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2009/08/21  Communities and Networks
2009/08/21  고 김대중 전 대통령을 추모하며..
2009/07/28  네이트 검색 TV 광고 : 보는 것이 힘이다.
2009/07/16  팀장의 배려
2009/07/13  스마일
2009/07/11  싸이판 여행
2009/06/15  월요병에 시달리고 계시나요?
2009/05/31  작은 지구사랑
2009/05/27  고 노무현 전 대통령을 추모하며..
2009/05/21  10 < 5 < 2 < 1 이론
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2009/08/21 18:35 2009/08/21 18:35
Communities and Networks
Communities and Networks
Communities and Networks - Presentation Transcript

   1. Stephen Downes July 7, 2009
   2.  "Communities of practice are an integral part of our daily lives.  They are so informal and so pervasive that they rarely come into explicit focus, but for the same reasons, they are also quite familiar.  While the term may be new, the experience is not. Most communities of practice do not have a name or issue membership cards.“  http://www.checkmi.com/comprac.htm
   3.  Facilitate collaboration  Answer specific questions via Subject Matter Expert  Filter out incorrect information by peer group  Capture institutional knowledge and reuse it  Prevent re-inventing wheels by sharing knowledge  Share successful (best) practices http://www.icasit.org/km/kmrt/march04/bgscott.ppt
   4.  Shared Domain of Practice/Interest  Crosses operational, functional and organizational boundaries  Defined by knowledge, not tasks  Managed by making connections  Focus on value, mutual exchange and learning http://www.icasit.org/km/kmrt/march04/bgscott.ppt
   5.  CoPs are informal  CoP Members are motivated by their enterprise  CoPs are responsible only to themselves  No one owns CoPs  Managerial control to produce certain deliverables will kill CoPs http://www.icasit.org/km/kmrt/march04/bgscott.ppt
   6. “…you cannot force a plant to grow by pulling its leaves… what you can do is create the infrastructure in which it can prosper.” - Etienne Wenger, 1999
   7.  What it is about – a joint enterprise understood and continually renegotiated by its members  How it functions – mutual engagement that bind members together into a social entity  What capability it has produced – the shared repertoire of communal resources, routines, sensibilities, artifacts, vocabulary, styles, etc. http://www.co-i-l.com/coil/knowledge-garden/cop/lss.shtml
   8.  Different from a business or functional unit in that it defines itself in the doing  A community of practice is different from a team in that the shared learning and interest of its members are what keep it together.  A community of practice is different from a network in the sense that it is "about" something; it is not just a set of
   9.  exchange and interpretation of information  retain knowledge in "living" ways, unlike a database or a manual.  steward competencies to keep the organization at the cutting edge.  homes for identities. They are not as temporary as teams, and unlike business units, they are organized around what matters to their members.
  10.  Distinctive focus: members readily understand what kind of resources they are likely to find there  Capacity to integrate content and communication: broad range of published content  Member-generated content: environments for generation and dissemination  Access to competing publishers and vendors  Commercial orientation: organized as commercial enterprises
  11.  Reduced search costs  Increased propensity for customers to buy  Enhanced ability to target: detailed profiles of members and their transaction histories,  Tailor and add value to existing products and services: integrated transaction histories  Disintermediation potential: deal directly with their end customers without retailers, wholesalers, distributors, or brokers
  12. http://www.munimall.net
  13.  Sought communications from their non-virtual channels onto the Internet  Sought to enhance these communications through repositories of information and opportunities for discussion and other exchanges  Communication, trade, and common culture would be transferred to the Internet environment and enhanced.
  14.  The very transparency of the invited discourse  The utility of using the virtual community versus other available sources and opportunities.  The disruption of established relationships (including power and authority relationships)  How much value virtual communities provide members  The willingness to use the resource http://www.govsource.net/govstudies/projects/olt/appendix04.pdf
  15. http://www.peggasus.ca
  16. http://www.sustainablelivelihoods.ca/Resources/Sustainability,%20Social%20Capital%20and%20the%20Canad
  17.  Markets are conversations.  We are waking up and linking to each other. We are watching. But we are not waiting. http://www.cluetrain.com/#manifesto
  18.  Evolution of the power of the individual  It is the individual whose desire is once more important and not the creation of that desire by the 'massage' of the media  The web allows for a new individuality in both inquisitive acquisition and informed choice  This is a step in the evolution of modern commerce and modern culture. http://www.cluetrain.com/signers.html
  19.  Control – and the technology – is in the hands of the individual  Creative capacity and technology lies at the edges  The network is merely a means of facilitating communication
  20.  Social Norms - have the effect of governance - no one can react to you in any kind of official way if you violate that rule, and yet there's a social structure that keeps that in place.  Mechanics - the stuff that just happens…  Interventions: places where we give some segment of society heightened power, and then allow them to make judgment calls  http://www.shirky.com/writings/nomic.html
  21.  Code: it's difficult to share the powers of code among the users - we don't have a design that's allows for social constraints on individual use.  The second big obstacle is economics - the box that runs the virtual world is owned by someone, and it isn't you.  http://www.shirky.com/writings/nomic.html
  22.  The information and the control is at the edges  Based on conversations, communications  Increasingly complex vocabulary – think blog posts, camera phones, presentations  CoPs are not created or grown, per se, they are found
  23. http://www.downes.ca/cgi-bin/xml/edu_rss.cgi
  24. http://careo.elearning.ubc.ca/wiki?HomePage
  25. The last few years have seen the emergence of the personalized web, the interactive web, the web that places a premium on participation and community. Web 2.0 How should the learning sector respond?
  26. “The dynamics of identity production play out visibly on MySpace. Profiles are digital bodies, public displays of identity where people can explore impression management...” Identity Production in a Networked Culture: Why Youth Heart MySpace http://www.danah.org/papers/AAAS2006.html
  27. “We do not feel compelled to rank or judge the elements of our multiplicity. We do not feel compelled to exclude what does not fit.” Life on the Screen http://www.transparencynow.com/turkle.htm
  28. “Groups require unity, networks require diversity. Groups require coherence, networks require autonomy. Groups require privacy or segregation, networks require openness. Groups require focus of voice, networks require interaction. ” http://www.downes.ca/cgi-bin/page.cgi?post=35839
  29. http://static.flickr.com/109/252157734_9e6c29433b_b.jpg http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-41262409059125315
  30.  A group is a collection of entities or members according to their nature; what defines a group is the quality members possess and number  A network is an association of entities or members via a set of connections; what defines a network is the extent and nature of this connectivity
  31.  A group, in other words, is a school (of thought, of fish…) or a class of some sort.  Or: classes and schools are just groups. They are defined as groups.  Can we even think of schools – and of learning – without thinking at the same time of the attributes of groups?
  32.  A group is elemental, defined by mass and sameness – like an ingot of metal (Aside: democracy is a group phenomenon)  A network is diverse and changing, defined by interactions – like an ecosystem Can we achieve order, responsibility, identity in an ecosystem? Do we need the iron hand? (Aside: Solon, learning, justice)
  33.  A group must be cohesive, united, “out of many, one”… “the people, united, will never be defeated…” The melting pot… the encouragement is to conform, to be like the others  Group technology appeals to the mass: television, radio, newspapers, books  Internet technology includes: all-staff email, corporate website, portal
  34.  A network, by contrast, thrives on diversity … “to each his own” … the salad bowl… the encouragement is to be distinct, to create  Network technology includes: talking, telephoning, writing letters, personal email  Internet technology: personal home pages, blogs
  35.  Groups require coordination, a leader, someone who will show the way… and to be managed… a group will often be defined by its values (aka the leader’s values?) and then a way to get members to follow, to share the vision, will define standards - members belong to a group  Associated technology includes the Learning Management System, Learning Design, LOM, etc
  36.  Networks require autonomy, that is, that each individual operate independently according to his or her own values and interests – cooperation entails mutual exchange of value rather than follower and leader – members interact with a network  Associated technology: e-portfolios, personal learning environments
  37.  Groups are closed - they require a boundary that defines members and non-members – walls - membership, logins and passwords, jargon and controlled vocabulary, lock-in (staying on-message, speak as one)  Technology: enterprise computing, federated search, user IDs and passwords, copyrights, patents, trademarks, assertions of exclusivity
  38.  Networks require that all entities be able to send and receive messages both (a) in their own way and (b) without being impeded  In their own way: open source software, platform independence, APIs, RSS, communities of practice  Without being impeded: Creative Commons and GPL, distributed identity (OpenID)
  39.  Groups are distributive  knowledge, information, money, etc., flows from the centre – an ‘authority’ and is distributed through to their members
  40. Traditional social network Central Influence Power Law Viral Hierarchy http://middleburydemocrats.wordpress.com/2008/09/28/college-democrats-getting-obama-to-go-viral-no-really/
  41.  Networks are connective – knowledge, information, money, etc., does not flow, but rather, emerges as a result of the interactions within the network.  There is no ‘authority’ and no ‘canon’ – each creates knowledge in his or her own way, from their unique perspective, and knowledge consists of patterns of connectivity among them
  42. Distributed Discussion Balanced Reflective Democracy http://www.daniel-lemire.com/fr/abstracts/DIVERSITY2008.html http://www.mailchimp.com/blog/using-email-to-uncover-hidden-social-networks/
  43.  Nature of the knower: humans are more like networks than  Quality of the knowledge: groups are limited by the capacity of the leader  Nature of the knowledge: group knowledge is transmitted and simple (cause-effect, yes-no, etc) while network knowledge is emergent and complex
  44. Independent variables vs dependent variables eg. Rational decision - vs role model The myth of solitary autonomy
  45. http://salt.uaa.alaska.edu/dept/metro.html http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W1TMZASCR-I
  46. Self Organization Network Learning… • Hebbian associationism • based on concurrency • Back propagation • based on desired outcome • Boltzman • based on ‘settling’, annealing
  47. “At its heart, connectivism is the thesis that knowledge is distributed across a network of connections, and therefore that learning consists of the ability to construct and traverse those networks.” What Connectivism Is http://halfanhour.blogspot.com/2007/02/what-connectivism-is.html
  48. http://www.yesandspace.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/open-space-metaphor_small.jpg
  49.  Nancy White - networks, not just about connecting the people, but the objects they care about
  50. Distributed Resources
  51.  Academic - OAI-PMH, Dspace, Fedora, Eprints, SWORD, Connexion, OCW  Web - Flickr, YouTube, Slideshare RSS OAI DC Atom p://www.ariadne.ac.uk/issue55/vandeventer-pienaar/
  52.  Stephen Downes ◦ stephen@downes.ca ◦ http://www.downes.ca
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2009/08/21 15:24 2009/08/21 15:24
고 김대중 전 대통령을 추모하며..
사용자 삽입 이미지
이미지 출처 : 인터넷

한 해에 두분을 보내게 될 줄은 꿈에도 몰랐습니다. 평생 인동초와 같이 사셨는데 이제야 평안한 곳에서 쉬셨으면 좋겠습니다.

2009년 1월 7일
인생은 생각할수록 아름답고
역사는 앞으로 발전한다.

고 김대중 전 대통령 일기중에서..

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secret
2009/07/28 15:57 2009/07/28 15:57
네이트 검색 TV 광고 : 보는 것이 힘이다.
네이트가 공격적인 마케팅에 나섰다. 텍스트기반의 검색이 아닌 동영상을 필두로 보는 검색을 지향한다는 것이다. 생활의 노하우, 사건 사고 뉴스, 최신 연예가 정보, 다양한 다이어트 정보, 스포츠 하이라이트 등 국내 최대 동영상 등록 수를 자랑하는 네이트의 앞으로 행보를 지켜봐야 할 것이다.

NATE 검색의 새로운 생각
보는 것이 힘이다.


1. 로맨틱 키스 편

2. 신혼 레시피 편

3. 유혹 댄스 편
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2009/07/16 21:09 2009/07/16 21:09
팀장의 배려
사용자 삽입 이미지
이미지 출처 : 플리커 

프로젝트 등으로 팀원들이 상당히 바빠지는 시기가 있다. 물론 팀장도 바쁘겠지만 실무를 담당하는 팀원들의 업무량은 팀장보다는 많기 마련이다. 그렇게 되면 야근을 하게 되는데 이때 팀장이 늦게 까지 일하는 팀원을 위해 함께 한다는 배려심으로 늦은 시간까지 남아 있는 경우가 있다. 물론 일이 없지는 않지만 야근까지 하지 않아도 되는 상황인데 남게 되는 경우가 있다.

이럴 때 팀원들의 반응은 어떨까? 역시 우리 팀장님은 우리를 생각해서 늦게까지 함께 해주시는 구나~ 또는 일찍 들어가셔도 되는데 왜 남으셨을까? 괜히 신경만 쓰이네~ 등 다양한 생각을 할 수 있을 것이다. 나의 지난 시절을 생각하면 일찍 들어가시는게 도움 될 때가 많았던 것 같다. 여러분의 생각은 어떤지..?
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secret
2009/07/13 21:06 2009/07/13 21:06
스마일
사용자 삽입 이미지
이미지 출처 : 플리커 

아침에 급 정형외과를 찾았다. 계속해서 등에 통증으로 자리에 앉아 있는것도 불편했다. 근육의 문제도 뼈의 문제도 아닌것 같은데.. 그래서 결국 병원을 갔고.. 의사 선생님은 아마도 염증이 있는것 같다고 물리치료 받고 약처방 받아보자고.. 그리고 물리치료를 무려 1주일을 받으란다. 하지만 난 매일 1시간 반씩 1주일 동안 물리치료를 받을 수 없다. 그래서 물리치료는 오늘로 끝일 것이다. 다만 처방 받은 약 3일치를 잘 먹어야지. 그런데 약을 먹고 나니 속이 불편하다. 약간 독한 듯..

덧.

이 병원의 물리치료실은 은근 크다. 간호사(?) 물리치료사(?) 도 많고 그런데 이들은 표정이 없다. 나름 친절한 말투지만 친절하지 않다. 남자 여자 섞여 있고 인물도 좋은 분들이 감정 없는 표정으로 환자를 맞이 한다. 조금만 웃으면서 대하면 좋으련만.. 너무 차가운 표정들이다. 쑤신 몸이 더 쑤신것 같다.