2020. 2. 21. 03:32ㆍ카테고리 없음
Save the world? What do you believe? 2xCome to, save the world? What do you believe? 2xSo you've been chosen 2x Ohhhh. So you've been chosen 2xTHE COME TO SAVE THE WORLD?
WHAT DO YOU BELIEVE? 2xCOME TO, SAVE THE WORLD? WHAT DO YOU BELIEVE? 2xSO YOU'VE BEEN CHOSEN.By your eyes, by your hands, by the choices that you call your own, and price that you would sell your own soul.
Pay the toll. Carry your, Carry your. Last test of flesh and bone we make exchanges as the story unfolds.Come to.
Save the world? What do you believe?
Save the world? What do you believe? 2xSO YOU'VE BEEN CHOSEN.
July 11, 2012 Posted by Greg Lloyd'All of this has led me to believe that something is terribly wrong with e-mail. What’s more, I don’t believe it can be fixed,' New York Times columnist Nick Bilton - not pictured on right - in his July 8, 2012 Bits column,. He's cranky just because he received 6,000 emails this month, not including spam and daily deals. Nick says: ' With all those messages, I have no desire to respond to even a fraction of them. I can just picture my tombstone: Here lies Nick Bilton, who responded to thousands of e-mails a month. May he rest in peace. 'Nick continues: 'Last year, Royal Pingdom, which monitors Internet usage, 107 trillion e-mails were sent.
A from the Radicati Group, a market research firm, found that in 2011, there were 3. 1 billion active e-mail accounts in the world. The report noted that, on average, corporate employees sent and received 105 e-mails a day. Sure, some of those e-mails are important. But 105 a day?'
Please read for a lively piece of Nick's mind on the subject.Email is OK for incoming introductions and disposible notifications, but when you try to use email for collaboration, multiple To: addresses turn it into something like in the Marx Brothers A Night at the Opera.Add the Cc: line and give up all hope! In 2008 Google engineer Kevin Marks referred to email as. I call it tragicomically inept for collaboration.In 2003 Clay Shirky said: 'All enterprises have more knowledge in their employees as a group than any one person, even (especially?) the CEO.
The worst case is where one person has a problem and another knows a solution, but neither knows the other – or that the other knows. Despite e-mail’s advantages for communication, it falls down as a close collaboration tool on complex projects: E-mail makes it hard to keep everything related to a particular project in one place; e-mailed attachments can lead to version-control nightmares; and it’s almost impossible to get the Cc:line right. If the Cc:line is too broad, it creates “occupational spam” – messages from co-workers that don’t matter to everyone addressed. If the Cc:line is too narrow, the activity becomes opaque to management or partners. 'From my 2008 blog postSee Clay Shirky, Release 1.
0 Vol 21, No. 5, 20 May 2003 (pdf)Caroline McCarthy, CNet. Com, Feb 29, 2008Modern social software is now being widely adopted as an alterative to email collaboration, based on a pattern that Doug Engelbart recognized long ago, see.May I suggest.
Traction SoftwareAnnounces TeamPage™: Free Download Includes Five Login Accounts and FiveProjects, so Large and Small Enterprises Can Try TeamPage for Zero Commitmentand CostProvidence, RI—March 26, 2007—, the leading developer of products forsecure, scalable, web-based collaboration, today announced a free,five-user, five projects download of its award-winning TeamPage™ enterpriseblog and wiki solution. InfoWorld namedTraction TeamPage 'Best Enterprise Wiki' in its January 2007 Technologyof the Year awards. The TeamPage™ software is available immediately for download at.Accordingto Mike Heck, contributing editor for the InfoWorldTest Center, who wrote a four productEnterprise Wiki review published January 5, 2007: “Traction TeamPage clearlyplaced above the others with its superior ease of use and query ability thatpresented each user with just the knowledge they need. ” In the review, Heckalso remarks on ease of installation, out-of-the-box suitability forenterprise, and ease of publishing and navigation.“Thisoffer is a great way for small companies and large enterprises alike to startusing the power of TeamPage with zero commitment or expense. The TeamPageconfiguration is a great product for personal or small team use, often the seedand necessary starting point for a larger deployment” said Greg Lloyd,president and co-founder of Traction Software.“The future of team collaboration goes beyond blogs and wikis tosolutions that bring the best features of each into one platform to supportsecure, scalable collaboration with internal stakeholders, external suppliers,customers and partners throughout the extended enterprise.
”TeamPage'sJava™ server software can be downloaded and easily installed on Windows, SPARCand Intel based Solaris, Linux and MAC OS X computers. There are no otherdependencies, so you don’t have to worry about installing and configuring otherweb servers, scripting languages or databases. TeamPage customers who wish todevelop TeamPage extensions can use Traction's Skin Definition Language (SDL)and Java Software Development Kit (SDK) to develop plug-ins for their own use,to share, or to sell.About the Free 5-User TeamPage LicenseThe free TeamPage license provides the functionality of the TeamPage Server but is limited to five login accounts and five projects (blog / wiki spaces). The license can be used for publicly-facing or internal websites. Each project can be configured to allow anyone to read, comment or subscribe to RSS feeds. This license is free for commercial or non-commercial use. Customers using this license may download software and access online support through Traction Software’s hosted Forum project and knowledge base (registration required), or they may purchase a $1K support contract.AboutTraction® TeamPage™Traction TeamPage was named InfoWorld Magazine’s 2007 EnterpriseWiki of the Year.
The product combineswiki style group editing, the simplicity of a blog, and a unique model forcommenting and secure, scalable collaboration. Global 1000 and governmentcustomers deploy TeamPage for business-critical applications including productdevelopment, management issue tracking, marketing, competitive intelligence,and sales force communication. TeamPagegives businesses the ability to collaboratively create and share valuableinformation such as market research, competitive intelligence, corporatecommunications, product plans, and business development resources. Traction TeamPage plugs into a company’sexisting infrastructure or operates stand-alone on an intranet or extranet.AboutTraction SoftwareTraction Software providesbusiness and government organizations with enterprise software that allowsgroups and teams to communicate more effectively. Traction's easy to useTeamPage™ software creates a secure communications hub for business informationand working communications that collects, organizes, links and shares sourcesof information in context over time.
Traction Software has been named one ofthe 100 Companies that Matter by KMWorld and is a winner of the RedHerring 100and eContent 100 awards. The company distributes its products directly andthrough global partners. Based in Providence,Rhode Island, Traction Softwareis a privately held corporation with financing from investors includingIn-Q-Tel and Slater Interactive.
For additional information, visit Traction at.###Traction Software and TeamPage are trademarks ofTraction Software. All other names aretrademarks of their respective companies.Contact:Jen Revis SniderRed Javelin Communications, Inc.617-795-0798jen@redjavelin.
February 21, 2008 Posted by Jordan Frankhas an incredible knack for putting information management issues into perspective, and always does so with just the right amount of humor and sarcasm (something I generally aim to achieve - but I imagine I fall short of a perfect Weinberger).He's done it again in a speech about 'The Information Mess and Why You Should Love it. ' blogged her notes on the speech. She says:He spoke about the power of digital disorder, and how we need to unlearnwhat we think that we know about the best ways to organize information.He looked at how many projects, typically physical projects, require amuch greater degree of control as they increase in size, but contraststhat with the web, which has growth only because of the lack ofcontrol. Control doesn’t scale.Controlled information systems don't scale, but the web does.
When it comes to 'unstructured information' this is undoubtedly the case. (I put quotes around 'unstructured information' because I mean to convey I don't believe in the term - all information has structure, especially written information which has LOADS of structure but generally doesn't grow as well as you would like on folder trees)'Enterprise 1. 0' approaches sought to consolidate and centralize information onto singular ECM or DM systems with one search box and what became lots of 'need to know' (vs. 'can know') silos (in the form of specifically permissioned files or collaborative workspaces) within the big centralized system.' Enterprise 2. 0' is not just about people posting pages, editing pages, and tagging, its about, as Greg Lloyd wrote in 2005,. Continuing that thread with another entry from Greg, its also about and, from my perspective, recognizing when.requires both deploying tools that allow your users to build an intranet out of pages and links as well as creating an IT architecture mandate to allow for the digital disorder which Weinberger argues is the ultimate tool in creating order at scale.
February 22, 2008 Posted by Jordan FrankIn yesterday's note, I talked about how Enterprise 2. 0 relies on an Enterprise 2. 0 architecture and approach in order to work more like the web.
Reflecting on a speech by Andrew McAfee at FASTForward 08,:T he irony of enterprise 2. 0 is that you actually get more controlbecause the free form nature of the tools allow the business people todecide on where structure occurs, not the people who make the software.By giving up control of a system, you allow business people to build structure on an emergent basis rather than entirely pre-planning systems and, as a result, making them too rigid to be useable by knowledge workers.Ives, like me, believes 'total free form is not always what you want - often you need to start a wiki with some structure. ' As I note in the and, the right balance of initial structure and top-down encouragement are key to success.Writing about the same speech,:Excellent gardeners exist to accelerate the emergence of structure, whether or not they contribute content.So, in an uncontrolled wiki environment, where some users are, its still important to provide some starting structure and to proactively build and manage that structure as the users of the sytem exert their own influence by publishing, editing and using (or not using) tags. April 19, 2012 Posted by Greg LloydThanks to, for his this afternoon while we were chatting on the phone. Last October Jacob in his Emergent Collaboration Vendor series, and liked what he saw, including TeamPage pricing. He said: 'I had the pricing explained to me so I understand it but I think it would be helpful if they made it easier to understand for all site visitors because it really does make sense. ' We agree on both points!
In updating the page, Chris Nuzum used Apple Store product configuration pages as benchmarks for clarity and ease of use.We followed Jacob's price comparison model, providing interactive feedback on per user per month pricing as well as an annual roll-up and clear option pricing. Cloud-hosted TeamPage is featured front and center - with hosted TeamPage, at $1. 87 per person per month for 100 people. All TeamPage products include integrated for project and case management that works, not something out of 1984.Pricing options includes cloud-hosted and, choices of workgroup or full TeamPage configurations, flexible pricing based on the number of named accounts, and easy upgrades when you want them.
Cloud-hosted TeamPage is great for small to mid-size organizations who want to punch well above their weight without hiring or adding IT staff.I'd change Jacob's probably the coolest and say the coolest, no doubt! Thanks Chris! Go to the and see for yourself. August 21, 2007 Posted by Jordan FrankWhen asked 'How are things?' A college friend used to reply 'Same old, same old' as a way of saying 'Nothing has changed, nothing's gone wrong, things are fine.
' This was always good to hear.Culture change, behavior change and IT adoption all have to come together for Enterprise 2. 0 (or any IT) success. These, and IT failures are all reasons that the majority of IT projects fail.So when I got these 'same old, same old' updates from Customers via two separate e-mails in early August, a smile crossed my face: 'BTW - ourregion uses Traction daily and we are happy with it - even though we probablyonly use a quarter of its functionality. 'This came in from a Managing Director for a Global Technology Service Company's EMEA Business Unit. They began using Traction over 1 year ago to promote awareness of sales and general market activity across their region. 'Things aregoing well, no big changes in how we use the tool'This came in from a CI Director at a Human Resources firm. They began using Traction 2.
5 years ago to track competitor activities. They started by importing about 3,000 pages (from e-mail) and building on top of that base, likely at a rate of 1,000 per year.In both cases, Traction was deployed for a simple purpose which satisfied a straight-forward business process and need. That things haven't changed since Day 1 is a testament to a well thought out content structure and human process for adding to it and interacting with it.Forgetting the stories of viral adoption and massive deployment thattend to capture our imagination and excitement around Enterprise 2.
0,we lose sight of the smaller scale successes which fulfill a straightforward business process and stand the test of time. These focused and discreet cases may just be an important norm around which to seek best practices and set realistic adoption goals that result in positive, consistent business value. The IntegratedJustice Information Systems Institute, whose membersare IT companies that support law-enforcementand Justice Department operations, uses RSS andAtom feeds that came built into its blogging softwarefrom Traction Software Inc. To keep committeemembers up to date on recent developments. ' Someof our more technical committees that had somefamiliarity with RSS saw immediately how theycould use that inside their workspace to providea publish-and-subscribe capability so they don'thave to rely on going hunting to see if there'ssomething new in their committee work,' executivedirector Paul Wormelli says.
For the sixth consecutive year, recognized Traction Software's market leadership in Enterprise 2. 0 Social Software by naming the company to their. The list is compiled by KMWorld's panel of KM practitioners, theorists, analysts, vendors and their customers and colleagues. 'We're honored by KMWorld's recognition of Traction Software.
I'm extremely happy to accept this award on behalf of Traction's outstanding employees, partners and customers. ' said Greg Lloyd, Traction Software President and co-founder, 'I believe that customer success using Traction TeamPage is proving the business value of knowledge management by making KM part of the context of work, benefiting everyone in the organization, every day.
' » See the list. For the seventh consecutive year, recognized Traction Software's market leadership by naming the company to their. The list is compiled by KMWorld's panel of KM practitioners, theorists, analysts, vendors and their customers and colleagues. 'We're honored that KMWorld continues to rank Traction Software as a company that matters in Knowledge Management,' said Greg Lloyd, Traction Software President and co-founder, 'In 2010 we brought TeamPage Release 5. 1 to market, introducing a new generation of social software with integrated collaboration, communication, action tracking and exception handling along with a user interface that's fast, great looking and simple to use. I thank Traction Software's employees and customers for earning this recognition as well as KMWorld for awarding it. ' » See the list.
For the eighth consecutive year, recognized Traction Software by naming the company to their. The list is compiled by a team of judges including KMWorld editors, analysts, system integrators, theorists, practitioners and a few select users. 'We're honored that KMWorld continues to rank Traction Software as a company that matters in Knowledge Management,' said Greg Lloyd, Traction Software President and co-founder, 'In 2011 Traction Software released introducing capabilities make live content in external documents, public or intranet Web pages, and even database records social objects seamlessly integrated with Traction TeamPage's action tracking, search, collaboration and communication. I thank Traction Software's employees and customers for earning this recognition, as well as KMWorld for awarding it. ' » See the list. For the ninth consecutive year, recognized Traction Software by naming the company to their annual. KMWorld’s list is compiled by KM practitioners, theorists, analysts, vendors, their customers and colleagues.
This is the 13th year of the list. 'Criteria for inclusion varies, but all companies have things in common. Each has either helped to create a market, redefine one or enhance one, and they all share two things—the velocity of innovation and the agility to serve their customers' says Hugh McKellar, KMWorld Editor-in-Chief.Greg Lloyd, Traction Software President and co-founder said: 'We're honored that KMWorld consistently ranks Traction Software as a company that matters in Knowledge Management. Traction Software employees work closely with customers to build a stronger and more useful TeamPage platform.
' Lloyd continued, 'Spring, Summer, Fall and Winter 2012 TeamPage releases introduced many user interface, performance, and Developer SDK additions and improvements to make it easier for customers to get work done. I thank Traction Software's employees and customers for earning this recognition. Traction Software partner of Yokohama Japan availability of cloud hosted TeamPage for the Japanese market. AKJ President Masayuki Kojima said: 'TeamPage provides a new communication infrastructure for projects and multi-team organizations within your company - now available as a cloud service. ' TeamPage cloud pricing starts at 7,908 yen per month for ten spaces and twenty-five named accounts, see for price, ordering, and product details. TeamPage cloud options include. Traction Software offers cloud hosted TeamPage to customers outside the Japanese market, see.See also.
KMWorld recognizes Traction's continued leadership in the Enterprise 2. 0 market, naming Traction TeamPage a. KMWorld Editor in Chief says: 'This year, more than 600 products were assessed by our judging panel which consists of editorial colleagues, analysts, system integrators, vendors themselves (sometimes even competitive ones), line-of-business managers and users. The products selected all demonstrate clearly identifiable technology breakthroughs that serve the vendors’ full spectrum of constituencies, especially their customers.
' » Read the September 1, 2010 announcement. KMWorld recognized Traction Software's TeamPage as a Trend-Setting Product for 2011. TeamPage: ' enables searching both external sources and TeamPage's Social Enterprise Web to discuss, tag, task, share and badge internal or external content. ' KMWorld's judging panel of editorial colleagues, analysts, system integrators and users evaluated over 800 products in reaching their decision for KMWorld's ninth annual list. Traction Software is honored that KMWorld has selected TeamPage as a Trend-Setting Product for the fourth time. KMWorld recognized Traction Software's TeamPage as a 2012 Trend-Setting Product of 2012, citing TeamPage for ' action tracking, Twitter-style status, threaded discussion, collaboration, social networking and deep search. ' KMWorld editor Hugh McKellar writes: 'This year more than 700 products/ product families were whittled down to the 89 listed in these pages.
Each company whose products are listed below helped to define and enhance a market critically important to our readership by listening to and working with customers. They all represent a commitment to innovation and their customers. ' Traction Software is honored that KMWorld has selected TeamPage as a Trend-Setting Product for the fifth consecutive year. Providence RI — May 10, 2011 — Traction Software Inc, the leader in enterprise social software for work today announced Traction TeamPage Release 5.
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2 with new capabilities to make it simple to track actions, show activity, watch status, and follow discussions embedded in the flow of collaborative work. 2's new activity dashboards show actions, status and work in context using a format that's easy to read and reduces information overload. Activity dashboards allow people dive into and watch activity associated with projects or milestones they want to focus on, while also seeing, searching, exploring and connecting with others across a broad view of actions organized by business context as well as person. Read » andSee also.
Providence RI — May 10, 2011 — Traction Software Inc, the leader in enterprise social software for work today announced Traction TeamPage Release 5. 2 with new capabilities to make it simple to track actions, show activity, watch status, and follow discussions embedded in the flow of collaborative work. 2's new activity dashboards show actions, status and work in context using a format that's easy to read and reduces information overload. These dashboards allow people dive into and watch activity associated with projects or milestones they want to focus on, while also seeing, searching, exploring and connecting with others across a broad view of activity organized by business context as well as person.'
There's been a lot of Web and Twitter discussion about the value of activity streams to promote broad awareness versus the potential problem of showing too much information and having important signals get lost in the flow,' said Greg Lloyd, President and co-founder of Traction Software Inc. 'Traction TeamPage makes it simple to zoom into activity streams, status and discussions - by space, by project, person or milestone - when you want to focus. You can register for automatic email or Jabber notification when anything is added, changed, or discussed in a context you want to watch carefully. 'You can also zoom out a broader view of all spaces you have permission to read, or people you choose to follow. This makes it easy to dip into the flow and read, search, or navigate by person, tag, task or discussion thread. Because TeamPage spaces carry access permissions, internal teams, customers, suppliers and other external stakeholders can freely tag, task, link and discuss anything they discover - even make more private comments on more public content.
'When you see something that looks important you can tag, task or comment on the relevant item to raise its visibility as an opportunity, an answer to an important question, or an issue to be addressed. A TeamPage project creates a context where work actually gets done - with specific deliverables, as an open ended activity with a stream of actions and milestones, or as customer or client case to be tracked and guided to a desirable outcome. In each case, TeamPage's integrated action tracking makes it easy to recognize, track and handle exceptions or opportunities in the natural flow of work. 'Traction TeamPage 5. 2 is the first of a series of enhancements of the integrated action tracking, communication and collaboration capabilities that Traction Software introduced in November 2010 with.
Traction Software developed this integrated model and enhancements in close collaboration with customers and partners including Attivio and Applied Knowledge Company Inc (Japan). A TeamPage customer quoted in the Feb 2011 Deloitte study said: 'With Traction Software I can post meeting notes and assign action items to individuals. Then, they can go into the tool and write comments to update the group on the status of their action items as well as post deliverables. It greatly increases transparency and streamlines communications. 'Traction TeamPage Release 5. Com contributor Hayden Shaughnessy: 'By moving social media practices into the enterprise we will change the way senior managers communicate, the way employees communicate with customers, and possibly people’s experience of work. ' He asked three platform vendors, including Traction Software President and co-founder Greg Lloyd, to respond to three questions on how a company can make social a success, starting from Day 1 requirements, benefits to the employee and enterprise outcomes.
Greg's advice includes: '“Social” use can informally open up a timeline of activity to make it easier for people working on the same activity – including people who may be from different parts of the organization or even customers, partners, suppliers. Jon Udell and Jim McGee call this “Observable Work” (on a personal basis “narrating your work” hits many of the same points).
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It’s very easy to do, and generally well accepted – people learn by example. ' » Read theSee relatedand TeamPage. KMWorld quotes Tom Woodman, enterprise applications manager at on use of Traction TeamPage to track, manage and report on issues across project groups. Woodman says: “TeamPage helped us document what wasn’t working, collaborate around potential solutions and turn on a dime to fix them. Then, it helped us spread the word about those improvements to the rest of the company very quickly. As a byproduct, we are also able to meet compliance requirements, because auditors can easily review the issues and determine if there are any that would need further scrutiny from a financial reporting point of view.