89 Articles match "2010","People","Wiki"

The Latest from the Nonprofit Technology Community

Thursday, July 29, 2010
Some of these ideas include: Ask people for advice and favors.  People like to help. . Host online chats and events where people can talk about a specific topic for a longer stretch of time. The other day I posted on how to blog when your industry or occupation hasn't embraced the whole social media thing.
 
Tuesday, July 27, 2010
Be a teacher --Use your blog to show people how to do different things. Contact key people in your industry or profession and ask if you can do a blog interview. Contact people outside of your industry to get their ideas and perspectives. If you're looking for some ideas on types of blog posts to write, try this wiki.
 
Wednesday, July 21, 2010
Whatever it is, we need to identify the people/roles and resources needed to make it successful. In CTX’s eyes it is the engagement, aggregation, or the weaving of people and ideas, questions and answers. connecting people in a way that recognizes/respects many hats and real context. Who is the community? Next steps.
 

The Best from the Nonprofit Technology Community

Categories Art/Media Best Practices FRC Nonprofit Personal Technology Telephony/Wireless Venture Capital Women Archives March 2010 December 2009 November 2009 October 2009 August 2009 May 2009 April 2009 March 2009 February 2009 January 2009 More. In particular, how can you measure the health of a wiki community?These Christine (.net)
is one person or organization pushing content out to many people via websites and e-mail newsletters. Web 2.0 = Blogs, wikis, and social networking sites. People can post comments and converse with your organization in public for all to see. Web 2.0 and Web 3.0 Web 1.0 The donation process is not interactive or public. Web 3.0
Home About Me Subscribe Zen and the Art of Nonprofit Technology Thoughtful and sometimes snarky perspectives on nonprofit technology Wiki Syntax madness November 26, 2007 As most people deeply imbedded in Web 2.0, I am an avid Wiki user. have two other wikis ( a public and private wiki) that are in Mediawiki, on my web host.
Additions: Photos, wikis, video, search, email notifications, and chat. The following were both collaboratively edited by dozens of people across the internet: Alternatives to Ning Spreadsheet. Ning , the leading free social media platform provider has recently lost not only its CEO, but also about 40 percent of its workforce.
Over at the WeAreMedia Wiki, we have a " Expertise Map " where people self-selected to add their names and in a number of cases share their expertise by contributing to the wiki.   I'd like to see a list of people who work as social media strategists as part of their job at a nonprofit or a community manager. 
For the most part, I agree with the way the crowds voted – but, given that people were able to submit and vote at the same time, it means some groups only submitted on the very last day, not leaving much time for votes. The value of the tool grows as people value the tool and add more content.  Crowdsourcing for Social Change.
hosted a webinar called "Collaborate with Wikis" which was recorded and can be accessed here. interviewed David Beall from SFHomeless.net and Beth Duttlinger from Alliance Library System who shared information about their experience creating and using a wiki. On Wednesday, Techsoup Talks! Tools
These included an English-Creole dictionary phone app, tools for tagging photographs of displaced people, texting tools that could be coordinated with the Ushahidi text alert system, and several tagging and updating efforts of satellite imagery and maps. Lucy Bernholz, Blueprint R+D. on our own servers or desktops.
These included an English-Creole dictionary phone app, tools for tagging photographs of displaced people, texting tools that could be coordinated with the Ushahidi text alert system, and several tagging and updating efforts of satellite imagery and maps. Lucy Bernholz, Blueprint R+D. on our own servers or desktops.
It doesn't have to be simple or designed for idiots - I work with very smart, technically capable people. Don't want tickets/case management, don't want wikis, don't want blogs, don't want "here's what I'm eating for lunch" status updates - need to be able to to tailor interface to only what we need/want. I am tearing my hair out.