The Macrosite for News, Analysis and Opinion about the Future of the Internet
Content tagged with Social Networking
posted in November 2007
All (144)           Blog Posts (18)           Comments (126)          
All
Comment: Re: work for parents - gbiczok - 11/30/2007
Comment: Re: People are people. - TNT - 11/30/2007
Comment: Disagree - DavidH - 11/30/2007
Comment: Re: People stink - Parry Aftab - 11/29/2007
Comment: Re: People stink - Jasper Sluijs - 11/29/2007
Comment: Re: People stink - Parry Aftab - 11/29/2007
Viral Distribution’s Coming of Age
Simeon Simeonov  
11/29/2007   2 comments
Businesses that develop the capability to truly leverage their brands through viral distribution to millions of consumers on the Internet will have a formidable advantage
Comment: work for parents - Mashka - 11/29/2007
Comment: Re: People stink - hounhosp - 11/29/2007
Comment: Cyberbully? - TNT - 11/29/2007
Comment: Re: People stink - experiences - 11/29/2007
Comment: Re: People stink - Parry Aftab - 11/29/2007
Comment: People stink - Nicole Ferraro - 11/29/2007
Taking Cyberbullying Seriously
Parry Aftab  
11/29/2007   25 comments
It can cause emotional devastation, suicide, and murder – and it may be criminal
Comment: Re: Reactionists - JulianaT - 11/28/2007
Comment: Re: Reactionists - Nicole Ferraro - 11/28/2007
Comment: Reactionists - JulianaT - 11/28/2007
Comment: Web 2.0 - Collaboration. - Big_Al - 11/28/2007
Comment: Quick Comment - frattaro - 11/27/2007
Comment: Close Ties - Jim Bengier - 11/27/2007
Traditional Media: Not Dead Yet
Editor's Blog  
11/27/2007   7 comments
The traditional media industry is not dead; it is starting to benefit from what Web 2.0 has to offer
Comment: Mediacy and Authority - kurniawan - 11/26/2007
Comment: Social ads - Nicole Ferraro - 11/26/2007
Cyber Monday: Who Cares?
Editor's Blog  
11/26/2007   2 comments
Fifty-four percent of employees have come to work today fully prepared to do nothing but score some online shopping deals
Comment: Deeply suspicious ! - experiences - 11/26/2007
Why the Future of Online Advertising Is About Identity
Rohit Bhargava  
11/26/2007   8 comments
In the future, online ads will incorporate identity and interests in a way that current targeted ads cannot
Comment: ... - Gabriel Kent - 11/25/2007
Comment: An eternal question - Mashka - 11/24/2007
Comment: A Case for meMe - Gabriel Kent - 11/24/2007
Comment: Re: Trend analysis - Rayno - 11/23/2007
Comment: Re: Overfitting - Rayno - 11/23/2007
Close Ties
The Big Report  
11/23/2007   7 comments
Lessons from FedEx, Schwab, eBay, and others on the customer-driven Web economy
Is Web 2.0 a Culture Killer?
Chris Minnick  
11/23/2007   22 comments
Some insight into Andrew Keen's anti-Web 2.0 book, 'The Cult of the Amateur'
Comment: Re: Trend analysis - peterbowman - 11/21/2007
Comment: Trend analysis - Ken Trough - 11/21/2007
Comment: Overfitting - flowersjustin - 11/21/2007
Blogs in Crisis
Editor's Blog  
11/21/2007   6 comments
Social networking may be starting to crash the feel-good atmosphere of blogs
Comment: Re: Substance - Insultant - 11/21/2007
Comment: Re: Substance - kurniawan - 11/20/2007
Comment: Re: Substance - Insultant - 11/20/2007
Comment: Substance - kurniawan - 11/20/2007
Comment: Re: humph - M Hulot - 11/20/2007
Comment: humph - Insultant - 11/20/2007
A Meshing of Minds
Editor's Blog  
11/20/2007   5 comments
My experience with meshminds.com, a new social networking site for creative types
Comment: Weird in fact it is - maryxmas - 11/20/2007
Comment: Hmmm.....social media. - Saman - 11/20/2007
Comment: virtual friends - M Hulot - 11/15/2007
In Social Networks We Trust
Editor's Blog  
11/15/2007   7 comments
Most Web users trust social network recommendations over traditional advertisements. Somewhere in the distance, Facebook yelps, 'Whooopie!'
Comment: Re: Article - Benjamin Melki - 11/14/2007
Comment: Re: Article - Nicole Ferraro - 11/14/2007
Comment: Article - Benjamin Melki - 11/14/2007
Befaft.com: The Facebook of Faceplants
Editor's Blog  
11/14/2007   5 comments
Seek the approval of strangers online regarding your impending rhinoplasty
Comment: Re: Used and abused - burn0050 - 11/13/2007
Comment: Re: Really? - Nicole Ferraro - 11/12/2007
Comment: Re: Really? - Mathew Ingram - 11/12/2007
Comment: Re: Really? - mcp111 - 11/12/2007
Comment: Re: Golf Wins - af412 - 11/12/2007
Comment: Refreshing if naive - Insultant - 11/12/2007
Comment: Re: Really? - Mathew Ingram - 11/12/2007
Comment: Really? - Nicole Ferraro - 11/12/2007
Facebook’s No-Pseudonym Policy Is Short-Sighted
Mathew Ingram  
11/12/2007   8 comments
On the Internet, no one knows you’re not an 18th century social satirist
Comment: Used and abused - Nicole Ferraro - 11/11/2007
Did Facebook Do Its Legal Homework?
Editor's Blog  
11/9/2007   3 comments
Asking Facebook users for their permission to 'get noticed' in a social ad is one thing. Having the user 'get paid' for appearing in the ad is another thing
Internet Eats Island
Stephen Saunders  
11/8/2007   19 comments
With the click of a mouse an ancient (if tiny) culture is wiped off the face of the planet by the all powerful Internet. What hath Vint Cerf wrought?!
Comment: Good question! - Maggie Fox - 11/7/2007
Comment: 15 Minutes of Jerkdom - M Hulot - 11/7/2007
Facebook's Sociable Sales Plan
Editor's Blog  
11/7/2007   2 comments
Facebook unveils its new advertising plan and turns its users into a band of marketing monkeys
The Customer-Driven Economy: Negative Is the New Positive
Maggie Fox  
11/7/2007   4 comments
The economy has always been consumer-driven, but social media has flattened the communications playing field
Comment: Can we help the geezers? - TNT - 11/7/2007
Social Networking for Geezers
Editor's Blog  
11/6/2007   5 comments
Settling in at SAGA Zone, the social networking site for the 'over the hills'
Comment: Re: I found MySpace - Insultant - 11/2/2007
Comment: Global Collaboration: - Claire - 11/1/2007
OpenSocial: Facebook's Nemesis?
Editor's Blog  
11/1/2007   4 comments
As Google's OpenSocial opens up social networks to application developers, has Facebook reason to shake in its proverbial boots?




a moderated blogosphere of internet experts
David Weldon
David Weldon   5/22/2013   8 comments
In the 1970 science fiction thriller Colossus: The Forbin Project, two giant supercomputers from the United States and Soviet Union secretly join forces to take control of the collective nuclear might of the two countries. In the film, the two machines discover each other's existence, communicate back-and-forth, share their collective data, and cut their human creators out of the process. It is the ultimate example of machine-to-machine communications, or M2M.
Jon Carter
Jon Carter   5/21/2013   18 comments
most recent post: Joanne Goldman... Thanks, Mitch.  
Paul Korzeniowski
The smartphone market reached a significant milestone, a breakthrough that may cause vendors to celebrate but could strain the capabilities of IT service desks.
Maria Korolov
Maria Korolov   5/21/2013   15 comments
In the fall of 2011, around 160,000 students in 190 countries enrolled in a Stanford-sponsored online course about artificial intelligence. About 23,000 completed the course and got certificates, including 248 who got a perfect score. The university offered the same course the old-fashioned way to students sitting in Stanford classrooms. None of the those students got a perfect score.
Joe Stanganelli
As Mitch Wagner discussed today, Yahoo is acquiring Tumblr. The big Internet debate at the moment is whether Tumblr will be good or bad for Yahoo. Regardless of their stances on the future of Yahoo itself, many claim that Yahoo will somehow ruin Tumblr.
IETV: the thinkerNet on film
5
of
Kim Davis
Big-Data Can’t Always Sell Wine

5|21|13   |   2:23   |   3 comments


Whole Foods Global Wine Purchaser Doug Bell told me about some of the constraints on using analytics in the US wine market.
Paul J. Fleuranges
Digital Signage Keeps NYC Subway Straphangers on Track

5|6|13   |   3:51   |   No comments


New York's Metropolitan Transit Authority is conducting a pilot test of digital kiosks to guide subway users to where they want to go more efficiently and at lower cost.
Kim Davis
Fast Forward to the Future

4|23|13   |   2:29   |   20 comments


A look back at tech writing in the 90s makes us wonder where enterprise IT will be 20 years from now.
Mitch Wagner
Google Launches Its Most Depressing Service Yet

4|15|13   |   2:59   |   10 comments


Google's new Inactive Account Manager lets you control how Google disposes of your accounts when you die.
Second Shooter
Argument Over Top-Level Domains Is 'Stupid'

4|11|13   |   2:07   |   3 comments


The whole Amazon.reader debate is a double-stupid. It's stupid to think that there's any e-book buyer who doesn't know Amazon's URL, and it was stupider to let ICANN launch the whole free-form TLD initiative to start with.
Kim Davis
Ladies, Your Tablet Awaits

3|21|13   |   2:22   |   37 comments


ePad Femme is the world’s first tablet “made exclusively for women.”
Wisdom of the Big Chair
NFC Moves Into the Mainstream

3|20|13   |   2:16   |   No comments


While NFC's original goal was to enhance mobile commerce applications, it is finding its way into a number of other uses, which is creating both opportunity as well as challenges for IT departments.
Wisdom of the Big Chair
Integrating Security Into Your Cloud Contract

3|19|13   |   3:35   |   No comments


Enterprises would like to move to cloud computing but are hesitant because they are concerned about providers’ ability to secure company data. Here are some tips that help to ensure that if breaches occur, the business is not left holding the bag.
Brian Baron
How Edmunds.com Collects Customer Information

3|18|13   |   1:15   |   No comments


Edmunds separates customers into segments based on the info it collects on its site and from partners, and uses that to push out custom content, said Brian Baron, director of business analytics for Edmunds.com, at Predictive Analytics Innovation Summit.
Brian Baron
How Edmunds.com Uses Analytics to Customize Site

3|14|13   |   0:47   |   No comments


The automotive website uses propensity modeling to target ads and customer registration forms, said Brian Baron, director of business analytics for Edmunds.com, at Predictive Analytics Innovation Summit.
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Keep Critical Data With a Knowledge Management System
Taimoor Zubair
Fortune 500 companies lose at least
$31.5 billion a year by failing to share knowledge. A Knowledge Management System (KMS) can help companies significantly reduce these costs.

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M2M: Rise of the Machines? Not Yet
David Weldon
In the 1970 science fiction thriller
Colossus: The Forbin Project, two giant supercomputers from the United States and Soviet Union secretly join forces to take control of the collective nuclear might of the two countries. In the film, the two machines discover each other's existence, communicate back-and-forth, share their collective data, and cut their human creators out of the process. It is the ultimate example of machine-to-machine communications, or M2M.

CLICK FOR MORE
M2M: Rise of the Machines? Not Yet
David Weldon
In the 1970 science fiction thriller
Colossus: The Forbin Project, two giant supercomputers from the United States and Soviet Union secretly join forces to take control of the collective nuclear might of the two countries. In the film, the two machines discover each other's existence, communicate back-and-forth, share their collective data, and cut their human creators out of the process. It is the ultimate example of machine-to-machine communications, or M2M.

CLICK FOR MORE
M2M: Rise of the Machines? Not Yet
David Weldon
In the 1970 science fiction thriller
Colossus: The Forbin Project, two giant supercomputers from the United States and Soviet Union secretly join forces to take control of the collective nuclear might of the two countries. In the film, the two machines discover each other's existence, communicate back-and-forth, share their collective data, and cut their human creators out of the process. It is the ultimate example of machine-to-machine communications, or M2M.

CLICK FOR MORE
M2M: Rise of the Machines? Not Yet
David Weldon
In the 1970 science fiction thriller
Colossus: The Forbin Project, two giant supercomputers from the United States and Soviet Union secretly join forces to take control of the collective nuclear might of the two countries. In the film, the two machines discover each other's existence, communicate back-and-forth, share their collective data, and cut their human creators out of the process. It is the ultimate example of machine-to-machine communications, or M2M.

CLICK FOR MORE
Yahoo Needs to Break Tumblr in Order to Fix It
Joe Stanganelli
As
Mitch Wagner discussed today, Yahoo is acquiring Tumblr. The big Internet debate at the moment is whether Tumblr will be good or bad for Yahoo. Regardless of their stances on the future of Yahoo itself, many claim that Yahoo will somehow ruin Tumblr.

CLICK FOR MORE