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Presentation – Weaving Your Social Bookmarking Knowledge Network

By sleslie on February 1, 2008

http://solr.bccampus.ca/wiki/index.php/Weaving_Your_Social_Bookmarking_Knowledge_Network

As part of my perennial quest to foment change, I’m trying to initiate a series of grassroots “brown bag lunch online presentations” within BCcampus. We are a distributed organization of 20+ people spread across over a half-dozen locations, so building community and sharing our practices and knowledge informally can be very hard. This is one small effort on my part to improve this.

To kick it off I delivered the above presentation, on using social bookmarking to help build your knowledge network, to about a dozen of my fellow staff today. We used Elluminate to run the session, and aside from the normal hiccups with sound cards and missing mics, it seemed to run pretty well and I’m hoping was well received. The real proof will be if anyone else starts to use this technqiue to start sharing their attention and knowledge, and also whether it inspires anyone else to stand up and run a session of their own. I hope it does. I built the original presentation within our Confluence wiki (partly to walk the talk with that tool) but posted it here in a mediawiki instance in the hopes that it might be of more general interest. It’s formatted to work ok with the Greasemonkey Mediaiwiki Presentation script as well. – SWL

Posted in The Rest | Tagged del.icio.us, grassroots, KM, mediawiki, presentation, social-bookmarking

No responses to “Presentation – Weaving Your Social Bookmarking Knowledge Network”

  1. 5tein
    5tein
    February 1, 2008 at 9:02 pm | Permalink | Reply

    That’s a good way to starting reigning in all that everyone is doing (and often doing differently) with social software in general. We’re at the stage where it’s all experimental still, and so gathering folks, documenting best practices gives us a place from which to reflect and theorize for the next phase of its transformation.

  2. Brian
    Brian
    February 4, 2008 at 11:06 am | Permalink | Reply

    Looks like a good session. Thanks for sharing!

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