Clever ways to honor mom this Mother's Day

Social Networking for Staff Development

SocialText's Ross Mayfield quotes SAP's Shai Agassi today in a private Q&A where the enterprise vendor's giant Software Developer Network is discussed.  Agassi says the online community gets 500,000 visitors per month, represents an "aggregation of knowledge that is second to none," and is like the slashdot of the sprawling SAP world.  Agassi says vendors in India are sending scores of new employees to spend their first three months on the site to learn.  Average time for a question to be answered is 30 minutes, the company is only creating 20% of the content and there's a reputation system for participants.  That's hot.

Mayfield points out that this system is just for software developers and Socialtext is creating an expanded wiki to serve the entire SAP user community.  Imagine if other communities of practice and interest could harness this model.  The challenge, I imagine, will be to get less technical folks over the learning hump.

 I think stories like this can be added to the list of answers to the argument that social networking sites aren't educational and should be blocked from schools.  That's not a stretch, is it?

Enterprise wikis for knowledge capture

InternetNews.com has a long story about a new enterprise wiki service called BizWiki from CustomerVision that includes some interesting discussion about enterprise wiki use in general.  Some highlights from the article:

It's all about capturing knowledge before oldsters retire - retaining intellectual capital and dynamically building a content bank.  Mass retirements may be right around the corner and organizations need to find effective ways to prevent devastating knowledge loss.

One Bank exec says he's using the wiki to respond to e-mail questions more efficiently.

"Financial services entities need quick, clear and concise responsiveness to electronic customer inquiries; these cannot take days to be responded to, nor can they build up into a project," he said in an e-mail to the author of the article.

Continue reading Enterprise wikis for knowledge capture

Movie production by wiki

Heather Green has an interesting piece on the use of a Jotspot wiki in the production of the new Morgan Freeman, Bruce Willis movie "Lucky Number Slevin." (Warning:  movie's site is annoyingly media rich and almost ate my browser.)

Gotta admit, the first thing I would have edited is that awful title.  But it wasn't the important parts of the movie that were subject of wiki-ization, it was the production documentation like contracts and budget details.  If the movie is a critical success, perhaps it will be a humorous addition to our growing list of wiki case studies.

 If wiki case studies are your thing, don't miss the 33 wikis profiled in 33 days - it's about half way over already!

Wikicities gets $4 mill in VC funds, changes name to Wikia

This is a couple of days old, so maybe it's only news to me - but Jimmy Wales' private wiki initiative has received $4 million in venture capital from a very hip crowd of investors.  Many people love the MediaWiki system that Wikipedia runs on.  I think others find it too complicated.

 Wikis are interesting, but I can't believe they are going to be exciting enough to be funded by advertising.    I like Wikis a lot, so I hope all these hip investors will be proven correct.  I'm not sure I can see truly mass audiences editing pages and reading edited pages on very specific topics.  I hope I'm wrong, though!
Found via alarm:clock

33 wikis to be highlighted

A company called EastWikkers is highlighting 33 different wikis over the next 33 days and explaining what kinds of innovations and best practices can be learned from each one.  A very, very cool project.  Check out, for example, their profile of This Might Be a Wiki, a fan site for They Might Be Giants.

Not only is this a great way to explore the world of community editable web sites, it's also a pretty good exercise in company promotion through fostering discourse by EastWikkers.  Three cheers for their understanding of new media put into action.

Thanks to Ross Mayfield for this link. 

Chemists who love Wikipedia

Chemistry World has posted an interesting article about a group of chemists who are deeply engaged in Wikipedia and believe that it is a very valuable source of information.  One went so far as to say that Wikipedia could become the main source of chemical information within 5 to 10 years.

Martin Walker, assistant professor of organic chemistry at the State University of New York at Potsdam says "a general rule on Wikipedia is that an article that has been heavily edited and around for a long time is usually pretty good, if it hasn’t, it may be flawed."

Continue reading Chemists who love Wikipedia

Reuters releases a wiki for financial terms

The innovative folks over at the Reuters Labs have just opened to the public a wiki glossary of financial terms.  Ross Mayfield wrote a very philosophical post about it today, though it uses Mediawiki and not Mayfield's SocialText software.  He points out that the experiment is poised to avoid the key mistake of the LA Times editorial wiki because this one built a community of dedicated users behind a firewall before going public.  The question remains whether a glossary of terms is really well suited for a wiki format.

So now Reuters has a wiki, the Washington Post uses Technorati to integrate blog posts linking to their online stories, and PR Newswire has del.icio.us baked in.  Kinda makes the NYTimes paid subscriber firewall seem all the more ridiculous.  Perhaps that's why a former NYTimes ombudsman said this week that he's concerned that blogs may soon overtake the mainstream media.

Anyone else have favorite examples of mainstream media integrating with Web 2.0?

BlogHer
Categories
A9 (0)
aggregators (21)
AJAX (4)
AOL (1)
APIs (4)
attention (3)
blogging (39)
citizen media (20)
cluetrain (2)
collaboration (9)
companies (17)
conferences (1)
Creative Commons (3)
dating sites (0)
developers (1)
digital music (2)
DRM (1)
e-commerce (4)
email (2)
file-sharing (1)
folksonomy (4)
gaming (4)
Google (9)
Identity 2.0 (1)
IM (9)
industry (2)
internet radio (0)
KM (1)
lawsuits (1)
long tail (0)
mapping (12)
mashups (10)
microformats (2)
Microsoft (2)
MMOs (4)
mobile (4)
moblogging (1)
MoSoSo (0)
MSM (9)
MSN (0)
music services (2)
nptech (6)
on-demand media (0)
open source (2)
OPML (4)
paradigm shifts (11)
photo-sharing (3)
podcasting (10)
portable media (4)
remix culture (2)
reputation (3)
RSS (32)
Ruby on Rails (1)
search engines (11)
SEM (0)
social bookmarking (11)
social media (7)
social networking (18)
social news (4)
social software (11)
startups (3)
tagging (14)
ubicomp (0)
VCs (4)
videoblogging (11)
VoIP (6)
web 2.0 (26)
web services (18)
web standards (0)
webOS (0)
wikis (7)
wireless media (5)
Yahoo (7)

RESOURCES

RSS NEWSFEEDS

Powered by Blogsmith

Other Weblogs Inc. Network blogs you might be interested in: