41. If we were to start designing a strategy for communication
and dissemination of research from scratch, based on what
is available today, without any constraints of internal
structures or external regulating bodies, what would it look
like?
Cameron Neylon, RIN Event (London, November 2010)
See discussion here:
http://knowmansland.com/learningpath/?p=772
42. getting started...
www.flickr.com/photos/turtlemom_nancy/1914397629/sizes/o/
• analyse your needs
• start with what suits your
purpose better
• check where ‘your
community’ is
• the true power of social media
is in the network (people)
stuck?
http://webpossibilities.pbworks.com
Hinweis der Redaktion
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\nVoltaire as an example of the statement above. The Philosopher was probably one of the most networked scholars of his time, with more than a thousand European correspondents\nNetworks of correspondence was quite useful during the Classic Age as a form of establishing and maintaining connections with the outside world in a rather informal, yet meaningful way. Other thinkers of that time also made use of the Epistolary genre to establish their networks beyond their local whereabouts: Erasmus and more recently Darwin \nCheck Republic of Letters: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nw0oS-AOIPE \nCharles Darwin corresponded with over 2000 individuals worldwide, exchanging his views on scientific matters, his health and family life... in http://great-scientists.suite101.com/article.cfm/charles_darwins_letters \n\nRead more at Suite101: Charles Darwin's Letters: Darwin Correspondence Project Expands his World Wide Web http://great-scientists.suite101.com/article.cfm/charles_darwins_letters#ixzz0p5hMEPG6\n\nDarwin corresponded widely, asking for information and opinions, checking facts. He was very scrupulous in giving credit, just look at the footnotes in his books. But actually the flow was not one-way. Yes, Darwin was a phenomenal networker. He would probably have had a blog. in http://agro.biodiver.se/2009/02/blogging-the-big-birthday-darwin-the-seed-networker/ \n