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Tap the Collective Sheds Light on the Power of Collective Intelligence
Recap of a DC meeting talking about collective intelligence and the tools/methods to tap CI.
Drape's Takes: A Shirky Aproach To Presenting Unplugged
A nice bit about collaboration, sharing and cooperation - which are all harder than just conversation.
Reflections on Knowledge Management and Organizational Innovation: Mysterious Art of Collaboration
http://www.projectnml.org/
Henry Jenkins' et al project.
Engaged Scholars and Thoughtful Practitioners: Enhancing Their Dialogue in the Knowledge Society PDF (52 KB)
"Two professional communities involved in information
and communication for development
(ICT4D) are especially noteworthy in this respect—
the thoughtful practitioners and the engaged scholars.
When they work cooperatively they can greatly
amplify
Collective Decision Making Systems
The Collective Decision Making Systems (CDMS) project conducts research in:
1.
• prediction markets
2.
• voting systems
3.
• information propagation
4.
• recommender systems
From Lo
Knowledge-at-work: Social search - KM thinking
What exactly is Social Search? There is no clear answer as the field is emerging and changing at a rapid pace. Here is one early definition: "..a collection of Internet wayfinding tools informed by human judgment. That judgment takes place in the form of
The New Yorker: Fact
-
KNOW IT ALL
Can Wikipedia conquer expertise?
by STACY SCHIFF
Issue of 2006-07-31
Posted 2006-07-24
On March 1st, Wikipedia, the online interactive encyclopedia, hit the million-articles mark, with an entry on Jordanhill, a railway station in suburban Glasgow. Its author, Ewan MacDonald, posted a single sentence about the station at 11 P.M., local time; over the next twenty-four hours, the entry was edited more than four hundred times, by dozens of people. (Jordanhill happens to be the “1029th busiest station in the United Kingdomâ€; it “no longer has a staffed ticket counter.â€) The Encyclopædia Britannica, which for more than two centuries has been considered the gold standard for reference works, has only a hundred and twenty thousand entries in its most comprehensive edition. Apparently, no traditional encyclopedia has ever suspected that someone might wonder about Sudoku or about prostitution in China. Or, for that matter, about Capgras delusion (the unnerving sensation that an impostor is sitting in for a close relative), the Boston molasses disaster, the Rhinoceros Party of Canada, Bill Gates’s house, the forty-five-minute Anglo-Zanzibar War, or Islam in Iceland. Wikipedia includes fine entries on Kafka and the War of the Spanish Succession, and also a complete guide to the ships of the U.S. Navy, a definition of Philadelphia cheesesteak, a masterly page on Scrabble, a list of historical cats (celebrity cats, a cat millionaire, the first feline to circumnavigate Australia), a survey of invented expletives in fiction (“bippie,†“cakesniffer,†“furgleâ€), instructions for curing hiccups, and an article that describes, with schematic diagrams, how to build a stove from a discarded soda can. The how-to entries represent territory that the encyclopedia has not claimed since the eighteenth century. You could cure a toothache or make snowshoes using the original Britannica, of 1768-71. (You could also imbibe a lot of prejudice and superstit
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