Mar
31

Hace relativamente poco tiempo me suscribi a Twitter, con el usuario @MARCEANDREOTTI, y realmente veo un gran potencial, ya que como toda herramienta puede utilizarse de diversas formas, en este punto analizaré la herramienta como inteligencia colectiva de trabajo.

Este tema lo relaciono con un libro que se llama “Pensamiento en Red” de Sonia Abadi y otro libro que se llama Wikinomics, ambos libros exploran los beneficios del pensamiento en red, de trabajar como una red haciendo una analogia a las redes neuronales, cuantas mas conexiones sinapticas puede generar un pensamiento, mayor será la calidad del mismo.

De alguna forma todas las herramientas sociales que existen en internet, facilitan y estimulan el pensamiento en red, recibiendo nuevos conceptos, procesandolos y emitiendolos nuevamente a la “gran conciencia” del grupo o publico del cual somos parte.

En este simple video podrán ver el beneficio de Twitter

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9gb4xt1HvA4

Saludos !

Oct
17
Posted on 17-10-2008
Filed Under (Redes Sociales, Vivir en Red) by Marcelo Andreotti on 17-10-2008

Investigando y leyendo sobre las redes sociales, un fenómeno que está creciendo exponencialmente, me topé con este artículo (en ingles) de Anthony Williams, uno de los autores de Wikinomics (Recomendable) que habla sobre ChaCha un sitio colaborativo online y a la velocidad de la luz, donde existe una retribución monetaria para los que colaboran, lo cual me parece justo por el tiempo y conocimiento invertido, un aporte mas a la sociedad, una herramienta que logra optimizar la oferta y demanda de información, hacia ahí vamos.

So I’m on my way to Biltmore in Arizona explaining to my driver what I do for a living. I’m trying to describe Wikinomics in the simplest of terms when he interrupts me, pausing briefly to flash a wry smile. “Say no more,” he says, “I know exactly what you’re talking about.” He explains that his daughter is on the Internet all day long answering questions on ChaCha and making about $100 a day. I admit I have no idea what he’s talking about, but I’m highly intrigued. It certainly sounds like something I ought to know about, so when I get to my hotel room I look it up.

So it turns out that ChaCha is a mobile answer service for people who need information quickly on the go. Let’s say, for some reason, you want to know how many seconds there are in a decade but your math skills aren’t up to scratch (apparently there are either 315,532,800 or 315,619,200 depending on whether the decade contains two leap years, or three). Or maybe you want to know who scored the winning goal in the 1966 World Cup clash between England and West Germany (it was Geoff Hurst, the only player ever to have scored three times in a World Cup final).

You text your question in conversational English to the ChaCha system (you can also leave a voice mail). Your question is routed to a specialist in the ChaCha network (mostly Internet savvy teenagers) who provides an answer within minutes. If you want to impress your friends and associates with your wit and sense of humor, ChaCha will also send you jokes!

On average, ChaCha specialists make between $3 and $9 an hour, but the most proficient Internet researchers can make a lot more (compensation is determined by one’s speed and accuracy in answering questions). My driver’s daughter is apparently one of them. He says all of her friends collaborate with one another to find answers fast, coordinating their searches using IM. Sounds like a decent day job for a high school student, at least until artificial intelligence makes all of this redundant.

Fuente: http://anthonydwilliams.com/