Thanks again Shifted - I've downloaded the PalmOS version and we'll give it a try.
I've tried eBooks before, but the reader units that I've used were just not right. First was a Newton. Too big, too slow. The Palm - too small (we'll try it again). I guess the idea is that I like having about 300 words visible at a time. At least half that - or the ability to view a complete thought (as expressed in a paragraph or 3 or 5).
Maybe the issue is the nature of reading material - I do read stuff from AvantGo on the palm - but they tend to be simpler, easier reading stuff - reminds me of the Big Chill line of Jeff Goldblum.
Finally, If I'm going to read something, really read it, then I want to sit down in a comfortable place and really read. If I want to read on a train or in a bathroom stall (see Big Chill), then this format is OK.
I guess the idea of integrating other tools into the electronic interface - blogging tools? or notation tools or extraction of idea tools would make the format more compelling. I often want to refer to a quote from a book - but unless I just read it, or it's something like Shakespeare - where you studied it and know where in the play the lines and ideas are from - you cannot really get the ideas out again. So again - tools would create some sort of enabling - hypertexted overlay on the books and stories....
Thanks for making it available for free - I'll try it again...
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An Easy Way to Experiment with Ebooks.
Down And Out In The Magic Kingdom
"I downloaded the PDB version of Down And Out In The Magic Kingdom a few weeks ago and have slowly been reading it in my spare time (It's really a quick read, I just have no time). Cory Doctorow released the book free in a zillion different file formats and I highly recommend either grabbing up one of the free versions, or spending a few bucks to get the print version. This is one of the best fictional works I've read in ages. Biting wit, intellectually stimulating ideas, and social criticism all make this a fun read for anyone who has been living and breathing in the last few decades. If Cory has more works like this one in him, he should emerge as one of the brilliant sci-fi writers of his time." [ReadYourPalm]
I'll reiterate that this book is a relatively easy way for libraries to get some experience with digital downloads. For those that are curious about interacting with ebooks in the library's OPAC, you can buy the paper copy for your physical collection and download digital copies for circulating through your online catalog. Very few libraries are ready for something like this, but it's one way to get your feet wet with little overhead and no worries for how to check the title in and out.
Interesting that there's still no WorldCat record for digital versions.
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The Shifted Librarian]
120 11:09:01 AM
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Article Pointer from Nature!
This link (above will take you to the PDF file on HP's Social Network analytics as describd below.
The whole email thing is interesting, but raises a few questions - two interesting data points. First is a lecture I went to by Mark Albion (former HBS professor and author of Making a Life amaking a Living). Who described how after he left harvard, his network was gone. That is no-one returned calls, no one would do favors, etc. He had to form entirely new networks once his Harvard B-School professor authority had disappeared.
Similarly I am watching the email of my wife - who was at Palm Computing, diminish dramatically. In fact she is amazing at forming relationships and has maintained relationships with people that she knew there, and continues email contact - although significantly less frequently. The comment from one of her former colleagues who also left was that his "Network" has been no help in landing a new position!
I guess my question focused on how one forms NEW NETWORKS. What investment is required here, and how and when do you salvage bits from your OLD NETWORKS. Software that analyzes existing networking behavior may not tell the individual much of any value (although it might be helpful to outsiders/consultants trying to solve organizational problems).
But strategies for forming new networks that are robust in the face of career and life changes - this is an important line of thought!!!!
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Want to know how your organization really works - who speaks to whom, who holds the power? Then study the flow of internal e-mail, say scientists at global technology firm Hewlett-Packard.
The researchers have developed a way to use e-mail exchanges to build a map of the structure of an organization. The map shows the teams in which people actually work, as opposed to those they are assigned to.
The technique can also reveal who is at the heart of each sub-group. These people often correspond with company-designated leaders such as project managers. But unofficial de facto leaders can also emerge. The approach might even help to pinpoint the heads of criminal or terrorist networks.
Communities of practice
It has long been recognized that big institutions tend to divide organically into informal collaborative networks, called communities of practice.
For example, colleagues in one department might all tend to consult one particularly useful person in another department, linking the group into a community of practice. Such collaborations are very common in scientific research. Groups in different universities share information, skills and expertise to solve problems.
But communities of practice are difficult to identify - the process typically involves laborious interviews and surveys.
E-mail, however, leaves a robust trace of the interactions between two people. If you want to know what they said, privacy issues could pose obstacles. But simply to know that they communicate, all you need are the names of the sender and the recipient, say Joshua Tyler and colleagues at Hewlett-Packard's labs in Palo Alto, California.
Tyler's group uses this information to construct a communications graph in which lines - each denoting a direct e-mail exchange - link nodes that correspond to individuals. Next the researchers use a computer to search for links with high 'betweenness'. These are the few connections between groups of highly connected nodes. Removing them decomposes the graph into a collection of isolated clusters of nodes, which correspond to the communities.
Big institutions tend to divide organically into informal collaborative networks | | |
There are several tricks to this reduction process. For example, taking out one link alters the others' betweenness, which must be recalculated at each step. And the process has to stop before the communities themselves get fragmented.
Tyler and colleagues tested their community-finding algorithm on a set of nearly 200,000 e-mails exchanged between 485 employees of the Hewlett-Packard labs over three months.
The graph created from this data is a 'small world' - any node can be reached from any other by just a few steps.
The researchers found 66 communities. They asked 16 employees how well the method had identified their community of practice. Most responded along the lines of "yes, that's pretty much our project team", even though the communities often crossed the formal departmental boundaries defined by the company.
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References
- Tyler, J. R., Wilkinson, D. M. & Huberman, B. A. Email as spectroscopy: automated discovery of community structure within organizations. Preprint http://xxx.lanl.gov/arXiv:cond-mat/0303264, (2003).
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119 9:14:50 AM
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Business Journalling as investment.
I've had an old friend come visit from Yale so I haven't been slave to the keyboard for a few days -- I'm catching up though.
Blogging = Investing. I don't spend much time reading good old paper off-line and since I was reading a book at the time I missed until today this article on an almost one month old issue of The Economist.
For the past decade or so, sociologists have been pushing one more concept, "social capital" - trust or community, in one of its guises - that is now also being taken up by economists. Crudely speaking, the more people trust each other, the better off their society. They might work more efficiently together, for example. In business, trust might obviate the need for complicated contracts, and thus save on lawyers' fees.
Besides using "social capital" to measure countries' economic power, I belive that the same concept can be applied to any community. Applied to the weblogs community, this concept help explaining the huge power that has been unleashed by blogging. Reading other people's weblogs creates trust and efficiency, and it's an excellent base to build businesses and relationships. This is interesting also for k-logging (or "business journalling"): if a country with a better community is richer, then also a company with a better developed trust and efficiency amoung its workers is going to be better off than others. So, no, we are not wasting time writing on our weblogs, we're investing. [Paolo Valdemarin: Paolo's Weblog]
I've little to add to a good piece by Paolo, other than that we are also exploring the ways in which companies can develop the infrastructure to allow employee's to make these investments and in how they can reap the benefit of their investment.
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Curiouser and curiouser!]
118 8:51:01 AM
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