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Welcome to the new blog!

Zen and the Art of Nonprofit Technology

I’ve moved it off of Typepad, and onto Wordpress. Choosing a theme Migrate the posts and comments (exporting it from typepad, importing into wordpress – all web gui based, very easy. The feed should stay the same. If, for some reason, yours stops working, try this feed. { I’d recommend it to anyone.

Typepad 100
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Varied and sundry

Zen and the Art of Nonprofit Technology

I did a webinar for NTEN on it – ReadyTalk worked just fine. I decided to move both of my blogs off of typepad, and to other platforms. I’ll keep you posted on URLs and feeds. { Flash (and, therefore, YouTube) is working, as is Java. Also, I’ll be moving this blog soon – probably next week.

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What OpenSocial Means

Zen and the Art of Nonprofit Technology

OpenSocial is a set of APIs that handle three different kinds of user data: profiles, social graph (who your friends are) and activities (the stuff of the Facebook news feeds.) Update: MySpace, SixApart (LiveJournal, Typepad and the newish social networking blog platform Vox), and Bebo have now all joined OpenSocial.

Ning 100
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Screencast: Using Widgets to Build Community on Blogs Featured on NTEN Blog

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Original photo remixed from flickr photo by Stinky Peter Screencast in conjunction with NTEN View the screencast as higher quality flash file -takes longer to download here. My screencast on widgets is featured in this month's NTEN newsletter in a section pointing to " How To Build Online Community." I'm so excited!

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Measuring Your Blog's Outcomes and Use of Other Social Media Tools

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

I've been trying to collect screen captures and stories about nonprofit web analytics for a screencast on Google Analytics for NTEN. Even more don't come at all -- they come from feed readers (as you would know). Unique Visitors & Feed Subscribers). via Kevin Gamble (see larger here ). But the stats. are very different.

Measure 50
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The Real Housewives of Social Media: Cooking up Recipes for Nonprofit Success

NTEN

They built an iGoogle dashboard and fed RSS feeds based on information they were seeking in online social networks. Then, grab the search RSS feed and add it to your iGoogle. We used this technique for DIGG, forums, Twitter, Bing, and Google and then set up various searches along with monitoring of certain Twitter feeds.