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Google +: The Trade Off Between Privacy Needs, Community, and Social Context

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Let’s consider the list of most used forms: Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, Google+ (assuming all continues to go well), LinkedIn, FourSquare, Gowalla, StumbleUpon, Tumblr, and your own site. This means choices will be made. Some will spread the peanut butter a little thinner, trying to make it stretch further.

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The Perils of Popularity

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Rashmi illustrates how social networks have and are evolving over the past five years from the perspective of an information architect/interaction designer/cognitive psychologist. The last section of the slide show offers ten lessons on social design - for interface designers. " That's why the article grabbed my attention.

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WeAreMedia Live Workshop: Reflections

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

understand how to design and implement a social media experiment that enables listening, participation, content creation, or community building and is appropriate and realistic. One of the instructional design flaws was that we assumed that all participants would be ready to write a draft social strategy as homework for the first night.

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See What’s Out There » Blog Archive » NTEN Does Web 2.0

See3

Home • About Us Mission Team News Partners Careers • Services Overview Interactive Marketing Video Web Design and Development • Clients Clients List Client Login • Resources Overview Events YouTube for Nonprofits Guide to Online Video Video FAQs Our Blog • Contact POSTED BY Daniel Hartman MAR 27, 2008 NTEN Does Web 2.0

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How To Think Like A Nonprofit Social Marketing Genius: What's Your Brilliant Thought?

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Buzz tools include FriendFeed, Twitter, StumbleUpon, and Digg - and of course you add many others to this category that are found in other categories. His tweets reveal him as a renaissance thinker, not just a narrow-minded tech geek. .

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Brooklyn Clicks with the Crowd: What Makes a Smart Mob?

Museum 2.0

The in-house team for Click included two curators, one interpreter, one artist/designer, and two web developers, but the person managing the whole project (Shelley Bernstein) is from Information Systems, not curatorial. In this way, Click is a powerful example of the "venue as content platform" definition of 2.0.

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Interview with Jonathon Colman: Social Media Secrets from a Green Geek

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

His team includes writers, designers, and web producers. s taken us a long time to build up credible, authoritative profiles and groups on sites like Care2 , Digg , Facebook , Flickr , and StumbleUpon. ??? StumbleUpon. StumbleUpon referred nearly 17,000 people to nature.org this past January, and what most marketers don???t