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Google Terminates Six Services

Mixed by Sylvain Munaut (Chief Technology Officer @ Whatever) in Trends, Web apps

28 January
An article originally posted on Information Week

“The ax fell on Wednesday at Google (NSDQ: GOOG), not just for some of the company’s employees but for six of its services, too.
In addition to Google’s announcements about the elimination of 100 recruiting positions and the shutdown of offices in Austin, Texas; Trondheim, Norway; and Lulea, Sweden, the company said it would close Dodgeball, Google Catalog Search, Google Mashup Editor, Google Notebook, and Jaiku. It also said it’s discontinuing the ability to upload videos to Google Video.”

Read the full article at www.informationweek.com

In my opinion…

It’s always sad when good services come to an end. At least Google tries to mitigate the negative effects. Sometimes we forget the risk associated with externally hosted services, especially free ones that provide no guarantees. That doesn’t mean commercial services are always reliable either, some of us might remember the “TheLinkup” huge data loss no so long ago …

Indexed » Sell something wonderful.

Mixed by Thomas Moreau (Head of Training @ Whatever) in After party

23 January
An article originally posted on Indexed

See other great cards from Jessica Hagy at thisisindexed.com

In my opinion…

Innovation is the greatest added-value of a company.

Gartner’s Mark McDonald: CIOs may have only four months to show results

Mixed by Thomas Moreau (Head of Training @ Whatever) in Enterprise 2.0, Trends

23 January
An article originally posted on WTN News

“Based on Gartner’s findings, the top technology priorities of global CIOs involves harvesting value from existing core technologies in a way that solidifies business intelligence, enterprise applications, and virtualization. In this environment, there are some technologies that will get left out in the cold - “Basically, anything new,” McDonald said - but Web 2.0 tools are not among them.
McDonald said anecdotal evidence, including conversations with CIOs, indicates that social computing tools are on a different plane because such tools are not prohibitively expensive to adopt. “What’s the average cost of implementation of a new business intelligence capability? McDonald asked. “It’s not $5, but companies are implementing web 2.0 technology for very little money.
“Investments in BI and CRM and ERP were viewed as investments, and fairly significant capital expenditures. Companies are doing web 2.0 things almost as a straight operating expense.”
That’s true, he added, whether companies apply Web 2.0 tools internally to foster collaboration, or externally to attract new customers and retain existing ones. McDonald advised against favoring one approach over the other. The deteriorating economy does not mean that any aspect of social computing, which Gartner cited as a top emerging trend in 2008, should be placed on the back burner.”

Read the full article at wistechnology.com

In my opinion…

Indeed, enterprise 2.0 solutions that facilitate social productivity, that do not require complex implementation, and for which costs are not prohibitive (often offering flexible pricing solutions based on active users) will probably be exempt from the economic slowdown.

RSS Overload: Don’t Complain, Do Something About It

Mixed by Thomas Moreau (Head of Training @ Whatever) in Web apps

16 January
An article originally posted on louisgray.com

“There seems to be a trend lately of posts regarding RSS overload. A lot of people are complaining about being overwhelmed with their Google Reader, and some are even advising for you to stop using your RSS reader altogether. I say, hogwash. Do something about it and take back your Google Reader. Now is the time to reclaim it.”

Read the full article at www.louisgray.com

In my opinion…

I fully agree with Louis Gray. RSS readers require organization. Many readers offer ways to filter feeds. Personally I use NetNewsWire (the stand-alone RSS application from Newsgator for Mac users) and I really like their Smart Lists, a way to filter RSS feeds based on lists of keywords that need to appear somewhere in the feed. FeedDemon (the Windows version from Newsgator) offers this feature too – they call them ‘watches’ –, like many others. Unfortunately, Google Reader doesn’t.

Knowledge Management and Innovation — Connections

Mixed by Thomas Moreau (Head of Training @ Whatever) in Knowledge mgmt

14 January
An article originally posted on Gartner

“A lot of people have suggested to me that KM is about collective intelligence or corporate memory or knowledge bases, but while these terms suggest these people know that KM involves richer forms of information management, it still rings of information that sort of lies there and doesn’t do much. So, a term like connective intelligence really describes (for me, at least) what we should expect of KM and all that digitized information we store in hopes of managing knowledge.”

Read the full article at blogs.gartner.com

In my opinion…

I like the concept of ‘connective intelligence’. Managing knowledge is indeed more about creating connections that generate ideas and innovation.

Trends that will affect enterprise collaboration

Mixed by Fabienne Vandekerkove (CKO @ Whatever) in Enterprise 2.0, Trends

9 January
An article originally posted on anecdote

“The beginning of the year is a good time to take stock of where things are going and try and get a handle on the macro trends affecting our work. For me that means enterprise collaboration in all its forms. Here are six major trends that will encourage leaders to take action and help their organisations to be even more collaborative.”

Read the full article at www.anecdote.com.au

In my opinion…

Among the six trends likely to encourage enterprise collaboration pointed out by Shawn Callahan points, the global financial crisis is certainly the more vivid.

What’s Next After Web 2.0

Mixed by Khalid Yagoubi (Developer @ Whatever) in Trends

6 January
An article originally posted on Read/WriteWeb

“The financial problems of the world will have a big impact … Indeed, it looks like we’ve arrived at one of those giant inflexion points - where one web era is usurped by another… Now is the time for innovation.
What’s Next After Web 2.0 ?”

Read the full article at www.readwriteweb.com

In my opinion…

Crisis and innovation are intimately related, and companies are typically more innovative than paid technologists, who often merely duplicate the work of others.
“What’s Next After Web 2.0 ?”, that’s the question…
This is the ReadWriteWeb’s recently published yearly trends predictions.
The first point of interest is that Web Sites are turning more and more into Web Services. Indeed, most popular web 2.0 sites offer APIs (think del.icio.us, Twitter, etc.).
The second point of interest is the rise of the Intelligent Web, with semantic capabilities, automatic recommendations and personalization of services.
And the last point of interest is the emergence of the Mobile Web, bringing the Internet closer to the user.

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