This link has been bookmarked by 18 people . It was first bookmarked on 06 Aug 2006, by Will Richardson.
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25 Mar 08
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17 Mar 08
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28 Feb 08
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18 Jul 05
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17 Jul 05
Constantin BastureaBlogging, text messaging, photo sharing - all these are both digital, rooted in the world of electrons and bits, and fundamentally social, built to enable new kinds of interactions among people.
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16 Jul 05
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15 Jul 05
Martin KoserSocial software is a VERY powerful movement - ever considered the impact on innovation?
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14 Jul 05
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13 Jul 05
Tom McHaleThis 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 nothin
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Yvonne MurtaghSocial software; collaboration; Web 2.0
socialsoftware rss wiki collaboration web2.0 mobile blogs podcasting technorati Delicious flickr folksonomy 21stcentury emerging_technologies
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12 Jul 05
Trey Martindalearticle on social software, blogs, wikis, flikr, etc. By Wade Rouse, technologyreview.com
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Mys TechgalArticle which brings together recent developments in social software apps and mobile and wireless technologies
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11 Jul 05
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Social Machines By Wade Roush August 2005 (Editor note: While writing this feature for the magazine, senior editor Wade Roush added footnotes to the story. But, he also solicited reader feedback which was then incorporated here. Throughout the text, readers can mouse over the bold text in the article to see what others helped contribute. If you are unable to click on the link in the contribution, simply click on the bolded word in the article, which will take you to the appropriate page.) My boss, Jason Pontin, caused a minor ruckus in May while attending D3, the Wall Street Journal's third annual "All Things Digital" conference outside San Diego. The editor in chief of Technology Review, like many executives, entrepreneurs, engineers, and students these days, doesn't go anywhere without his wireless gear--meaning, at a minimum, a Wi-Fi-enabled laptop and a cell phone. At D3, Jason was using his laptop to file blog (or Web log) posts "live" from the conference floor, summarizing talks by Bill Gates, Steve Jobs, Sun Microsystems CEO Scott McNealy, and other computer-industry celebrities. But on the third day, he couldn't find a signal. The Wi-Fi network he'd been accessing was on by mistake, a conference staffer told him. She explained that the hosts of the conference--Walt Mossberg and Kara Swisher, two of the Journal's technology writers--had decided that no one should have Internet access from the main ballroom. Jason, naturally, wrote a new blog post Blog post: See pontin.trblogs.com/archives/ 2005/05/d3_suppressing.html. [hide] about the incident (from the hallway this time). Forbidding live blogging at a technology conference, he remarked, "seems a very retrograde move." Mossberg responded hours later. "It is untrue that Kara and I banned live blogging at D3, from the ballroom or anywhere else," he explained. "We merely declined to provide Wi-Fi, to avoid the common phenomenon that has ruined too many tech conferences--near univ
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07 Jul 05
Michael PowersWade Roush's "socially-written" article on continuous computing
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