social software
Making Users Happy with Social Software Paid Members Public
As part of a post looking at predictions for 2009, Ross Mayfield of enetrprise wiki provider SocialText [http://www.socialtext.com/] presents some interesting figures about making social software projects successful [http://ross.typepad.com/blog/2008/12/2009-prediction.html]: > Line of Business implementations not only experience growth, but
Le Web 08: The Social Stack Paid Members Public
For example, OpenID is a profile web address that you can use to login to any site that supports it. OpenSocial solves the desire to use any app on any site on the web, with the same people relationships and profile data you have elsewhere. Apps written for this standard
Giving Up E-mail for Social Software Paid Members Public
[https://i0.wp.com/www.computerweekly.com/blogs/enterprise-social-software/pics/2008/Luis%20Suarez.jpg] Poor old e-mail, it’s taking a right old beating at this conference. In fact, one speaker has given it up entirely. Luis Suarez [http://www.elsua.net/] isn’t from a hipster startup, though. He
Why Web 2.0 Matters to Enterprise Paid Members Public
This morning, a select group of bloggers were invited along to a round table discussion with Tim O’Reilly [http://www.oreillynet.com/pub/au/27], founder of books and conference company O’Reilly Media [http://oreilly.com/]. He, along with conference hosts Jennifer Pahlka [http://blog.pahlka.com/] of
Welcome to the Social Enterprise Paid Members Public
About Me [https://i2.wp.com/www.computerweekly.com/blogs/enterprise-social-software/pics/2008/Photo%2034.jpg] My name is Adam Tinworth, and I’m part of the editorial development team at Computer Weekly‘s publishers, RBI. In the last two years I’ve been part of a small team championing
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