there, ranging from the clinical ("software that enables people to connect through computer-mediated communication") to the pragmatic ("stuff that gets spammed").
While doing research for a recent workshop, I came across a useful list of seven social software elements. These seven building blocks--identity, presence, relationships, conversations, groups, reputation and sharing--provide a good functional definition for social software. They're also a solid foundation for thinking about how social software works.
The original list was assembled by Matt Webb (who was expanding on a list created by Stewart Butterfield). Here's a brief definition of each element. -
Mikel MadinaThere are lots of definitions of social software out there, ranging from the clinical ("software that enables people to connect through computer-mediated communication") to the pragmatic ("stuff that gets spammed").
While doing research for a recent workshop, I came across a useful list of seven social software elements. These seven building blocks--identity, presence, relationships, conversations, groups, reputation and sharing--provide a good functional definition for social software. They're also a solid foundation for thinking about how social software works.web 2.0 software social elementos panal caracteristicas med09
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27 Dec 07
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16 Nov 07
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12 Aug 07
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03 Aug 07
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09 Jul 07
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13 May 07
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12 May 07
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07 May 07
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06 May 07
Johannes KleskeSehr interessantes Konzept zu den Bausteinen von Social Software
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05 May 07
gallox smithI came across a useful list of seven social software elements. These seven building blocks--identity, presence, relationships, conversations, groups, reputation and sharing--provide a good functional definition for social software.
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03 May 07
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01 May 07
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Gabriela Grosseckf. buna resursa despre pilonii sof.social
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28 Apr 07
Sue WatersFor the workshop, I borrowed an idea from Peter Morville's user experience honeycomb and created a social software honeycomb
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27 Apr 07
Lambert HellerGene Smith offers a taxonomy / visual model of social software bulding blocks
via:kontext socialsoftware information_architecture taxonomy honeycomb web2.0 visualization lang:en year:2007 blogpost
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25 Apr 07
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maarten cannaertszeven nuttige social software elementen (thx steven)
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While doing research for a recent workshop, I came across a useful list of seven social software elements. These seven building blocks--identity, presence, relationships, conversations, groups, reputation and sharing--provide a good functional definition for social software. They're also a solid foundation for thinking about how social software works.
The original list was assembled by Matt Webb (who was expanding on a list created by Stewart Butterfield). Here's a brief definition of each element:
Identity - a way of uniquely identifying people in the system
Presence - a way of knowing who is online, available or otherwise nearby
Relationships - a way of describing how two users in the system are related (e.g. in Flickr, people can be contacts, friends of family)
Conversations - a way of talking to other people through the system
Groups - a way of forming communities of interest
Reputation - a way of knowing the status of other people in the system (who's a good citizen? who can be trusted?)
Sharing - a way of sharing things that are meaningful to participants (like photos or videos) -
While doing research for a recent workshop, I came across a useful list of seven social software elements. These seven building blocks--identity, presence, relationships, conversations, groups, reputation and sharing--provide a good functional definition for social software. They're also a solid foundation for thinking about how social software works.
The original list was assembled by Matt Webb (who was expanding on a list created by Stewart Butterfield). Here's a brief definition of each element:
Identity - a way of uniquely identifying people in the system
Presence - a way of knowing who is online, available or otherwise nearby
Relationships - a way of describing how two users in the system are related (e.g. in Flickr, people can be contacts, friends of family)
Conversations - a way of talking to other people through the system
Groups - a way of forming communities of interest
Reputation - a way of knowing the status of other people in the system (who's a good citizen? who can be trusted?)
Sharing - a way of sharing things that are meaningful to participants (like photos or videos)
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24 Apr 07
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22 Apr 07
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21 Apr 07
Wytze KoopalSeven building blocks--identity, presence, relationships, conversations, groups, reputation and sharing--provide a good functional definition for social software.
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15 Apr 07
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Martin KoserThese seven building blocks--identity, presence, relationships, conversations, groups, reputation and sharing--provide a good functional definition for social software.
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14 Apr 07
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13 Apr 07
Cindy KendallThese seven building blocks--identity, presence, relationships, conversations, groups, reputation and sharing--provide a good functional definition for social software. They're also a solid foundation for thinking about how social software works. Interest
social software research design culture networks community identity for:chericem
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08 Apr 07
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