Library clips

sharing ideas thoughts and feedback

May 18, 2009

Roundup : TweetBios, TweetEffect, Tweeterate, TweetIE, TwittBot

Filed under: tools, roundup

TweetBios - extend your Twitter profile…more info about yourself, links to all your profiles, etc…

TweetEffect - find out which of your Twitter updates made people follow or leave you.

Tweeterate - an alternative interface where you can rate tweets

TweetIE - a plugin for Internet Explorer…these are far and few between

TwittBot - allows multiple people to publish to a single Twitter account, and for a single person to post to multiple Twitter accounts.

BONUS
3rd Party Twitter Application List

Sensemaking, PKM and networks

In a past post I elaborated on social networks like Twitter as being a Help engine; an alternative to a search engine in some cases in finding answers and making decisions.

I also paralleled this concept to the aims of KM, productivity, performance, sense-making, decision-making, etc:

“I think it’s getting us closer to the KM productivity (sense-making) aim that knowledge sharing and knowledge transfer has always aspired to, which is:

  • finding the right information at the right time
  • re-frame that information to be usable in your context and situation
  • by connecting you to a social network of people you trust who will be willing to help out in a reciprocal relationship
    (which also helps out in the re-contextualising process as you share a common wavelength or level understanding with people in your network)
  • learning organisation, information re-use, and corporate memory”

And one thing I missed out is “adapting”.

This is how it goes:

I’m after some information and people to help me out on an issue or some research

I perhaps search my network (strong and weak ties), or I may search the entire network (potential ties)

If no go, I then post a question to my network

A response may point me to someone or a piece of work, or the response may be from the person I need to talk to

If I have a strong tie, this is good, as we already know about each other and share some context

Through conversation in real-time or via the online network/blog we are able to probe, clarify, re-frame the information that is usable for my context. The conversation and perhaps related blog entries may reveal lots more peripheral information than what’s included in a report. The blog entries will have the work in progress, thinking out loud, workings out of the report, that may include, approaches, styles, and bits and pieces that trigger thoughts for my situation.

From this interaction we have information/knowledge transfer.

When I act upon this information we have knowledge creation.

The results of this interaction remains for the process to repeat itself.

In this way the same content is able to be mutated or re-contextualised, on a perpetual basis.

We are not precisely re-using a piece of information, instead we are re-blending existing knowledge by connecting and conversing. It’s not about re-inventing the wheel, it’s about making a new wheel using some of the concepts of the other wheel.

Rather than “best practices”:

  • codifying
  • storing solutions
  • wiped of context in order to be applicable to many situations
  • getting people motivated to do this after the fact
  • hoping it’s worthwhile in people one day seeking this information
  • hoping it doesn’t expire
  • less adaptable and less chance of innovation as the best way is already prescribed
  • not really a method to elicit and create new knowledge

We instead turn to our “network”:

  • timely information
  • probe/clarify
  • re-contextualise
  • trust the messenger as you have a history
  • willingness to help as you have a reciprocated relationship
  • peripheral information (not apparent or shared in a report)
  • tapping into tacit knowledge to understand what’s behind the approach or how it comes together
  • adapt to our situation
  • creating new knowledge
  • interactions that blend into new knowledge may lead to innovation
  • build a relationship/contact for ambient awareness and future help
  • each interaction makes your network richer and feeds the core network

What does all this mean?

It means I’m not lost, it means I have a framework in which to makes sense of my situation.

It means thoughts and concepts have a chance to emerge, it’s means being adaptable.

This type of knowledge flow and creation is more close to the aims of KM rather than a storage approach.

My approach to social productivity on the web needs to also happen in the same way in the workplace.

Enterprise federated search is a good step to search across silos, and personalised/customised pages is a good way to create your own dashboard, but it’s not enough…

When I research material for a blog post, most of the time I know where to look as I recall information passing my radar. I have ambient awareness of what’s happening…that piece of information when I saw it meant nothing, but now it has value as I have a need for it.

I can search my Google Reader, browse my delicious/slideshare bookmarks, check out my previous blog/tumblr posts and perhaps ask my Twitter network for help.

This is my personal information/knowledge management (PKM) environment and this personal and social productivity orientation helps me work more efficiently and effectively.

This online participation model is not enterprise 2.0, it’s social computing, but it may one day be the catalyst for enterprise 2.0.

We can never have complete KM, instead we have PKM nodes that are connected in a network.

I came across Nick Milton’s blog the other day, and one of his posts that speaks a lot of truth, says something I don’t agree with:

“So for me, PKM is a sign of failure of corporate KM. If you get corporate KM correct, you don’t need personal knowledge management, as all knowledge management will be collective, giving the individual access to far far more than their personal store.”

To say you no longer need PKM is to say you never need to create new knowledge or learn…it’s like saying you have traveled every path, and moved every move possible to encounter anything new.

The issue is that what’s happen in the network (PKM nodes) is not feeding back into the procedures. The PKM is the spring, KM the bottle…without spring you have nothing.

“It’s easier to reorganise your personal information habits, than it is to change the culture of a company. It’s easier to be personal, than it is to work in community. But for me, working KM as a personal issue just does not deliver the value. It may give the individual more efficient access to information and documents, but it does not give access to better knowledge.”

This above paragraph is true if you treat PKM as nodes on their own, but if you connect these nodes into an open network, then you don’t just have access to people and then knowledge, in your interactions you are creating new knowledge. This is doing KM bottom-up, empowering people to do KM without even realising it.

I’d also add that you don’t change the culture of the company, you create conditions to make a difference in an individuals experience. You give them an environment where they can more easily sensemake, and eventually this node connected environment will bring about a culture change without realising it…we hope…but it has to be a naturalistic approach.

“Now I know that many people develop PKM habits out of frustration. The information they need is not readily available through the company, or through the community, so they build their own stores. But as soon as the content of those personal knowledge stores starts to drift away from community knowledge, then all you are doing is introducing information and knowledge silos at the level of the individual.”

Again this is a true observation, but the problem is not PKM, the problem is not being connected.

At work we use a blog for our support team to post about tips, tricks, error solutions we encounter. I post in this blog for memory management (yes on many occasions, I have encountered the same problem 3 months later and forgot what to do, and consulted the blog…booyah.), and for others to also benefit. This is a reciprocated relationship, so we all gain from each other. If we don’t know answers we ask in the forums.
My next goal is to refine the process, by perhaps having a few people mine the blog and forum for a solutions wiki. The blog and forum are as it happens, and the wiki can contain the cream the floats to the top. The wiki will bring things together on topic pages.

Anyway, what we are doing here is leveraging on each others PKM, and we have created conditions for people to do some of the PKM in an open and shared place. Not only that but as a result we have interactions eg. comments, etc… that make it even more valuable.

We needn’t go on, but this ecoysystem has not only sensemaking benefits for the individual, but has self regulation and recognition (incentive) built in.

In all it’s not that I don’t agree with all of Nick Milton’s post, it’s more that the solution is a bottom-up connected network, rather than PKM not existing at all.

Nick adds a good comment:

“There’s a great methodology that Shell Drilling use, called Drilling the Limit, where Drilling teams seek out all existing knowledge of drilling a well in a particular basin, and challenge themselves to step out beyond the performance benchmark. This is a very powerful process, all the more powerful by being worked collectively as a team, and being based on a full knowledge of what’s been done in the past. That way the tensions are resolved.”

All that “existing knowledge” came from recognised PKM, ie. actioning PKM. This is why social computing is not just about bottom-up, there is also a facilitating factor of taking the good stuff and feeding it back into processes and procedures.

So yes, it’s essential to look at past methods, but it’s also essential to ask people for timely information, where you can re-frame the context.

And what if you are drilling a new basin, then a PKM network enables you to adapt to uncertainty and new situations. You ask people before taking on the exercise. You then use forums and blogs during the exercise to capture and mull over as it happens, and then perhaps if this will be a repeatable endeavor a good practice is drawn up.

Steve Barth also has his thoughts in his post, Does Corporate Failure = PKM?. I personally like one of his past posts on PKM.

“Personal KM explores how expertise and effectiveness scale up to organizational value with a focus on the capabilities and contributions of each and every knowledge worker. PKM starts with individual priorities and processes that lead to self-organization in the workplace with values, skills and tools to build stronger teams and networks from the ground up.”

“Successful companies know they have to evolve. Executives consider knowledge worker productivity to be a priority for bottom-line results. Knowledge workers need to make informed decisions, but then they need to translate decisions into successful actions.”

Here’s some Twitter conversation on PKM networks or click here:


johnt: disagree http://snipr.com/huqpe I think PKM in a socnet builds culture as it's networked + gains momentum, scales http://snipr.com/huqym
about 4 days ago

yurial: @johnt wrt PKM: agreed. PKM = what you know; networking = who you know. That's a winning combo.
about 4 days ago

johnt: @yurial @markgould13 PKM is greater than sum of it's parts b/c of network aspect-macro emergence of K-flow from micro PKM habits @stevebarth
about 4 days ago

stevebarth: @johnt @alevin, Personal #KM =Failure? Would you say that Citizenship means a failure of Government? http://bit.ly/4gKrW
about 3 days ago

johnt: @stevebarth workers do pkm using web2, if make avai enterprise wide we connect all workers in a network @alevin
about 2 days ago

stevebarth: @johnt Please define “do P#KM ” as u see it. (140ch or less!). For me much more than searching/saving, no? Your learning/collaborating style.
about 2 days ago

johnt: @stevebarth 4 me key is 2 create conditions 2 help PKM,+4 it 2 connect in2 KM big picture-like spirituality(bottom-up) vs religion(top-down)
about 2 days ago

stevebarth: @johnt excellent! sign me up
about 2 days ago

johnt: @stevebarth agree with u, most of km is macro result of pkm..always need pkm 2 adapt,a km is never complete
about a day ago

An example of a help network

I’m finishing off by coming back to the start of this post about a help network and making sense of things by accessing people in your network.

This simple Facebook status update is just a natural use of the system, the person asking the question (Chris Saad), does not consciously think he is doing KM, it’s just embedded into being a participant…something I pondered at the end of this post.

This example would be even more poignant if the Chris was clarifying and contextualising by having a comments conversation, and something else it doesn’t reveal is that personally this conversation is of interest to me as I will soon need to draw on this information (I’m getting the benefit for free).

Anyway, this simple open conversation with people you trust in your network is on par with the aims of KM suggested in the beginning of this post.

Facebook as a Help Engine
SOURCE - Click image for larger size

[ADDED 31/05/09: Sense-making with PKM, see my comment…

“Defintely agree. PKM is like sensemaking and everyone does it. But now we can do it in the open, and not only that but we can do it in a connected and networked way.

aggregated PKM is not the same as social PKM.

This section of Boyd’s law fits perfectly here:

http://johntropea.tumblr.com/post/41954985/connected-people-will-naturally-gravitate-toward

‘On a work basis, businesses today want it (or think they want it) both ways. They want their employees to be personally productive, making the classic logical error that if everyone is highly productive personally then the company will be. Nope’”]

May 17, 2009

Twitter fix replies, Friendfeed and Facebook comparison

This week Twitter decided to not allow you to see tweets people you are following are having with people you are not folllowing.

Previous to this it was an option in the settings, but it turns out this option slows down the servers, and since it is only known or used by 3% of users they decided to remove it. This horrified power Twitter users, see #fixreplies.

Why?

Because eaves dropping on conversations people you follow are having with people you don’t follow is a great way to discover new people. Actually this is the most common, if not only way, that I personally discover new people…it’s recommendations without trying to be recommendations…I trust who people I follow converse with, so there’s a good chance I will want to follow them. I’m not about to go through every person I follow’s contact list and look through these lists for new people…I don’t have the time…so I get more suitable value eavesdropping on conversations…I’ve only used Mr Tweet once, it was handy, but I’d rather find new people in my flow as part of using the system.

Anyway, now Twitter promise new things, so we will see, but at the moment they have kind of come half way.:

“…any updates beginning with @username (that are not explicitly created by clicking on the reply icon) will be seen by everyone following that account.”

Meaning…if someone I follow replies to someone I don’t follow using a reply button (which threads the reply to the tweet ID), then I won’t see it. But I will see it if they type the word @user in the text box (rather than using the reply button).

What they are basically saying here, is that when you click the reply button, you are explicitly having a conversation, as the tweet you are replying to becomes a link at the end of your tweet. (You will see this at the end of some tweets, where it will say “inreply to johnt”). Whereas when you type in the reply in the text box this does not link the tweets so can be taken as a shoutout or a mention, which apparently is more appropriate for you to see, rather than a conversation from which you are not in the loop.

Personally I think the option in the settings was the way to go, but since this option could no longer scale, they had to take it away, I’m sure if it did scale there would be no problem with keeping it.

NOTE: what I’m not sure of is if I click the reply button using an alternate interface like peoplebrowsr, filttr, dabr, tweetdeck will the same function apply, or does it only apply when I use the reply button on Twitter itself. My hunch is it will make no difference, as it’s a linked reply and will be treated as such.

Facebook/Friendfeed comparison

It has taken a step backwards in regards to “serendipity”, but it’s no way going to be restricted like Facebook.

I like that Facebook is restricted and private as I use it as a more personal thing, I don’t want the world to know when I’m not home, or personal family happenings. I think this is Facebook’s strength, and they should see this unique feature as something that differentiates them from Twitter and Friendfeed, some don’t think so.

Let’s face it Facebook competes more with Twitter than Friendfeed.

NOTE: Of course they (Facebook and Twitter) are in competition to be the social network you most visit, but in regards to functionality they are different.

Friendfeed is a lifestream and a social network, just like Facebook, only Facebook has all features inhouse, whereas Friendfeed consolidates all your scattered profiles that you have at different services…basically Friendfeed mostly aggregates your stuff, where Facebook does it all. And of course you are free to browse profiles on Friendfeed, where this is restricted on Facebook as they allow people to set privacy settings.

But I will say that Twitter competes more with Friendfeed than Facebook. The reason is that a lot of people use Twitterfeed to auto-tweet their blog posts, bookmarks, photo’s videos, etc…Meaning not every tweet is manually typed, some of them are auto-posts from your happenings elsewhere, which kind of turns Twitter into a lifestream service, if you want to use it that way. It’s not designed for this, as is Friendfeed, but it is done.

As I mentioned before, they are all indirectly in competition because they run on the “social network” model. There is only so many places you can spend time, and you usually will hang out in the service where your buddies are hanging out…whether this service has crap features or not doesn’t matter in the end, what matters is that you can connect with them all in one place.

For me it’s Twitter, if all my Twitter buddies hung out at Friendfeed, then I may give it a try (NOTE: I do use Friendfeed for my lifestream, but I don’t network). And I do use Facebook for family and close friends, but this is more minimal use. I use LinkedIn as well, but it’s not really a place to hang out in. Basically, if juicy stuff happens in Friendfeed, Facebook or LinkedIn, it gets posted to Twitter, ie. Twitter has become the pulse.

Symmetric

Facebook is more about friendship. I can only follow you, if you follow me back (accept my request for friendship)…it’s more about strong tie relationships.

Asymmetric

Friendfeed and Twitter are less about friendship, as I can follow someone, who doesn’t follow me back…giving it a strength of weak ties scenario. This is great for serendipity, discovery, exploration, research…

As I said each service has it’s strength in the relationship dynamic it offers, at least for me anyway.

Status Updates comparison

To finish let’s compare the experience of Facebook status updates to Twitter. I thought I would cover this as lots of people say, “this feature is on Facebook, so I have no reason to use Twitter”, but they are mistaken…

The only thing Twitter and Facebook have in common is “status updates”, which is just one feature of Facebook, whereas this is the whole concept of Twitter. Due to the differing relationship dynamic they work quite different.

FB - I can only see status updates of people I follow (in order to follow them, they have to follow me back, which means we are friends)
TW - I can visit any profile and see their updates, I can also follow them and see their updates in my homepage (they don’t have to follow me back)

FB - I can see replies from people that are also my friends to status updates on my friends profile
TW - ditto

FB - I can see replies from strangers to status updates on my friends profile
TW - This is no longer a 100% truth, see start of this post for explanation

FB - I cannot see replies my friends make on a status update on a strangers profile
TW - This is no longer a 100% truth, see start of this post for explanation

FB - replies are threaded under an update
TW - replies are at the same level as an update (any update is considered an update regardless if it has the word “reply”)
If you click the reply icon it will publish a link to the tweet you are replying to under your reply. But the tweet you are replying to will not list the tweets that has replied to it

[ADDED 19/05/09 : see Twitoaster and Twonvo for all replies to a tweet]

FB - replies alert you via notifications
TW - replies don’t have notification, they are just another tweet in the stream
But replies to you, are accessed via your reply stream

As we can see here Facebook takes a more blog and comment approach, and Twitter has a full stream approach.

Eg. in Facebook a status update is like a micro-blog post, and comments are threaded (of which you are notified). Whereas in Twitter everything is a same level item in the stream…posts start at the top of the page, and roll off the bottom.

The other thing is that in Twitter you can discover more people through posts (eg. conversations your friends are having with strangers) and visiting profiles, whereas this is restricted in Facebook.

The advantage of Facebook is that after the fact conversations are more distilled, whereas in Twitter if you were not there while it was happening, you have to piece it together, although Twitter Search does have a nifty view called “Show Conversations“, and the use of hashtag channels for tweets on a topic.

May 15, 2009

Roundup : ConvoMonitor, pagetweet, TweetALink, SayTweet, Tweecious,

Filed under: tools, roundup

ConvoMonitor - multiple keyword searches side by side, for more power check out monittor, peoplebrowsr, or TweetGrid

pagetweet - a URL shorterner that displays your tweet at the top of the page

TweetALink - a URL shorterner that displays your tweet at the top of the page, only this one has a bookmarklet

SayTweet - create a Twitter widget that shows your updates on a picture

Tweecious - finds links in your tweets and posts them to delicious…I’d rather something where I could manually do this

BONUS
Tweetfan

May 13, 2009

Roundup : MyCleenr, Tinker, AddTweets, BigTweet, Twitlet

Filed under: tools, roundup

MyCleenr - remove people you follow based on their last tweets

Tinker - turns a keyword or hashtag search into a nice stream that resembles a profile page rather than search results. When you create an event stream you can filter out keywords (even keywords by specific users) and even limit the whole stream to particular tweeps (so basically you can make a public group stream). Each event page has takeaways like an embed code and an RSS feed. If you register you can follow an event (just like following a tweep). You also get a profile page. Here’s an enterprise 2.0 event.

Add Tweets - add a javascript box to your site

BigTweet - a bookmarklet, also see TwitSnip, TweetMyPage, TwitThis

Twitlet - yet another bookmarklet

BONUS
Good To The Last Tweet: Coffee Machine Drips Updates To Twitter

Get free blog up and running in minutes with Blogsome | Theme designs available here

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...