B’musings

February 26, 2009

Twitter for research?

Filed under: Social Networking — Mike Burford @ 3:36 pm

I’d read a few comments in the past about searching Twitter but didn’t think much about it until reading Anthony Pisani’s comment on Eric Mack’s “Twitter as a tool for Personal Knowledge Management” post.  Eric raises some good points as I hadn’t thought of using Twitter for research before, and Andy makes a really good comment in response.  But Twitter Search is helpful for identifying the people who Twitter about something I’m interested in, then checking out their blogs/websites for anything they may have posted about the topic.  Okay, so maybe I’m way out of date and everybody knows this already.  :)

February 5, 2009

Brilliant! The Lotus Connections installation step-through I’ve been looking for!

Filed under: Lotus,Social Networking — Mike Burford @ 6:14 pm

My attempt at installing a demo/practice Lotus Connections environment has been a fairly haphazard affair as I try to find the time to work on it in between work and family commitments.  I invariably end up spending whatever time I can cobble together struggling through infocentres and numerous websites trying to work out how to get Websphere, DB2, TDI etc installed, patched, configured, and playing nicely together so that Connections will work when I finally get around to installing it.  I’m a Notes Admin with very limited to almost non-existent experience with Websphere et al, so it’s been a really challenging process trying to get my head around everything that needed to be done.  In fact, a couple of times I got pretty close to giving up and going back to the pilot installation.

So you can imagine my relief – bordering on sheer excitement – when today I found what I’ve been wishing was ‘out there’: a clear, easy to follow set of instructions stepping through the whole process, courtesy of Mitch Cohen and Chris Whisonant and their Lotusphere presentation “Getting Your Feet Wet with Lotus Connections”.

Mitch has made the presentation available on his website and you can grab it from here.  Whilst you’re there, check out his Resource Pages for Connections and Quickr.

January 29, 2009

The Wisdom of Crowds – James Surowiecki

Filed under: Reading,Social Networking — Mike Burford @ 9:59 am

I’ve been a bit slow with my reading lately, but managed to catch up on this book over Christmas.  There are lots of reviews of it on the Internet so I won’t go into detail here, but there’s some great stuff in this book for anyone who is interested in group dynamics. One of the key points that stood out for me was:

“The idea of the wisdom of the crowds is not that a group will always give you the right answer but that on average it will consistently come up with a better answer than any individual will provide.”

He discusses the importance of diversity in group decision making so that outcomes aren’t limited by subject experts; how strong leaders can negatively impact the decision making by encouraging the group to lean towards the leader’s perspective; and how too much information reduces the accuracy of the decision making process.

I remember the argument when Wikipedia started out that the contribution of everyday people to an online encyclopedia instead of leaving it up to the knowledgeable experts would result in the “dumbing down” of both Wikipedia and those who referred to it.  Surowiecki gives various examples of why this isn’t usually the case:

“A survey on the question of overconfidence by economist Terrance Odean found that physicians, nurses, lawyers, engineers, entrepreneurs, and investment bankers all believed that they knew more than they did.  Similarly, a recent study of foreign-exchange traders found that 70 percent of the time, the traders overestimated the accuracy of their exchange-rate predictions.  In other words, it wasn’t just that they were wrong; they also didn’t have any idea how wrong they were.  And that seems to be the rule among experts.  The only forecasters whose judgments are routinely well calibrated are expert bridge players and weathermen.  It rains on 30 percent of the days when weathermen have predicted a 30 percent change of rain.”

He presents some very good examples from business and industry and it was an enjoyable book to read.  I highly recommend it.

January 5, 2009

Good checklist for Quickr 8.1 install on Windows

Filed under: Lotus,Social Networking — Mike Burford @ 12:24 pm
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I made the most of some downtime over Christmas to build a demo Quickr 8.1 server.  I always refer to the infocenter, but came across a great checklist/walkthrough for the installation here, set up by Michael Urspringer.  I found it really helpful for a quick review and check of the installation and configuration process and even picked up on a couple of things I’d missed.  It’s an excellent Wiki and I highly recommend it.

December 23, 2008

Social Networking Market Growth

Filed under: Social Networking — Mike Burford @ 1:59 pm
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My father recently returned from the US with a couple of oldish copies of the First Glimpse magazine.  There’s a small section in the “marketplace” segment of the “ce news” in the July 2008 edition titled “Social-Networking Sites More than Fun Fad” in which they state:

In 2006, IDC projected that the enterprise social-networking market would grow 120% from $46.5 million.  Actual 2007 numbers showed growth of 191% to $135.3 million

They quote some figures that reinforce the need for enterprises to take advantage of the social networking opportunities:

Market size in 2006: $46.5 million

Projected in 2007: $102.3 million

Actual in 2007: $135.29 million

Projected in 2012: $1.25 billion

December 5, 2008

“Why Facebook and Twitter matter to business”

Filed under: Social Networking — Mike Burford @ 9:26 am
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Good article in stuff.co.nz this morning.

Universal McCann’s latest global round of research on the media, derived from interviews with 17,000 active online users in 29 countries, hammers home the booming participation in this arena. Here are some of its statistics on online users gathered this year:

* Bloggers globally: 184 million;

* Those who watch video clips online: 82.9 per cent;

* Those who say they have joined a social network: 57 per cent;

* Those who have uploaded photos to a network: 55 per cent;

* Those who have uploaded videos to a network: 22 per cent;

* Those who have uploaded a video clip to a video sharing website: 8.5 per cent.

These are global figures, but UM breaks out some numbers for Australian users: 62 per cent say they have read a blog, up from 21 per cent in 2006 and 55 per cent last year.

But here’s the critical point for companies: 34 per cent of bloggers say they post opinions about products or brands.

November 18, 2008

Lotus Connections vs. Quickr comparison

Filed under: Lotus,Social Networking — Mike Burford @ 12:11 pm
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Kevin Hansen has compared Lotus Connections with Quickr in his blog and has made some good points for sites confused about the application of either Connections or Quickr.  We have customers who have read about and are interested in Connections, but in terms of their requirements, and budget, would be more suited to a Quickr environment.  As Kevin points out, there is a lot of overlap between the two products.  Both are good value, quality products, but we’re finding that there is a fair amount of confusion over which is best suited to an organisation.  Our approach: demonstrate them both, let the customers have a ‘play’ with the features of each product (Lotus Greenhouse is a good demo site for this) and that way there’s more chance of the decision being made on function that meets their requirements.

October 26, 2008

The Tipping Point – Malcolm Gladwell

Filed under: Reading,Social Networking — Mike Burford @ 4:14 am
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I’ve been churning through a few books lately, largely due in part to either having to fill in time whilst waiting for my turn on “late shift” to feed the baby, or unable to get back to sleep after being woken by aforementioned baby.  The Tipping Point wasn’t quite what I expected when I first heard about the book, but I quite enjoyed it.  Here’s the overview from a Wikipedia article on it:

Tipping points are “the levels at which the momentum for change becomes unstoppable.” Gladwell defines a tipping point as a sociological term, “the moment of critical mass, the threshold, the boiling point.” The book seeks to explain and describe enormous and “mysterious” sociological changes that mark everyday life. As Gladwell states, “Ideas and products and messages and behaviors spread like viruses do.” The examples of such changes in his book include the rise in popularity and sales of Hush Puppies shoes in the mid-1990s and the dramatic drop in the New York City crime rate in the late 1990s.

I had heard of the requirement for a combination of “Connectors, Mavens, and Salesmen” for an idea or product to take off, but hadn’t understood how it all tied together, or in fact grasped all the concepts involved until reading the book.  He gives some good examples – the success of Paul Revere’s ride in comparison with that of William Dawes intrigued me – and discusses some fascinating projects such as the “zero tolerance” approach taken by the New York City Police to fight crime on the New York subway and the impact that had on crime throughout the rest of the city.  The Wikipedia article gives a good overview of the book and details some of the criticisms of Gladwell’s theories.

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Good familiarisation, practice, demo site – Lotus Greenhouse

If you need a good place to review various IBM Lotus software products, check out Lotus Greenhouse.  It’s got pages for Lotus Connections, Quickr, Sametime, iNotes, Lotus Forms Turbo, Websphere Portal, and IBM Mashup Centre.  You can either use it for learning how the various products work, or work together, as a demo site for clients, or, as in my case, for showing my Microsoft workmates how Lotus products can look and feel.

October 24, 2008

Social Network Ad site provides decoys for robber

Filed under: General,Social Networking — Mike Burford @ 11:22 pm
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There is a website in the US called craigslist, which is described in Wikipedia as “a central network of online communities, featuring free online classified advertisements”.  On October 1st, a crafty armoured car robber put an ad in craiglslist seeking workers for a road maintenance job for which he was offering $28.50 an hour.  The requirement was that anyone interested in the job was to show up outside the Bank of Ameria in Monroe, Wash. wearing “[a] Yellow vest, safety goggles, a respirator mask, and, if possible, a blue shirt”.  The robber approached the armoured car outside the bank wearing the same outfit as required in the job ad, pepper sprayed the guard and took off with a bagload of money, leaving the job applicants behind as decoys!

To top it off, he then escaped down a river in a fairly uncommon getaway vehicle – an inner tube!

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