The Benefits of Distraction and Overstimulation -- New York Magazine
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Since every interruption costs around 25 minutes of productivity, we spend nearly a third of our day recovering from them.
How Email Brings You Closer to the Guy in the Next Cubicle
Tags: no_tag on 2009-03-20 and saved by 14 people -All Annotations (8) -About
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A 2007 study by economists Neil Gandal, Charles King, and Marshall Van Alstyne looked at the networks formed by 125,000 email messages from the staff of an executive-recruiting firm. It found that email's real value isn't in communicating with Kuala Lumpur but with Betsy in the next cubicle. The most productive workers have the densest intracompany email web.
Attention - O'Reilly Radar
-
- Technology has improved my life
- Technology has harmed my quality of life
- I pay full attention to people when they talk to me, when I am in meetings, when I work
- I pay partial attention to what I'm doing and I'm scanning my devices or software for other inputs
- Technology sets me free
- Technology enslaves me
Pop quiz. It's okay to answer "yes" to a question even if you're contradicting an earlier answer:
- Technology has improved my life
Meritocracy and marketing
Jeff Jarvis argues that the internet removes big media and cultural institutions as the high priests of culture.
Tags: attention, media2.0 on 2008-08-08 -All Annotations (0) -About
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The curmudgeons also argue that this level playing field is flooded with crap: a loss of taste and discrimination. I’ll argue just the opposite: Only the playing field is flat and to stand out one must now do so on merit - as defined by the public rather than the priests - which will be rewarded with links and attention. This is our link economy, our culture of links. It is a meritocracy, only now there are many definitions of merit and each must be earned.
Internet Famous: Julia Allison and the Secrets of Self-Promotion
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"People have been so paranoid about having any presence online for such a long time," says David Karp, founder of the Tumblr blogging service and a friend of Allison's. "A lot of them have gone through that transition of 'Well, shit, it's out there. I'm searchable on Flickr or Google.' The cat is out of the bag, and the only way to take back that control is to get out there and have a presence, have an identity that you feel represents you."
Top 3 Disruptive Technologies
Multi-core and hybrid processors, virtualization and fabric computing, and social networks will be the top three disruptive technologies for 2008 to 2012, according to research and advisory firm Gartner.
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Multi-core and hybrid processors, virtualization and fabric computing, and social networks will be the top three disruptive technologies for 2008 to 2012, according to research and advisory firm Gartner.
Convert Your Annotations to Blog Posts with 1-click
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you simply highlight and add sticky notes on anything that interests you, and afterwards, you can easily incorporate your highlights and notes to your blog with one-click "Send to Blog".
Uganda Travel Guide and Travel Information - Lonely Planet
Get this plug adapter ahead of Uganda trip
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Emergency 2.0 is coming to a website near you - tech - 02 May 2008 - New Scientist Tech
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"National news websites were completely worthless as they ignored everything except the comparatively minor Malibu fire, which burned near some celebrities' homes," said one.
http://www.globalpolicy.org/globaliz/define/kism.htm
Tags: capitalism, globalization on 2008-05-11 -All Annotations (0) -About
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Capitalism's ideal is a borderless global economy in which money
and goods can be moved freely in search of short-term maximum profits without
regard to the consequence for people, communities and nature. -
The operation of the present capitalist system illustrates how it is dedicated to
making money to the exclusion of all other interests. -
One certified public accountant and professor at Washington DC University
developed an inventory and came up with estimates of the cost the corporations
impose on US society each year through such things as defective products,
unsafe working conditions and environmental discharges. That estimate was 2.6
trillion US dollars a year. This is 5 times the corporate profit and constituted 37 per
cent of US GDP in the relevant year (1994). -
The pattern in each of these instances is to subordinate the
interests of people to the interests of money. -
This raises the question of where capitalism based as
it is on the fundamental human nature of greed, is capable of being changed. A
relevant point is that human nature is not limited to greed but extends to good will,
love, generosity and the like. Moreover, the general view appears to be that there is
nothing inevitable about capitalism; that is, in fact, planned in the board-rooms of
corporations; and that it can be changed if there is sufficient will to do so
Globalism Versus Globalization by Joseph Nye - The Globalist
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Globalism describes the reality of being interconnected, while globalization captures the speed at which these connections increase — or decrease.
Lateralization of brain function - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Left brain functions Right brain functions sequential simultaneous analytical holistic verbal imagistic logical intuitive linear algorithmic processing holistic algorithmic processing mathematics: perception of counting/measurement mathematics: perception of shapes/motions[citation needed] present and past present and future[citation needed] language: grammar/vocabulary, literal language: intonation/accentuation, prosody, pragmatic, contextual
Technological singularity - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The World After Midnight?
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The technological singularity is a hypothesised point in the future variously characterized by the technological creation of self-improving intelligence, unprecedentedly rapid technological progress, or some combination of the two.[1]
Globalization (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)
Describes Globalization as the collapsing of space and time
Tags: globalization, space, time on 2008-05-04 -All Annotations (0) -About
more fromwww.science.uva.nl
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most contemporary
social theorists endorse the view that globalization refers to
fundamental changes in the spatial and temporal contours of social
existence, according to which the significance of space or territory
undergoes shifts in the face of a no less dramatic acceleration in the
temporal structure of crucial forms of human activity -
Geographical
distance is typically measured in time. As the time necessary to
connect distinct geographical locations is reduced, distance or space
undergoes compression or “annihilation.” The human
experience of space is intimately connected to the temporal structure
of those activities by means of which we experience space. -
humanity's experiences of space and time are working to
undermine the importance of local and even national boundaries in many
arenas of human endeavor. Since globalization contains far-reaching
implications for virtually every facet of human life, it necessarily
suggests the need to rethink key questions of normative political
theory -
Heinrich Heine, the
émigré German-Jewish poet, captured this same experience
when he noted: “space is killed by the railways. I feel as if the
mountains and forests of all countries were advancing on Paris. Even
now, I can smell the German linden trees; the North Sea's breakers are
rolling against my door -
The juggernaut of
industrial capitalism constituted the most basic source of technologies
resulting in the annihilation of space, helping to pave the way for
“intercourse in every direction, universal interdependence of
nations,” in contrast to a narrow-minded provincialism that had
plagued humanity for untold eons (Marx, 1979 [1848]: 476). Despite
their ills as instruments of capitalist exploitation, new technologies
that increased possibilities for human interaction across borders
ultimately represented a progressive force in history. -
John Dewey argued in 1927 that recent economic and
technological trends implied the emergence of a “new world”
no less noteworthy than the opening up of America to European
exploration and conquest in 1492. For Dewey, the invention of steam,
electricity, and the telephone offered formidable challenges to
relatively static and homogeneous forms of local community life that
had long represented the main theatre for most human activity. -
the compression
of space posed fundamental questions for democracy. Dewey observed that
small-scale political communities (for example, the New England
township), a crucial site for the exercise of effective democratic
participation, seemed ever more peripheral to the great issues of an
interconnected world. Increasingly dense networks of social ties across
borders rendered local forms of self-government ineffective. Dewey
wondered, “How can a public be organized, we may ask, when
literally it does not stay in place?” (Dewey, 1954 [1927]: 140) -
The Canadian cultural critic Marshall
McLuhan made the theme of a technologically based “global
village,” generated by social “acceleration at all levels
of human organization,” the centerpiece of an anxiety-ridden
analysis of new media technologies in the 1960s (McLuhan, 1964:
103) -
According to his analysis, the high-speed imperatives of
modern warfare and weapons systems strengthened the executive and
debilitated representative legislatures. The compression of territory
thereby paved the way for executive-centered emergency government
(Virilio, 1986 [1977]) -
“All distances in time and space are shrinking. Man now reaches
overnight, by places, places which formerly took weeks and months of
travel” (Heidegger, 1971 [1950]: 165). Heidegger also accurately
prophesied that new communication and information technologies would
soon spawn novel possibilities for dramatically extending the scope of
virtual reality: “Distant sites of the most ancient
cultures are shown on film as if they stood this very moment amidst
today's street traffic…The peak of this abolition of every
possibility of remoteness is reached by television, which will soon
pervade and dominate the whole machinery of communication”
(Heidegger, 1971 [1950]: 165) -
contemporary analysts associate globalization with
deterritorialization, according to which a growing variety of
social activities takes place irrespective of the geographical location
of participants. -
“global events can
-- via telecommunication, digital computers, audiovisual media,
rocketry and the like -- occur almost simultaneously anywhere and
everywhere in the world” (Scholte, 1996: 45). -
Globalization
refers to increased possibilities for action between and among people
in situations where latitudinal and longitudinal location seems
immaterial to the social activity at hand. Even though geographical
location remains crucial for many undertakings (for example, farming to
satisfy the needs of a local market), deterritorialization manifests
itself in many social spheres. -
recent theorists conceive of globalization as linked to the
growth of social interconnectedness across existing
geographical and political boundaries. -
ince the vast majority of
human activities is still tied to a concrete geographical location, the
more decisive facet of globalization concerns the manner in which
distant events and forces impact on local and regional endeavors
(Tomlinson, 1999: 9) -
Globalization refers “to
processes of change which underpin a transformation in the organization
of human affairs by linking together and expanding human activity
across regions and continents” (Held, McGrew, Goldblatt,
Perraton, 1999: 15). -
According to one influential strand within
international relations theory, relations between states are
fundamentally lawless. Since the achievement of justice or democracy,
for example, presupposes an effective political sovereign, the lacuna
of sovereignty at the global level means that justice and democracy
are necessarily incomplete and probably unattainable there. In this
“Realist” view of international politics, core features of
the modern system of sovereign states relegate the pursuit of western
political thought's most noble normative goals primarily to the
domestic arena (Mearsheimer, 2003; Morgenthau, 1954). -
To claim, for example, that questions of distributive justice have
no standing in the making of foreign affairs represents at best
empirical naivete about economic globalization. At worst, it
constitutes a disingenuous refusal to grapple with the fact that the
material existence of those fortunate enough to live in the rich
countries is inextricably tied to the material status of the vast
majority of humanity residing in poor and underdeveloped regions.
Growing material inequality spawned by economic globalization is linked
to growing domestic material inequality in the rich democracies (Falk,
1999) -
Similarly, in the context of the ongoing destruction of the
ozone layer by privileged countries like Australia, Japan, and the
United States, a dogmatic insistence on the sanctity of national
sovereignty risks constituting a cynical fig leaf for irresponsible
activities whose impact extends well beyond the borders of the
polluting countries.
Knowledge Management for Generation Y - ReadWriteWeb
Generation Y will expect the following 3 things from a KM system: real-time access, personalization, and community. They state:
"By the end of this decade we will have moved from a workforce that often has to be sold on e-learning to one that demands e-learning, knowledge management and communities of practice."
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Generation Y will expect the following 3
things from a KM system: real-time access, personalization, and
community. They state:"By the end of this decade we will have moved from a workforce that
often has to be sold on e-learning to one that demands e-learning, knowledge management
and communities of practice."
Next Generation Knowledge Management Volume 2 (2007) by Jerry Ash (Gurteen Knowledge)
Some key issues in KM
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- Comparing, contrasting, connecting corporate and personal KM;
- The road from command and control to knowledge sharing;
- Interpersonal knowledge management (IPKM);
- Social network analysis and social software;
- Seven steps to personal knowledge management;
- How do we know knowledge works;
- Relationship of CRM and other disciplines to KM;
- Knowledge networks and value creation;
- The creation and reuse of project knowledge;
- Achieving accountability through shared values;
- New roles for top and middle managers;
- Increasing performance through knowledge;
- Defining and organising communities of practice.
- Comparing, contrasting, connecting corporate and personal KM;
Notation: * = Private bookmark and comment|… = Clipping [?] | … = Public highlight [?]
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- 4webdesign,
- 3website,
- 2websites,
- 1webware,
- 1widgets,
- 4wiki,
- 4wikipedia,
- 1wine,
- 2WOM,
- 6wordpress,
- 2work,
- 1world,
- 1worldchanging,
- 1writing,
- 1yammer,
- 5youtube,
- 2zille





