Tag Search Results For 'world of tomorrow' (55)

Many Eyes = Many Brains

The Scholarly Kitchen | October 9th 2008

Socially networked data visualization becomes a reality with Many Eyes. read more

Renaissance II

The Scholarly Kitchen | October 8th 2008

Are we in the early days of a new Renaissance? One keen observer agrees, and trends point in that direction. read more

Blogs Move Mainstream

The Scholarly Kitchen | October 7th 2008

A new Technorati report on the state of the blogosphere jibes with observations that blogs have become mainstream. read more

The Collapse of Peer Review

The Scholarly Kitchen | October 6th 2008

Is peer review in decline? Evidence from the field of economics suggests that top authors are bypassing the journal certification process and distributing their papers on their own. Will other authors follow? read more

Kindle’s Snacks and Speed-dates

The Scholarly Kitchen | October 2nd 2008

The Kindle's use-case isn't what I'd assumed. In fact, I'm thinking very differently about it. read more

Is Email Losing Its Mojo?

The Scholarly Kitchen | October 1st 2008

Users are dropping email, and young people aren't taking to it. What does this portend? read more

Social Network Veteran Flees!

The Scholarly Kitchen | September 26th 2008

What happens when you've had one virtual life too many? read more

Linking and Copyright

The Scholarly Kitchen | September 25th 2008

If linking becomes the main form of citation, does copyright become a moot point? read more

Wikileaks vs. the Status Quo

The Scholarly Kitchen | September 23rd 2008

Image via Wikipedia A site recently came to the attention of many people observing the US political scene — Wikileaks.org, a site that promises to help you “safely get the truth out:” Wikileaks accepts classified, censored or other read more

Optimists and Technology

The Scholarly Kitchen | September 22nd 2008

Are technology enthusiasts more optimistic about progress? Does that mirror itself in our audiences? read more

Headlines 2.0

The Scholarly Kitchen | September 18th 2008

Editors still write headlines like they're for print and people. With online, headlines shift to a new environment and have at least two more audiences. read more

Go Away = Come Back

The Scholarly Kitchen | September 17th 2008

The link is the currency of the Web. Give users more to spend, and they'll reward you with loyalty. read more

The $1 Billion Apomediation

The Scholarly Kitchen | September 17th 2008

UAL loses $1 billion in value, thanks to the power of apomediation combined with a mess in the metadata. read more

Google Knols = Infomercials

The Scholarly Kitchen | September 16th 2008

Google Knol may be just author infomercials, not a vibrant reference work with accountability. read more

The Gridlock Economy

The Scholarly Kitchen | September 15th 2008

Michael Heller's book "The Gridlock Economy" explains many things, including airport congestion, Google Books, and the drop in drug discovery. read more

48 Hours on Wikipedia

The Scholarly Kitchen | September 11th 2008

Lies inserted into Wikipedia get corrected quickly, a small study finds. read more

The Myths of Texting

The Scholarly Kitchen | September 9th 2008

Text messaging and its social and linguistic effects are examined in a new book. read more

SSP TMR Rocks the House!

The Scholarly Kitchen | September 6th 2008

The SSP TMR has closed, but much of the meeting was captured. Here's your guide, and insights on why the meeting will evolve next year. read more

Joining: The Binary Game-Changer

The Scholarly Kitchen | September 4th 2008

Six degrees of separation is now down to three. Will you join? We'll be talking about such things at the SSP TMR in Philadelphia this week, as well. read more

Google Chrome Arrives

The Scholarly Kitchen | September 3rd 2008

Google's Chrome debuts, and reaffirms that Google knows exactly what it is doing. read more

iPhone, Enthusiastically!

The Scholarly Kitchen | September 3rd 2008

A few weeks after giving up my Treo, I've found the iPhone to be quite an impressive little machine. read more

George Orwell’s Blog

The Scholarly Kitchen | August 29th 2008

Image via Wikipedia The New York Times recently reported that George Orwell has started blogging. Or, rather, his diaries are being put online daily as part of a new blog. This is a fascinating blog to read. Each entry is 70 years old, to the day. H read more

Apomediation: Word of the Day

The Scholarly Kitchen | August 28th 2008

Disintermediation presupposes the intermediation is the only choice. Maybe apomediation is the destination. read more

Sneaky Disruption, High & Low

The Scholarly Kitchen | August 27th 2008

Disruption can come from above or below. Does scholarly publishing allow for high-end disruption anymore? read more

Scientists Use Social Media

The Scholarly Kitchen | August 14th 2008

Two surveys reveal that scientists use social media. But maybe not because social media help them work -- maybe because social media help them socialize. read more

iPhone, Reluctantly

The Scholarly Kitchen | August 13th 2008

After years using another smartphone, I finally switched to the iPhone 3G. It's a platform for clever interaction designers. read more

Citing the Kindle

The Scholarly Kitchen | August 12th 2008

The Kindle takes hits, but seems on-course to become a major force in scholarship in the future. read more

Dude Looks Like a Lady?

The Scholarly Kitchen | August 8th 2008

Does your browsing history reveal your gender? Take this quick test to find out. read more

The Rise of LinkedIn

The Scholarly Kitchen | August 6th 2008

LinkedIn has grown a huge audience -- the one thing that will make it tough to beat. read more

Watching the Wrong Things?

The Scholarly Kitchen | August 4th 2008

Scholarly publishers have traditionally focused on articles, issues, subscriptions, citations, impact factors, and business models. But maybe by focusing on these things, which are much more about us than about our readers (who are becoming users tod read more

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