An ad-hoc gathering people passionate about transit in Toronto and the TTC.
community action, i love it. we need this for all metros.
2008-02-20: And for the Bay area, though one of their big headlines is “carpooling from the east bay”. how ironic.
Sapere Aude
Tag: community
An ad-hoc gathering people passionate about transit in Toronto and the TTC.
community action, i love it. we need this for all metros.
2008-02-20: And for the Bay area, though one of their big headlines is “carpooling from the east bay”. how ironic.
do mailing lists have an upper limit of concurrent threads?
You need to really put some consideration into providing a more human interface into your customer service department, and it would be nice if you would follow the lead of Microsoft, Sun, IBM, and others who have embraced the notion of employee blogging.
more calls for googlers blogging
gmaps api is used by 51% of mashups
heh. community-maintained google bugs.
I really, really want to show a lot of people how to use more of what they’ve got. Smarter methods of communication. More powerful data analysis and visualization. Surprisingly simple kinds of integration.
The details aren’t nailed down, but in broad terms I’ve proposed to Microsoft that I continue to function pretty much as I do now. That means blogging, podcasting, and screencasting on topics that I think are interesting and important; it means doing the kinds of lightweight and agile R&D that I’ve always done; and it means brokering connections among people, software, information, and ideas — again, as I’ve always done.
wow. jon going to ms is big. he has clue in spades. being an evangelist who can code cough scoble cough makes a big difference. AND he thinks it is all connected through intelligence augmentation. ROCK!
technology is sometimes an enabler for whole new levels of awkward.
“Are you my friend? Yes or no?” This question, while fundamentally odd, is a key component of social network sites. Participants must select who on the system they deem to be ‘Friends.’ Their choice is publicly displayed for all to see and becomes the backbone for networked participation. By examining what different participants groups do on social network sites, this paper investigates what Friendship means and how Friendship affects the culture of the sites. I will argue that Friendship helps people write community into being in social network sites. Through these imagined egocentric communities, participants are able to express who they are and locate themselves culturally. In turn, this provides individuals with a contextual frame through which they can properly socialize with other participants. Friending is deeply affected by both social processes and technological affordances. I will argue that the established Friending norms evolved out of a need to resolve the social tensions that emerged due to technological limitations. At the same time, I will argue that Friending supports pre-existing social norms yet because the architecture of social network sites is fundamentally different than the architecture of unmediated social spaces, these sites introduce an environment that is quite unlike that with which we are accustomed.
a blog by svn developers. some good notes about future direction
A site for vanguard fans