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Developers at the BBC and Reuters have picked up on the potential for this. They are working on applications to monitor Twitter, the Twitter search engine Summize, and other social-media services – Flickr, YouTube, Facebook – for news catchwords such as “
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A long (33 minute) uncut and quite casual interview that the Macedonian IT portal did with me whilst I was at Glocal 2.0 in Skopje. I talk about cornfields, cybersex, online community management and social media. Not in that order.
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I love the way Jemima deals with the comments on her Guardian posts: @SinTrenton: I used that pic for the word ‘sabotage’. I suppose I could’ve used the Google logo like every other darn post about search but I chose something different.
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Blog of a doctoral student at SUNY who “openly wishes to become a social cyborg” – had a look around and am bookmarking so I can pop back in although I’m not sure whether it will end up in my RSS list
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…”an elaborate discussion of the emergent themes from survey responses”
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“Fully 90% of business forays into virtual worlds fail because organizations focus on the technology rather than on understanding the needs of the employees using it, Gartner said”
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Another example of the BBC setting up “listening devices” for content offsite: “lists the top 1,000 artists based on discussions crawled from Bebo, Last.fm, Google Groups, iTunes, MySpace and YouTube…”
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Hello Robin, thanks for looking me up. For the sake of efficiency (and honesty), I’d recommend you not subscribe to my blog. It’s a mixture of personal, pedagogical, cyberculture, social media and social cyborg-ing, so it might get too noisy since it’s not genre specific. That’s just how I “roll”. If anything specific develops, you’ll hear folks recommending specific posts. ;)
P.S. This prompts me to think I should start a new RSS feed for genre specific news so professionals like yourself could follow. What do you think?