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708 items (708 unread) in 8 feeds
P2P Foundation
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Posted: July 20th, 2008, 10:00pm PDT
- Benefit Sharing - P2P Foundation
replaces profit sharing in the context of peer production
- Ubuntu (philosophy) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- Global Consciousness Project -- consciousness, group consciousness, mind
an engineering approach to the question whether sensitive electronic devices including random components might be affected by special states of consciousness, including strong emotions and directed intention
- Angelo Vermeulen: Translucent Futures | FoAM
Translucent Futures is an artistic/activist platform initiated by Angelo Vermeulen that deals with the increasing abrasion of civil liberties through ubiquitous, networked, miniaturized technology.
- Amazon.com: Behind the Blip: Essays on the Culture of Software: Matthew Fuller: Books
Behind the Blip looks at the many ways in which the ostensibly neutral user interfaces, search engines, “intelligent agents,” and word processors that are now part of our everyday life are actively reshaping the way we look at and interact with the wo
- Netroots Nation
You can watch all of the action (or at least all of our keynotes and panels) at netrootsnation.org, courtesy of ustream.tv.
- Techgnostic Institute · Becoming the content you want to see in the world
recognizing that the technology we create in the future is not material, but spiritual in nature. All of our material creations are complex reflections of ourselves.
- Digital Dharma - P2P Foundation
These technologies, as many human inventions, can be viewed as a product of the creative collective mind and therefore encoded with core lessons of human evolution and transformation.
- The Wikipedia "Naming Controversy" by Joshua Gay - Exploring Freedom with Matt Lee
On the English version of Wikipedia there is an article that discusses the naming controversy over whether one should call the operating system “GNU/Linux” or “Linux.”
- Monetising future content « Beyond Digital Media
The move away from subscription-based and ‘pay for content’ systems was questioned as potentially due to a weakness in current technology, rather than an intrinsic and systemic change in the media environment and consumer needs.
- TechNation Australia » Blog Archive » Future of Media 2008 Summary
conference review
- Exhibitionism drives the power of Web 2.0 - Trends in the Living Networks
- Web 2.0 and human resources – who should drive Web 2.0 initiatives in the organization? - Trends in the Living Networks
The UK Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development has recently launched a discussion paper titled Web 2.0 and human resources, designed to help HR professionals
- web20 and humanresources
report
- Future Exploration Network | Enterprise 2.0 Executive Forum
Enterprise 2.0 Executive Forum, held in Sydney on 19 February 2008, was a sellout event,
- Ad networks for the long tail: Technorati enters the fray - Trends in the Living Networks
Technorati, still the leading blog search engine, though far more precariously than before, is today launching an ad network
- The 20-year-old at heart of web's most anarchic and influential site | Technology | The Observer
this online community is building a reputation as a nursery of all that is weird and wacky and likely to be landing in your inbox tomorrow.
- Amazon.com: Informal Learning
It does a magnificent job of explaining how we actually learn. It turns much "conventional wisdom" on its head. It provides us a cornucopia of innovative ideas for how to stimulate a culture of learning and innovation throughout an organization.
- news - P2P Foundation
blog and news search engine
- The rise of professional-quality user generated media - Trends in the Living Networks
Despite cries from many that all user generated content is crap, that’s not true. It’s just that most user generated content is crap, and a small proportion is outstanding.
- Thinking about the future of museums: fourteen key issues - Trends in the Living Networks
the Powerhouse is specifically branded as a science and design museum, implicitly being about technology and it's impact on people's lives.
- MySpace embraces “data availability” – a major step forward to the Wide Open Web - Trends in the Living Networks
MySpace has just announced its Data Availability program, which includes adoption of a range of DataPortability standards, and data sharing with Ebay, Yahoo, and Twitter.
- Everywhere, JPG - magazines for the future
That's because the images and short stories that fill these magazines are submitted by its readers. Folks post their photos to a Web site, the site's readers vote on the best ones, then a small team of editors assembles its top choices into the magazines.
- Boston Globe covers the Extinction Timeline - Trends in the Living Networks
thoughts on the demise of newspapers, national currencies, public libraries, butchers, British royalty, and far more.
- extinction_timeline
things that will disappear, and when
- The evolution of blog ranking mechanisms (Trends in the Living Networks ranked #549 by Wikio) - Trends in the Living Networks
Wikio represents the new breed of media and blog aggregation, bringing together a range of features to improve access to breaking news.
- Go Big Always - Twitter: A two-way social computer?
Twitter is as smart and useful as the network of people you build within it. Forrester’s Jeremiah Owyang and Charlene Li like to call it their social computer. Stay connected to smart people, have a smart social computer.
- Rich to the rescue | csmonitor.com
Among the more than 8 million millionaires in the US, making a global difference is becoming 'the cool place to be.'
- Anti-Sai Baba Deceptions?
This page is my report on the Sai war. No doubt many other very similar stories could be told regarding the antagonistism between devotees and ex-devotees of any abusive guru.
- An Internet Bully. Joe (Gerald) Moreno
In the swirling debate and controversies about Sathya Sai Baba there is one recent development, peculiar to the Internet, which calls for special comment.
- Gerald Joe Moreno's infovandalism of Google search results
We tend to assume that information found online will be reliable. That Google provides unbiased search results, that Wikipedia is a decent alternative to Brittanica. My experience with the abusive and totalitarian Sai Baba follower Gerald "Joe" Moreno has