Social networks have had giant growth spurts over the past couple of years, and it seems there's one for everyone: from dogs to moms to book-worms to shoppers. Social networks, I think, more than anything give people a place to belong and to hang out. Bec
Social networking sites create a central repository of personal information. These archives are persistent and cumulative [18]. Instead of replacing old information with new materials, online journals are archive–oriented compilations of entries that ca
Think of trust as the currency of social capital. Managing trusted relationships is a complex and risky social, emotional, and strategic problem. Social networking systems are still fairly new, so while earning the trust of their users is being increasing
Think of trust as the currency of social capital. Managing trusted relationships is a complex and risky social, emotional, and strategic problem. Social networking systems are still fairly new, so while earning the trust of their users is being increasing
Richard Price wandered about for three years searching for someone who would understand the problems he had… with his research. Then, one fateful day in 2007, he found that special someone—a fellow philosopher working on the same question. Like many good scientific quests, the end of Price’s search for a kindred academic spirit raised another question: "Isn't there a better way to find fellow researchers?"
As stodgy old newspapers begin to think of themselves in digital terms, they're increasingly looking to MySpace -- the unedited, consumer-generated and not-infrequently-profane social-networking site purchased by News Corp. in 2005 -- as an unlikely role
Actually the link inside delicious changes with time. Right now is: http://del.icio.us/url/be32f827a38adb501753480616a249a4 So. obviously each of us have only one bullet. I added the tag "delichat" to collect all the threads