This link has been bookmarked by 35 people . It was first bookmarked on 25 Jul 2006, by Myles A Braithwaite.
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29 Sep 08
tagging web2.0 folksonomy ibm collaboration social software jotspot enterprise...
I'm at a small IBM press event, "The Future of Social Networks" held in the IBM office in Cambridge. They're talking about 1) Social Nets Analytics, a "solution" [yech, I hate that term — What product isn't a solution? Can-opener= Your sealed can solution. Plunger = Your crap won't go down solution] that tracks and analyzes what's being said about you on in blogs, feeds, articles...; 2) Appliki, an "application wiki" [= JotSpot competitor, = Why aren't we using Notes for this?]; 3) Jamalyzer, productizing what IBM uses in its "jams," multi-day cross-company conversations; 4) dogear social bookmarking service [= del.icio.us + "authentication," i.e. The Folksonomy Torquer]; 5) Fringe, a productiziation of IBM's internal employee phonebook [ = Friendster without the condoms]; Web Activity Management, what seems to be a portal for tracking all your business activities and communications [ = Big Blue Brother]; 6) Blog and Wiki Central, IBM's internal blog aggregator. (I'm on a panel on social software at the end.) [Non-disclosure: I'm not getting paid for this and have no financial relationship with IBM.]
Irving Wladawsky-Berger, VP of Technical Strategy and Innovation leads off. He says that Web 1.0 was originally made up of content generated by institutions. [This is my biggest issued with the Web 2.0 meme overall32 : It's solidifying the totally false idea that until Web 2.0, users weren't on the Web. In fact, what drove the Web from the first day was the ability of users to speak and connect.] We're now seeing the rise of collaborative knowledge, he says. KM was "incredibly boring." Now it's arising organically, he says.
Irving moderates a panel including Marc Andrews (strategy, content integration, search), Mike Rhodin (GM workplace, portal and collaboration) and Irene Greif (IBM fellow, collaborative user experience).
Mike recommends blogs as a way for leaders to get their messages out. [Oh, yes, I really want to absorb yet more me -
03 Aug 06Thomas Pleil
Bericht über ene IBM-Veranstaltung im Nov. 05, auf der mehrere Enterprise-Anwendungen von Social Software vorgestellt wurden
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26 May 06
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07 Apr 06
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13 Feb 06
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Del.icio.us for inside the firewall. It's a research prototype now available throughout IBM. David Millen demos it and shows that the suggested autocompletions for tags include the number of other people using that tag, a way of quickly driving a folksonomy [although it also encourages the downside of folksonomies: conformity]. Within IBM, there are almost 17,000 bookmarks (generated in 2-3 months), with only 10% of them private. The tags retain an association with the person who made them. It shows people who have the same tags as you, deriving a social network from a semantic one. You can import bookmarks from del.icio.us. There are group bookmarks as well, something del.icio.us is working on adding. At IBM someone did a Firefox extension so that searches in the Firefox search box first do a query against dogear bookmarks and then does the search on your choice of engines.
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Del.icio.us for inside the firewall. It's a research prototype now available throughout IBM. David Millen demos it and shows that the suggested autocompletions for tags include the number of other people using that tag, a way of quickly driving a folksonomy [although it also encourages the downside of folksonomies: conformity]. Within IBM, there are almost 17,000 bookmarks (generated in 2-3 months), with only 10% of them private. The tags retain an association with the person who made them. It shows people who have the same tags as you, deriving a social network from a semantic one. You can import bookmarks from del.icio.us. There are group bookmarks as well, something del.icio.us is working on adding. At IBM someone did a Firefox extension so that searches in the Firefox search box first do a query against dogear bookmarks and then does the search on your choice of engines.
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Del.icio.us for inside the firewall. It's a research prototype now available throughout IBM. David Millen demos it and shows that the suggested autocompletions for tags include the number of other people using that tag, a way of quickly driving a folksonomy [although it also encourages the downside of folksonomies: conformity]. Within IBM, there are almost 17,000 bookmarks (generated in 2-3 months), with only 10% of them private. The tags retain an association with the person who made them. It shows people who have the same tags as you, deriving a social network from a semantic one. You can import bookmarks from del.icio.us. There are group bookmarks as well, something del.icio.us is working on adding. At IBM someone did a Firefox extension so that searches in the Firefox search box first do a query against dogear bookmarks and then does the search on your choice of engines.
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04 Feb 06
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24 Jan 06
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23 Dec 05
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11 Dec 05Hans Henrik H Heming
Blogpost by David Weinberger
del.icio.us blogging business collaboration folksonomy ibm intranet km social tagging wiki
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04 Dec 05
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02 Dec 05Marja Verstelle
Wow wat staat ons te wachten?!?!
(link via Wytze Koopal)socialsoftware folksonomy tagging web2.0 wiki del.icio.us ibm
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28 Nov 05
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22 Nov 05
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17 Nov 05
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11 Nov 05Wytze Koopal
Insight in what IBM is using internally (all the things that are also out there and that we are using right now)
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10 Nov 05
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IBM shows del.icio.us for the enterprise, and more I'm at a small IBM press event, "The Future of Social Networks" held in the IBM office in Cambridge. They're talking about 1) Social Nets Analytics, a "solution" [yech, I hate that term — What product isn't a solution? Can-opener= Your sealed can solution. Plunger = Your crap won't go down solution] that tracks and analyzes what's being said about you on in blogs, feeds, articles...; 2) Appliki, an "application wiki" [= JotSpot competitor, = Why aren't we using Notes for this?]; 3) Jamalyzer, productizing what IBM uses in its "jams," multi-day cross-company conversations; 4) dogear social bookmarking service [= del.icio.us + "authentication," i.e. The Folksonomy Torquer]; 5) Fringe, a productiziation of IBM's internal employee phonebook [ = Friendster without the condoms]; Web Activity Management, what seems to be a portal for tracking all your business activities and communications [ = Big Blue Brother]; 6) Blog and Wiki Central, IBM's internal blog aggregator. (I'm on a panel on social software at the end.) [Non-disclosure: I'm not getting paid for this and have no financial relationship with IBM.]
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09 Nov 05
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08 Nov 05
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07 Nov 05
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