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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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1613 Articles match "future","Google"
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The Latest from Informal Learning Flow
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8 Ways to Better Understand the Internet of Things
Future sustainable technologies linking the physical and virtual world'
In future posts we'll be covering IoT-driven growth in the fields of virtual factories, digital cities, agriculture and forest management.
'Novel More recently, Google launched an API for PowerMeter , which allows device manufacturers to create PowerMeter-compatible devices. The world's second Internet of Things Conference is scheduled to take place at the end of November in Tokyo. The deadline for papers was just extended to June 1 - which gave us an idea.
ReadWriteWeb
- Thursday, March 18, 2010
"Steal It" and Other Internal YouTube Emails from Viacom's Copyright Suit
Google's been quick off the mark to react to the unsealing of the court documents, and has a blog post defending its position and decrying Viacom's tactics already. Viacom is trying to portray that YouTube was built on the principles of making money from out-and-out piracy, and that Google was complicit in this when it bought the site. It's even suggesting Google engaged in "high-tech extortion" by refusing The U.S. District Court has just made public the documentation in the controversial Viacom vs.
Fast Company
- Thursday, March 18, 2010
Screw Monetization! It's All About Ethonomics at SXSW
How do we create a future we want to live in?" She asked important questions about how changing norms of privacy (such as the Google Buzz "privacy fail") might affect an undocumented immigrant, a gay member of the military, or a woman fleeing a battered husband. SXSW Interactive this year was all about ethonomics, or social media for social change. "How Danah Boyd asked in her keynote on "Privacy and Publicity in the Digital Age," based on her career's worth of astute investigations into young people's use of social media.
Fast Company
- Wednesday, March 17, 2010
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The Best from Informal Learning Flow
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The Web of Identities: Making Machine-Accessible People Data
In an email, Chris Bizer hinted that a payment model to charge for particular content may come in future.
Many ID providers, such as Google, Yahoo!, In the future, ID providers will loosen their connection to social applications and start taking over management of users' social attributes. ID In a previous article, we discussed the Web of data , which is about inter-linking open data sets and, thus, turning them into machine-accessible structured data. In this post, we'll draw a picture of how the emerging social Web could serve as a Web of identities, which is essentially
ReadWriteWeb
- Saturday, July 11, 2009
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Futures of the Internet
Earlier this year the Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Project and Elon University conducted research toward The Future of the Internet IV , the latest in their survey series , which began with Future of the Internet I – 2004 . This latest report includes guided input from subjects such as myself (a “thoughtful analyst,” they kindly said) on subjects pertaining to the Net’s future. We were asked to choose between alternative outcomes — “tension pairs” — and to explain our views. Here’s the whole list:
Doc Searls Weblog
- Wednesday, March 10, 2010
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Google Buzz re-invents Gmail
When I first heard about Google Buzz, I was worried that I might be seeing the birth of another "me too" product. But with the release of Buzz today, you can see how Google has taken the social media lessons of Twitter and applied them to their own core products.
I'm Google has also done a neat hack on the Twitter @name syntax, allowing you to prefix @ to an email address to have a message show up for sure in that user's Gmail Inbox. After all, everyone wants a piece of the Twitter halo. I'm especially fond of Gmail Buzz, which adds the power of asymmetric following
OReilly Radar
- Tuesday, February 9, 2010
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Seeing the Future of Mapping in Crimespotting
Google's Mapmaker project ( Radar posts ) has also been seeing more attention and just this week expanded into Mexico (I wonder how long until they bring Mapmaker to the US). Tags: geo google government20 stamen web2 This week Stamen Design released San Francisco Crimespotting. It's a crime map and notification system that allows for time and crime trend analysis.
OReilly Radar
- Friday, August 21, 2009
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Navigating the Future: Take Me to Bob
Google has just announced a free turn-by-turn navigation app for Android 2.0 Google Maps Navigation relies on Google's own mapping for routing you. In the promo video Google demonstrates that you can ask to be taken to "The King Tut exhibit". Google has a lot of data. in the US ( Radar post ). As with many navigation devices you can search Business Listings.
OReilly Radar
- Thursday, October 29, 2009
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25 Stretch Goals for Management
Mid-way through the event, Eric Schmidt, Google's CEO, stopped by and added his thoughts to the already bubbling cauldron of ideas:
In the future, they must facilitate innovation and change. Share the work of setting direction. Management systems must give more power to employees whose emotional equity is invested in the future rather than in the past. Expand the scope of employee autonomy. In May 2008, a group of renowned scholars and business leaders gathered in Half Moon Bay, California, with a simple goal: to lay out an agenda for reinventing management in the 21st century. The two-day event, organized by the Management Lab with support from McKinsey & Company, brought together veteran management experts such as CK Prahalad , Henry Mintzberg , and Peter Senge ; distinguished social commentators including Kevin Kelly , James Surowiecki and Shoshana Zuboff ; and a number of progressive CEOs, including Terri Kelly from WL Gore , Vineet Nayar from HCL Technologies
HarvardBusiness.org
- Tuesday, February 3, 2009
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Marissa Mayer On Charlie Rose: The Future Of Google, Future Of Search
Charlie Rose, who’s been focusing lately on Silicon Valley personalities, interviewed Google Vice President Marissa Mayer last night. In a long and broad ranging discussion, Marissa talks about the product development cycle at Google as well as the future of search and other key areas of technology.
On social networking, she admits Google’s Orkut has largely fallen flat (other than in Brazil and India). At one point in the interview Rose ask Mayer about Yahoo. Her diplomatic answer - an independent Yahoo is best for the web.
TechCrunch
- Friday, March 6, 2009
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Google Now Scanning RSS, Atom Feeds, May Experiment with Real-Time Protocols in Future
According to a post on Google's Webmaster Central blog , Google is now discovering web sites by automatically scanning RSS and Atom feeds. This new process will help Google more quickly identify web pages and will allow users to find new content in search results as soon as it goes live. While not exactly "real-time," using feeds to identify updates to websites is an arguably faster method than the traditional crawling techniques And Google may get even faster in the near future - the post also notes that the company may soon explore using mechanisms like the real-time protocol PubSubHubbub to identify updated items going forward.
ReadWriteWeb
- Friday, October 30, 2009
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Google's Sneaky Launch of Latitude's Location-Sharing API
Google has extended their location sharing service Latitude ( Radar post ) with the first set of Latitude Apps . These are just the first signs of Google's Latitude API. am hoping that in a future version Google adds OAuth and let's you turn on/off access to different apps. One of them is a blog badge for sharing your location publicly on a website. The other updates your GTalk status for sharing your location to your IM network.
OReilly Radar
- Wednesday, May 6, 2009
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If Google Wave Is The Future, Google Buzz Is The Present
See our live notes from today’s Google Buzz event here .
Google has a problem. Today, Google may have just solved their social problem.
Google Buzz is easily the company’s boldest attempt yet to build a social network. Despite having their hands in just about everything online, they’ve never been able to tackle what is a key part of the fabric of the web: social. Yes, they have Orkut and OpenSocial, but no one actually uses them.
TechCrunch
- Tuesday, February 9, 2010
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