This link has been bookmarked by 24 people . It was first bookmarked on 16 Jul 2006, by nancy.
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Alex HalavaisAn article for Tech Review on the evolution of new social computing tools.
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Pelle StenI samband med att Technolgy Review publicerade papperstidningen som innehåller Wade Roushs artikel om sociala datasystem publicerade han själv artikeln på sin blogg tillsammans med korta kommentarer angående experimentet. Ta gärna och leta upp tidnin
waderoush technologyreview socialadatasystem mobilitet uppkopplad trådlösanätverk web20
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Hans Mestrumcomputing means suddenly connecting
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11 Jul 05
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The arrival of continuous computing means that people who live in populated areas of developed countries (and increasingly, developing ones such as China and India) can spend entire days inside a kind of invisible, portable “information field.” This field is created by constant, largely automated coöperation between 1) the digital devices people carry, such as laptops, media players, and camera phones 2) the wireline and wireless networks that serve people’s locations as they travel about, and 3) the Internet and its growing collection of Web-based tools for finding information and communicating and collaborating with other people. This information field enables people to both pull information about virtually anything from anywhere, at any time, and push their own ideas and personalities back onto the Internet—without ever having to sit down at a desktop computer. Armed with nothing more than a smart phone, a modern urbanite can get the answer to almost any question; locate nearby colleagues, friends, and services; join virtual communities that form and disband rapidly around shared work and shared interests; and self-publish blog entries, photographs, audio recordings, and videos for an unlimited audience.
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The arrival of continuous computing means that people who live in populated areas of developed countries (and increasingly, developing ones such as China and India) can spend entire days inside a kind of invisible, portable “information field.†This field is created by constant, largely automated coöperation between 1) the digital devices people carry, such as laptops, media players, and camera phones 2) the wireline and wireless networks that serve people’s locations as they travel about, and 3) the Internet and its growing collection of Web-based tools for finding information and communicating and collaborating with other people. This information field enables people to both pull information about virtually anything from anywhere, at any time, and push their own ideas and personalities back onto the Internet—without ever having to sit down at a desktop computer. Armed with nothing more than a smart phone, a modern urbanite can get the answer to almost any question; locate nearby colleagues, friends, and services; join virtual communities that form and disband rapidly around shared work and shared interests; and self-publish blog entries, photographs, audio recordings, and videos for an unlimited audience.
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