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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.
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25 Articles match "Clay Shirky","generation"
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The Latest from Informal Learning Flow
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SXSW 2010 for Marketers & Online Strategists
Clay Shirky hasn't announced the content of his presentation yet. Originally called "Web applications 1.0", it brings new semantics, JavaScript APIs for drag and drop, offline storage, generating images, plugin-free video and form validation. 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 . The market's enthusiasm for user generated mapping may be contracting after a few years of initial excitement, but make no mistake: there is a big new way for people to publish the way we see the world now. 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
ReadWriteWeb
- Tuesday, March 2, 2010
Pew Report Interview
Here's how I am featured: "Here are some of the respondents: Clay Shirky, Esther Dyson, Doc Searls, Nicholas Carr, Susan Crawford, David Clark, Jamais Cascio, Peter Norvig, Craig Newmark, Hal Varian, Howard Rheingold, Andreas Kluth, Jeff Jarvis, Andy Oram, David Sifry, Marc Rotenberg, John Pike, Andrew Nachison, Anthony Townsend, Ethan Zuckerman, Stephen Downes, Rebecca MacKinnon, Jim Warren, Sandra Brahman, Seth Finkelstein, Jerry Berman, and Stewart Baker." But with this capacity freed, we may (and probably will) be capable of more advanced integration and evaluation of information
Half an Hour
- Saturday, February 20, 2010
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[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
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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 Why should we print a speech when it can be bottled , and why would [the next generation] learn to read when some skillful elocutionist merely repeats a novel aloud in the presence of a phonograph. It's been a busy week for the "death of newspapers" camp. A
OReilly Radar
- Friday, January 9, 2009
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Old Growth Media, The Aftermath
I've certainly never given a speech that generated so much discussion before, which tells you a little about how passionate people are about this issue right now.
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. 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.
stevenberlinjohnson.com
- Wednesday, March 25, 2009
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Wikimedia Strategy: Ideas for Strengthening Online Communities
Our hunting and gathering of ideas for improving community health got a booster shot last month when Wikimedia Foundation executive director Sue Gardner, deputy director Erik Moeller and I had the opportunity to spend the day with Wikipedia's founder, Jimmy Wales as well as with Clay Shirky, adjunct professor in NYU's graduate Interactive Telecommunications Program and author of Here Comes Everybody: The Power of Organizing without Organizations. The subject of the day was the state of the Wikipedia community, and its objective was to generate ideas. For those of you who have been following Wikimedia's open strategy initiative on this blog , you'll know that one of the goals of the work has been to strengthen the health of the Wikipedia community of contributors who create and use its online encyclopedias.
HarvardBusiness.org
- Tuesday, February 9, 2010
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Pls. Tweet For Me. Thx!
The next day, independently, Clay Shirky tweeted that he'd been spammed by a company offering to respond to messages addressed to him on social networks "in your own voice," in order to promote his profile. His post generated a considerable discussion.
Recently, my wife and I were discussing over dinner the time-intensiveness of using social networks effectively (I know, I know). I
HarvardBusiness.org
- Friday, July 10, 2009
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Four Steps to Gov 2.0: A Guide for Agencies
It's most definitely an amalgam of many different ideas, especially Clay Shirky’s idea of convening the conversation , and the Obama Administration’s ideas around releasing high value datafeeds and making government transparent, participatory and collaborative . Use it to generate mechanical turk -like assistance from the public. What Does the World Look Like When the Work of Government is Driven by the People?
Gov Gov 2.0
OReilly Radar
- Monday, February 8, 2010
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Geeks Invade Government With Audacious Goals
Clay Shirky has pointed out that these new social arrangements are leading from cooperation to collaboration to collectivism. Both The Geeks and The Govies need to listen to each other's ideas, hear each other's concerns, and work towards achieving Shirky's four stages of organizing if the government is to provide all the things that its citizens are increasingly demanding of it. Imagine what this generation's list of Big Hairy Audacious Guest blogger Mark Drapeau is the Co-Chair of the Gov 2.0 Expo Showcase in Sept 2009 and the Gov 2.0
OReilly Radar
- Wednesday, May 27, 2009
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Informal learning hot list for February 2009
generation
Clay Shirky
Wouldn’t it be cool to let the wisdom of your crowd suggest things on the net that merit your attention? It beats threshing a barrage of chaff to locate the kernels of information you want. It’s a time-saver, time is money, and most of us could use more of it.
Internet Time
- Tuesday, March 3, 2009
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Business of Learning
billion in ad revenue compared year-over-year.” Newspapers and Thinking the Unthinkable by Clay Shirky "...the This team builds innovative solutions, often in concert with their training company partners, that they believe will help generate business. This is a very strange time. While increasing amount of concept work and the pace of change puts a premium on learning, the business of learning faces an incredibly difficult time.
eLearning Technology
- Monday, June 15, 2009
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A Practical Guide to Implementing Web 2.0 (aka Social Networking Tools) in Your Organization
the same time, we have a new generation of workers (Gen Y or Gen
Millennium) And is there a solution to the generational culture war that Web
2.0 first generations of groupware, are simply not the way most people
communicate. another generation, this isn't a need in business-to-business
organizations, BLOG A Practical Guide to
Implementing Implementing Web 2.0 (aka
How to Save the World
- Friday, May 29, 2009
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