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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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44 Articles match "Clay Shirky","Idea"
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The Latest from Informal Learning Flow
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SXSW 2010 for Marketers & Online Strategists
But applications can extend conversations and perceptions of a brand, as well as add to discussions and ideas in compelling new ways. How can applications help your brand and idea be more authentic, genuine, user friendly, and just plain old fun? Clay Shirky hasn't announced the content of his presentation yet. 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
[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. 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 edition of Cluetrain ), which is the basic reason I went with Basic for Too Big to Know.
Joho the Blog
- Sunday, February 28, 2010
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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The Best from Informal Learning Flow
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[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.
Mangling other people’s ideas and words. As Bob Garfield says (says Clay), it turns out that people will go to sites that do nothing but post ads.
NOTE: Live-blogging. Getting things wrong.
Joho the Blog
- Tuesday, September 22, 2009
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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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Clay Shirky in London: Group action just got easier
One reason I like it is that you can suggest that you'd like to hear someone like, say, Clay Shirky and, six months later, you've got him. Clay speaks today at Online Information Conference in London. As well as formal groups around certain types of photography on Flickr ( like this HDR group for beginners ) there are the more impromptu adhoc communities that form around just one photo . 10 years ago, as Clay helped newspapers People sometimes ask why one might 'waste' one's time sitting on Advisory Boards, especially those of conferences. It means that whereas
edublogs
- Tuesday, December 2, 2008
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Clay Shirky on Helping People Find You, Content as Mere Conversation Fodder, and Letting Users Identify Their Needs
BLOG Clay Shirky on
Helping finally got around to reading Clay Shirky's Here Comes Everybody .
The address a real need: Shirky notes wryly "If you designed a better
shovel, Shirky says, is that large scale group activities and political/social
actions Helping People Find You, Content as Mere Conversation Fodder, Letting
Users Users Identify Their Needs, and the Formula for Effective Social
Networking
How to Save the World
- Sunday, May 24, 2009
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Clay Shirky - The Observer Interview
The Observer (UK) interviews Shirky.
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Occasionally people contact me to ask, "Are you the same Clay Shirky I was at school with?" The idea, which I grew up with, of going into a place separate from the real world, is something my students just don’t recognise.
This Much I Know
John Hind The Observer, Sunday 15 February 2009
Wirearchy
- Sunday, February 15, 2009
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Feature Interview with Clay Shirky on Canadian Radio (CBC)
I recently finished reading Clay Shirky’s new book (New York: Penguin, 2008) entitled Here Comes Everybody: the power of organizing without organizations . If you have been following the shift from presentation mode to participation mode in education and training, then you won’t find many startling ideas in this book, as Shirky covers topics already well discussed by other writers and bloggers. The ideas include the importance of sharing to build community, the fact that we all can be contributors to the information explosion, the increasing speed of change, challenges to established institutions, social media, small worlds, and that failure is a good thing in terms of learning.
Workplace Learning Today
- Friday, January 2, 2009
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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. 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 conditions created by an interconnected digital infrastructure that supports all communications and management of information – the lifeblood of an organization’s
Wirearchy
- Wednesday, February 11, 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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Idea nodes & innovation
In Australia last month, a client gave me a copy of Smart World , Breakthrough Creativity and the New Science of Ideas by Richard Ogle. Ogle’s concept of nodes as idea spaces are a piece in the puzzle being decoded by Rob Cross, Ross Dawson, Valdis Krebs, Duncan Watts, John Hagel, John Seely Brown, Verna Allee, Kevin Kelly, Clay Shirky, Albert Laszlo-Barabasi, George Siemens, David Weinberger, Ross Mayfield, and others. I am a wanderer, enthusiastically trudging wherever my curiosity leads me. The author uses stories of Watson & Crick, Ruth Handler &
Internet Time
- Tuesday, July 8, 2008
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Evening Beer Notes
8221; the answer is that I stupidly somehow signed off Flickr and can’t sign back on, because I have no idea what the hell my ID or password are. The Failure of #amazonfail , by Clay Shirky, is a good read too. Tags: Blogging Business Ideas Journalism Life Photography Travel infrastructure problem I’m bummed that I’m drinking a beer on the deck here in Santa Barbara while Dave is in Cambridge . Would have enjoyed having coffee with him this morning.
Doc Searls Weblog
- Thursday, April 16, 2009
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