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10 Twitter Apps for Nonprofits

Nonprofit Tech for Good

on their Twitter avatars, and then spread them throughout the Twitterverse. 12seconds : 12seconds allows users to easily record videos with your laptop camera or cellphone, and then upload them to your 12 seconds video channel in order to easily post them to Twitter. channel/BigCatRescue. Favstar.fm : Favstar.fm

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33 Fun, Useful, and Totally Random Resources for Nonprofits

Nonprofit Tech for Good

A handy little tool when designing a YouTube channel, Twitter profile, MySpace page, blog, etc. This tool turns your smartphone or desktop computer into an audio recorder that allows you to easily share audio messages and podasts with your supporters. Based in the U.K., 2d Code is a must read for the early adopters.

Fun 276
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22 Fun, Useful, and Totally Random Resources for Nonprofits

Nonprofit Tech for Good

A handy little tool when designing a YouTube channel, Twitter profile, MySpace page, blog, etc. This website allows users to build visually appealing interactive timelines using video, audio, images, location, social media, and timestamps. A website that allows you to create an image with a mosaic of your Twitter Followers’ avatars.

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The Future of the Nonprofit Office: Working from Home v2.0

NTEN

FaceTime allows two iPhone -- and soon, next-generation iPad and iPod Touch -- users to have a streaming video and audio conversation while both are connected to a wireless network. Look for mobile providers to combine these ideas to enable a virtual meeting environment with video, audio, whiteboard, and presentations from multiple attendees.

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What's the opportunity cost when a nonprofit blocks employees from using social network sites during work hours?

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

We created a wiki full of sample avatars, banners, widgets, videos, audio clips, etc. We've used our online channels to keep the public updated on the campaign. that are easy to grab and use. The campaign's home page has all the links you'd need to help out.

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What are your most useful synchronous online facilitation practices?

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

But there is also a trust issue too -- particularly if you don't know all the avatars in real life. I've always had chat as a back channel to a conference call and used it to summarize key points as a sort of electronic flip chart. Of course, you'd need the aural channel for it to work.

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The One-Look Virus and Immersive Environments for Teaching and Learning

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Six worlds, avatars, lots of chat and even then screens receiving video for. web geeks and cardboard cutout avatars. There are better and more efficient channels for collaboration, conference calls for one. It works okay for getting things done if you use it as a back channel to say a conference call or a real life event.