links for 2008-10-14
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Robert Scoble is one of the most prolific and intelligent of bloggers. But, as he points out in this piece, blogging is a small part of the “job” – a rounded profile of listening and sharing via Google Reader, FriendFeed et al are the marks of a truly hooked up Web 2.0 professional.
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Web 2.0 is dead? And no one told me? I didn’t even get an invite to the wake.
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Interesting piece showing the difference between a personal blog (”one of the most effective manifestations of marketing I could have produced for myself”) with what corporations and large companies do in the more conventional arena
links for 2008-10-13
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Tom Harris lost his position as Rail Minister at the Department for Transport in the recent reshuffle. Here he writes about how he found out.
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The comments here are wider than just social media implementation and can be taken as a good discussion of the unique nature of working with, for and in the public sector as a whole. Certainly rings a few familiar bells for me.
links for 2008-10-12
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Hmm. Somehow I can’t imagine even the power of Children in Need getting Tom Baker and Christopher Eccleston to agree to this. The others – Peter Davison, Colin Baker, Sylvestor McCoy, maybe Paul McGann and of course David Tennant – I can see being up for it.
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With the huge impact and visibility of the Robert Peston blog during the current financial crisis, it raises the spectre of unfiltered/unedited remarks resulting in another Andrew Gilligan episode …
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I confess, I didn’t have a clue about ‘Twitter-quette’ – although fortunately I seem to have fitted all of the ones Paul outlines here, with a bit of prodding from someone on the bio/web page front. In fact it’s the moment I overhauled my blog to actually say something about me and not just F1. But the big question is – should you tweet a ‘high’ to the new object of your affection?
links for 2008-10-11
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