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Tuesday, October 08, 2002 |
Map a social network Dr. Karen Stephenson gives a nice discription of the importance of social capital in the corporation. I think it would be better to use a different discinction when comparing the org chart to the social network; however for the purposes of this article it works ok to support the communication. The org chart is a formal structure that does controll resources in the form of human capital. The Informal economics can be used to describe the workings of the social network. I still would like to see the four forms of capital in the same equation. fincial capital, physical capital, human capital, and social capital should all be taken into consideration when developing an interaction model and even visualization for what is taking place.
10:25:25 AM
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I found myself in another estemed list on the weblog of John Mcdowall. Thanks again John. John is the CTO of Grand Central, a company with ritch background and engaging in an exciting area of web services. I've been able to read evey entry John has posted. It reminds me of the story Mason Hale told me of the early days in the web when each day he was able to read every new web site added to the internet the previous day. Mason was that kind of guy and the web was once that small. John's web log is new, still smallish and I'm the kind of person that gets comsumed by weblogs that I find interesting.
9:18:00 AM
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I'm the number one search result for "Dr Barabasi" the author of "Linked" I've kindly invited Dr Barabasi to the Blogsphere to take back his ritefull place at the top of that results set. I hope he wants to play. His contribution would be facinating greatly valued.
9:09:40 AM
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© Copyright 2002 Stephen Dulaney.
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Top 10 hits for THEORIES FROM THE EDGE OF THE ORGANIZATION on..
 | 11/1/2002; 9:07:53 AM. |
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