|
|
|
|
Informal Learning Flow is a content hub started by Jay Cross that collects and organizes the best information on the web around informal learning. We hope this will help you find good stuff, learn and stay current.
|
43 Articles match "Clay Shirky","future"
|
The Latest from Informal Learning Flow
|
MORE
|
|
SXSW 2010 for Marketers & Online Strategists
Brian Solis will be joined by a special guest to discuss the new book and answer questions followed by a book signing."
The Future of Influence
"The For brands and publishers, tapping into Influence is critical to social media's future. Leading voices in social media from multiple backgrounds will define the value of influence, discuss best practices, and predict future impact. Navigating SXSW is overwhelming to say the least! To help you out ReadWriteWeb has been breaking the events, panels and parties down into vertical reviews.
ReadWriteWeb
- Wednesday, March 10, 2010
What Does it Mean to Make 5 Million Maps? Platial's Legacy
The three founders said they were taking advice from people like Clay Shirky , Anselm Hook and Arturo Duran . You can stay abreast of future projects the Platial team develops on the side on its Twitter account and keep up with the work and thoughts of Di-Ann Eisnor , Jason Wilson and Jake Olsen .
It's not every day that a business shuts down but declares itself a success in helping kick off an unstoppable movement to change the world.
Community mapping service Platial announced this week that it is turning off its servers and asking users to move their
ReadWriteWeb
- Tuesday, March 2, 2010
[2b2k] Another re-org
introduce Clay Shirky’s “It’s not information overload — it’s filter failure ” idea, and then say that the difference is not simply that we now have social filters and the like. feel like I’m postponing facing the organizational problem posed by what I’m proposing as Chapter 3: the history and future of facts. (That’s Last week, I went through the current (dis)organization of the book with Tim Sullivan, my editor at Basic Books. I’ve known Tim for a few of years, (even before he became the editor of the tenth anniversary
Joho the Blog
- Sunday, February 28, 2010
|
-
|
The Best from Informal Learning Flow
|
MORE
|
-
Clay Shirky's "Newspapers and Thinking the Unthinkable"
Sometimes Clay Shirky astounds us by articulating something we've never thought of, and sometimes he astounds us by telling us something many have thought, but never so clearly and so compellingly. By contrast, Clay cuts the Gordian knot :
That This is a piece that anyone concerned with the future of publishing simply MUST read.
That But always, he astounds.
Into Into the first category falls the claim that he made in his keynote at the last Web 2.0
OReilly Radar
- Saturday, March 14, 2009
-
[berkman] Clay Shirky on the future of news
Clay Shirky is giving a lunchtime talk at the Shorenstein Center, which may be a joint event with the Berkman Center.
As Bob Garfield says (says Clay), it turns out that people will go to sites that do nothing but post ads.
Clay says he wants to distance himself from the utopians and optimists. “I NOTE: Live-blogging. Getting things wrong.
Joho the Blog
- Tuesday, September 22, 2009
-
[2b2k] Clay Shirky, info overload, and when filters increase the size of what’s filtered
Clay Shirky’s masterful talk at the Web 2.0 Clay explains in greater detail in this two part CJR interview: 1 2 ]
Clay traces information overload to the 15th century, but others have taken it back earlier than that, and there’s even a quotation from Seneca (4 BCE) that can be pressed into service: “What is the point of having countless books and libraries whose titles the owner could scarcely read through in his whole lifetime? Expo in NYC last September — “It’s not information overload. It’s filter failure”
Joho the Blog
- Sunday, January 31, 2010
-
-
Clay Shirky On Leadership and Management in an Interconnected World
A couple of days ago, as the FASTForward 09 conference opened, I had the opportunity to sit down with Clay Shirky, author of the book “ Here Comes Everybody – the power of organizing without organizations ” and a consultant, professor and writer. As a way to get into the issues, I asked Clay to offer his perspective about how the Web and its interconnectedness is affecting knowledge-based work.
I wanted to bear down a little bit on some of the core ideas in his recent book and examine how his premises impact what management needs to understand and do with the new set opf
Wirearchy
- Wednesday, February 11, 2009
-
The funeral for analog news… by Clay Shirky
A multitude of tweets from people like Tim O’Reilly and Nion McEvoy pointed me to this excellent piece on the end of analog news by (past seminar speaker) Clay Shirky. Tags: Technology Future Not to be missed, here is an excerpt:
“When 8220;When someone demands to know how we are going to replace newspapers, they are really demanding to be told that we are not living through a revolution.
The Long Now Blog
- Saturday, March 14, 2009
-
The Sky is Falling!
We've had Michael Hirschorn's Atlantic Monthly piece forecasting the demise of The New York Times by May, Jack Shafer weighs in at Slate , James Surowiecki in The New Yorker , Clay Shirky raises some very interesting points, and today Fred Wilson joins the chorus with My Focus Group of One .
A The latter bottles it up for future use....With It's been a busy week for the "death of newspapers" camp. A
OReilly Radar
- Friday, January 9, 2009
-
-
A tipped hat back to Eric Norlin
Many come to mind: Kevin Kelly, Stuart Brand, Dave Winer, Chris Anderson, Jerry Michalski, Esther Dyson, Tim O’Reilly, Steve Gillmor, Kevins Marks and Werbach, Craig Burton, Clay Shirky, Bruce Sterling… the list, as I think about it, is quite long. Tags: Blogging Events Future Ideas Life Pas The Cluetrain Manifesto wasn’t the biggest nonfiction book to come along in early 2000. That would be Who Moved My Cheese .
Doc Searls Weblog
- Sunday, June 7, 2009
-
Old Growth Media, The Aftermath
I'd been meaning to do a follow-up post collecting the responses to my SXSW speech on "Old Growth Media And The Future of News," but I kept putting it off because new articles and posts continued to roll in, and stitching them all together started to seem a little daunting. The volume of response also underscores the value of releasing an essay version of a speech more or less simultaneously with the speech itself -- a trick I learned from my old friend Clay Shirky, who, entirely by coincidence, posted his own essay on the newspaper crisis the day I gave my speech in Austin.
stevenberlinjohnson.com
- Wednesday, March 25, 2009
-
Personal Democracy Forum: Politics in the Web 2.0 Era
Trippi, writers Clay Shirky, danah boyd and Doug Rushkoff, and
anthropologists anthropologists of the future Mike Wesch and Mark Pesce, among many
others. Gov for Transparency and Participation (with Clay Johnson
and In the past year or so, I've been urging people to work on stuff that matters . The world is faced with serious problems, and we in the technology community have a unique contribution to make, as the tools we've created help us to collaborate and organize at an unprecedented scale outside of industrial-era top-down organizations.
One
OReilly Radar
- Friday, June 19, 2009
-
-
The future of news skews young and is not rectangular
He’s posted a terrific article that calls to task the Newseum ’s ten part TV series on The Future of News that seems to include no one under 40 years old. Now, as a 58-year-old, I’m certainly sensitive to the formal fallaciousness of an argument that says 40+ folks can’t understand the future that will be built by 20+ folks. As the over 30 year old Clay Shirky says , we are Jose Antonio Vargas is an under-30 who recently left his plum job at the Washington Post as a technology reporter/writer to become the editor of HuffingtonPost tech section . [
Joho the Blog
- Friday, October 2, 2009
|
|
|