Twitter proposes open social network standard
Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey wants to replace Twitter's existing social networking platform with one based on an open, decentralized standard.
Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey wants to replace Twitter's existing social networking platform with one based on an open, decentralized standard.
Cloud, social, and mobile technologies can have transformational impact on an organization. In this video, innovative CIOs discuss how they remain relevant in today's social world.
With Microsoft finally making a major acquisition move in social software, are we now seeing the roll up of the entire social business industry? Or is this just an minor story in a vast parade of change when it comes to how enterprises are moving to social software?
I'm at the Microsoft FastForward conference in Las Vegas, and seeing and hearing quite a bit about the growing movement to open up enterprises and drive greater innovation with Enterprise 2.0.
Searches for ways to innovate often need to begin with looking at the self imposed limitations of internal corporate cultural conventions
Under the questionable rubric of "Web 2.0" (see my treatise on the uncomputer), there have been a lot of events that, if you ask me, run incredibly counter to this new culture of open API provision and mashup development.
Riding open source innovation, when your contributions to it are scant, is not a good deal for your fellow contributors.
At the FourSquare Conference in New York put on by the private investment firm Quadrangle, Facebook CFO Gideon Yu made a gonzo statement that is being picked apart by the blogosphere.As reported by Sam Gustin of Portfolio, who apparently was the only journalist to witness the event, Yu, the former YouTube CFO and Yahoo treasurer, said regarding his current and former employers:"There are these small bands of people who are trying to take over the world," Yu said.
Cloud, social, and mobile computing have transformed the technology landscape. Here are tips to help you remain relevant in these changing times.
Yahoo CEO Carol Bartz talks site analytics, advertising potential and the importance of mobile at the Morgan Stanley technology conference today.