This link has been bookmarked by 52 people . It was first bookmarked on 21 Mar 2008, by Takuya Homma.
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17 Sep 08
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23 Aug 08
Kristina Hoeppnernew / hyped tools used for discussions outside of the blogosphere; good example: Chris Lott's question on twitter about ple; cf. http://www.chrislott.org/2008/03/04/tired-of-the-ple-flak/
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29 Jun 08
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Wie kann man Diskussionen zu eigenen Inhalten verfolgen, die nicht aufm Blog laufen?
aggregator blogging conversation socialmedia twitter lifestreaming article
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25 Mar 08
Ratcatcher"Before becoming too overwhelmed, it's time to find some solutions. To stay in touch with so many different sources of conversation and activity, let's turn to RSS"
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24 Mar 08
Sarah Perez recommends subscribing to dozens of feeds to find out, "Is my article being read, commented on, or dugg?"
readwriteweb public_discourse friendfeed feeds digg twitter via:engtech delicious_import
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The truth of the matter is, like it or not, the conversations that once existed solely in the blogosphere have now moved on. People still comment, but in a lot of cases, those comments aren't on found on the blog itself. So the question is, has the conversation become diluted among all the different services and applications? Or is it just adding layers to the original topic? And most importantly, how can you keep up?
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Before becoming too overwhelmed, it's time to find some solutions. To stay in touch with so many different sources of conversation and activity, let's turn to RSS. Begin by getting a list of all the feeds you want to keep track of. Here some I recommend, you can pick and choose which ones are right for you...
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Before becoming too overwhelmed, it's time to find some solutions. To stay in touch with so many different sources of conversation and activity, let's turn to RSS. Begin by getting a list of all the feeds you want to keep track of. Here some I recommend, you can pick and choose which ones are right for you...
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23 Mar 08
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22 Mar 08
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Michel Bauwenshas the conversation become diluted among all the different services and applications? Or is it just adding layers to the original topic? And most importantly, how can you keep up?
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21 Mar 08
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The truth of the matter is, like it or not, the conversations that once existed solely in the blogosphere have now moved on. People still comment, but in a lot of cases, those comments aren't on found on the blog itself. So the question is, has the conversation become diluted among all the different services and applications? Or is it just adding layers to the original topic? And most importantly, how can you keep up?
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Don Schuetzecomments on pieces being posted on network sites like digg or dil.icio.us etc instead of on the blog itself. how to keep track of not only your piece's impact (ie conversation), but comments on your comments?
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Oliver GassnerHow to find conversations aoutside of Blogs
information overflow tipps weblogs social web 2.0 monitoring how2
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brad cooperSarah makes a good point - conversation used to be held inside blogs. But now that content is aggregated to other places, the conversations are going on there in addition...
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People still comment, but in a lot of cases, those comments aren't on found on the blog itself. So the question is, has the conversation become diluted among all the different services and applications? Or is it just adding layers to the original topic? And most importantly, how can you keep up?
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the sentiment is that conversation-relocation is detrimental to the blog itself. If no one is commenting on the blog, will the blog lose readers? Will the blog lose traffic?
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20 Mar 08
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