Web Two > Politics: Web 2.0
[IPITevents] Has there been a shift in political use of the internet and digital new media - a new web 2.0 politics based on participatory values? How do broader social, cultural, and economic shifts towards web 2.0 impact, if at all, on the contexts, the organizational structures, and the communication of politics and policy?
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[Intranet Benchmarking Forum] The practical issues of governing 2.0: But these issues should not become show stoppers within the organisation for letting Enterprise 2.0 tools in and letting employees out to participate in Web 2.0 sites. Rather, they should be handled through ensuring that intranet governance keeps pace with the changing intranet landscape.
[Lawrie's Blog] Eliciting Answers using web 2.0 tools.: It’s just that some people are using Web 2.0 because it’s there and because it’s a bandwagon, meaning a large volume of rubbish gets generated that doesn’t help connect people or do anything else; for example, I’m getting to the stage where Twitter and tweets are really annoying me as they’re used as buzz words by Nathan Barley noo media types who only use it because it’s ‘cool’!
[Boxes and Arrows] The Trouble With Web 2.0: these issues as they advise their clients on how to approach web strategy in a way that is best suited to their industries and/or business models (something we advise our clients on how to prepare for). I think Adam points out some of those other factors that might make adopting a new web strategy (in general) much easier said than done (multi-channel marketing plan implementation, legal ramifications of unsolicited editorial content, and the design impact of ad contracts, etc.) within that context.
[Social Media Club Austin] Web 2.0 in the morning: the Bryan Person Social Media Breakfast: Find out what a newcomer is passionate about offline, then help him or her find online content (blogs, forums, Twitter friends, videos) that matches that passion. It makes learning about the technology a lot more fun, and less intimidating.
[Connecting Librarian] The Hyperlinked Library - a presentation by Michael Stephens: If we don’t, we could lose both users and staff. What stories are these libraries telling? Showed signs banning phones - we should be banning the more concerning bad behaviour, not the technology. Things we do can now go around the world - with a phone and a quick picture, then to Flickr and a blog and its publicised wider than your local library. PLCMC - Rules for the Loft - Respect yourself, respect others, respect the space. Casey and Stephens - understand the people who are breaking the rules (Transparency column). Walk through the library with users eyes - a teen even.
[Jesus Creed] Civility 1: Lastly, and I don’t intend to sidetrack this back to the recent lengthy (though civil) discussion on gays, but I’ve left a church where ridicule, sarcasm and rudeness was the tone used to attack the current acceptance of gays in our culture. Ironically, at the same church, the pastor was exhorting us to gentle talk about another marginalized group here in the southwest - illegal/undocumented (pick your adjective) immigrants.
[agentgenius.com- national real estate opinion column] Engage Us!: This doesn’t make them bad or wrong but to some degree it does make them out of touch with the day to day problems of a working Realtor. Having the leadership seeing and listening to what real agents who list and sell houses for a living are thinking and saying will do more to enable leadership to keep their finger on the pulse of what is happening “out there”
[Man with no blog] Government 2.0: When in reality the speakers (except a few) are usually just coming to terms with the web itself. One does wonder maybe that these conferences need to consider allowing a few real people from industry as speakers and not usual conservative managerial list that have no concept of what is really happening.
[blog.vortexdna.com] The inevitable outcome of the infonami: Millions of individuals with something to say were aching for the opportunity to self-publish, blog, record, distribute, blather, yap and holler, and the fall of the Old Media Wall led to a mass riot of people scrambling over its rubble, elbowing each other in the rush to be first into the holy land of disintermediated ‘fame’.
[SocialSphere] The Cost of Ignoring Web 2.0 - A Case Study of Lost Opportunity: This whole thing is a fad.” To this we usually respond with a non Facebook Web 2.0 personal example. Mine is often around an experience I had recently trying to find after market running boards for my Lexus 400h SUV by looking for a user group on the manufacturers web site.
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