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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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1034 Articles match "generation","Google"
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The Latest from Informal Learning Flow
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Staying Immune to the Hype Virus at SXSW
It's a lead generation world and they really don't want to give you anything until they've generated that lead with your precious e-mail address. The Twitter, Google and Facebook icons you see sprinkled across thousands of websites signal that a web site cares about integrating with the services we already use. Still, I'm constantly trying new ones for at least a few weeks, which is enough time to create content or I'm heading off this week to SXSW Interactive , the annual geekfest that remains the only place where I have actually danced with robots to the music of theremins .
HarvardBusiness.org
- Thursday, March 11, 2010
Hulu on the iPad? Not as Easy as it Sounds
Through the subscription model, Hulu could potentially generate enough revenue to keep the studios happy and maybe even encourage them to offer up more programming.
See: Google Voice banishment from the iPhone , for example).
In a recent interview, Hulu CEO Jason Kilar told technology reporter Om Malik that his company was "very bullish" on mobile, even going so far as to say "we will embrace every device." That's a funny statement, considering that the company has been touting that same sentiment for years but has yet to launch anything for mobile, be it an
ReadWriteWeb
- Wednesday, March 10, 2010
Expensify: Easy, Paperless Expense Tracking and Reporting
Tuesday night Google announced the creation of the Google Apps Marketplace , a place for third-party applications developers to share their work with the community of Google Apps users. Currently, businesses can use enterprise versions of Google's popular suite of web apps, and with the new Apps Marketplace, they can integrate outside applications into these services. One of the applications launching in the App Marketplace is Expensify , an online tool for gathering and reporting expenses.
Sponsor
ReadWriteWeb
- Wednesday, March 10, 2010
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The Best from Informal Learning Flow
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Continuous Brand Management for Generation 10:45
What will the "10:45 generation" expect? Google is everywhere; their friends are too; so is access to communication. Second, Generation 10:45 will desire transparent service. Tags: Branding Generational issues Technolog The Kaiser Foundation recently released a study documenting the astounding fact that 8-18 year olds in the United States have increased their media use from 8 hours and 33 minutes' worth of usage per day in 2004 to 10 hours and 45 minutes' worth in 2009. Regardless of whether you think this is bad news signaling the demise of our society, or good
HarvardBusiness.org
- Wednesday, February 3, 2010
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Let Gen Y Teach You Tech
Just look at a single photo of a rally on www.youtube.com/citzentube to see hundreds of hands raised in the air and holding a cell-phone camera to get a sense of how tech-savvy this generation is," says Steve Grove, head of news and politics for YouTube (now owned by Google). "Now Grove's expansive and enthusiastic take on YouTube is at the heart of Google's mission. This post was co-authored by Laura Sherbin and Karen Sumberg.
You You say you want a revolution?
HarvardBusiness.org
- Monday, June 29, 2009
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Tips for Building Next Generation Web 2.0 Applications
Expo next week in San Francisco on building next-generation Web 2.0 Next generation Web apps are also much more social than in the past with features such as friends lists, activity streams, and aggregation from other social sites as well as using that information to really learn about your customer like Facebook does [Paul Buchheit.] And new Web apps are leveraging powerful new development platforms like Ruby on Rails , grid environments like 3tera , or cloud computing platforms like Amazon's I've been spending a good amount of time the last several weeks getting ready for the workshop session I'll be giving at Web 2.0
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The Twitter Gold Mine & Beating Google to the Semantic Web
Twitter, potentially, has the ability to deliver unbelievably smart advertising; advertising that I actually want to see , and they have the ability to deliver search results far superior and more accurate to Google, putting Twitter in the running to beat Google in the latent quest to the semantic web. I send a tweet saying "I'm looking for a new car does anyone have any recommendations", I would be more than happy to see 'smart' user generated advertising recommendations based on my past tweets, mine the data of other people living Brooklyn who have tweeted about their car and
OReilly Radar
- Monday, December 8, 2008
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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 What's particularly cool is that the people you "follow" are auto-generated for you out of your email-based social network. After all, everyone wants a piece of the Twitter halo. I'm especially fond of Gmail Buzz, which adds the power of asymmetric following to email.
AWESOME
OReilly Radar
- Tuesday, February 9, 2010
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Make Google Real-Time With Twitter Search Add-on
Some people say that "the real-time web" could be the next generation of post-Google search . Google backers say that Google is already capable of indexing anything online mere moments after it's been published - but the user experience in search doesn't really feel "real-time" right now. Movable Type consultant Mark Carey came up with a simple solution this weekend that could change your use of Google more than anything else has in a while.
Social media tools have greatly increased not just the number of people posting content online but also the speed with which they are able to do so.
ReadWriteWeb
- Monday, March 2, 2009
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The iGoogle Meme Generator
There are thousands of Google gadgets you can add to your iGoogle pages, from email checkers, games, even (wow, over 70 ) Twitter clients. The framework for these gadgets is flexible, allowing most of them to work not only in iGoogle but also on your PC using Google Desktop and in Gmail as a labs plugin. The Google gadget called What's Popular came to our attention thanks to Steve Rubel's blog Micro Persusion . So when we write about a particular gadget, although it may not get as big as an iPhone app, there's still a lot of potential there.
His take is
ReadWriteWeb
- Saturday, April 25, 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 have generated a lot of press, but I haven't seen much discussion about the first sighting of the Latitude API.
On These are just the first signs of Google's Latitude API. 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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Google Warns of Privacy Issues on the Social Web
In a recent paper about social privacy Google researchers caution that the expansion of the social Web and our growing involvement with it is compromising our privacy while offering the false sense of security that we act in the privacy of our own social circle.
According to the paper, there are two primary ways in which lack of control over activity streams may compromise our privacy; the lack of control we have over events going into our activity streams (examples given are Facebook Beacon and coComment ), and the lack of control we have when it comes to who can see our activity
ReadWriteWeb
- Saturday, January 10, 2009
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Why Google Employees Quit
In 2008 Google HR set up a private Google Group to ask former employees why they left the company. The thread shows a brutal honesty about what it’s like to work at Google, at least from the point of view of employees who were unhappy enough to resign. One message stands out though in most of the posts - employees thought they were entering the promised land when they joined Google, and most of them were disappointed. We’ve been forwarded what appears to be authentic posts to the thread by a number of ex-Googlers, which we reprint below minus identifying information other than their first names.
TechCrunch
- Sunday, January 18, 2009
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