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I can't agree more when you say :
"Myspace, blogger, flickr and other popular services are exactly that - they aren't a community, as such, but they are services that help individual users to create and manage their own communities."
I keep trying to explain that in France, where some big media such as TF1 are trying to launch their own platform : wat.tv, etc
I've made a post two days ago about that, the successful platforms don't advertise about them, they let the users advertise about their own profil, like when a band on myspace try to add as many teenagers as possible !

Interesting post, thanks.
I was hoping that the reference to Kim's book would be a useful alternative to Preece's Online Communities (currently our course book), but it's clearly out of print & at over £100 per copy, not a sensible choice!)

Any idea if she's going to republish?

Emma

I don't know, but would doubt that it would appear as a reprint. You could always email Amy Jo and ask if she might be able to authorise you to use a .pdf version of sections or something like that. Otherwise, why not just make a course blog and link to stuff that's online?

I know that, for example, Gillmor's We The Media is available as a download under the creative commons license.

What course is this for, by the way?

excellent post, robin. someone linked you to this post regarding nancy white and blogged communities ('boundaried' communities)

ohhh . . no html? . . . . here it is ..

http://kt.flexiblelearning.net.au/edition-11-editorial/blogs-and-community-%E2%80%93-launching-a-new-paradigm-for-online-community/

Thanks Andrew. I'd spotted that one. I think Nancy and I are headed in the same direction on this. She's been doing lots of thinking recently about the communities between blogs. Hope you're well! :-)

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Robin Hamman



  • Robin Hamman has over ten years experience devising, implementing and managing social media projects, particularly within the Broadcasting and Media sector.
    Before joining Headshift as a Senior Social Media Consultant, Robin was a Senior Producer/Journalist with responsibility for the BBC's Blogs and a wide range of other social media projects. Robin was also previously an Executive Producer at Granada (ITV) and Communities Evangelist at Talkcast (mobile).
    Robin is also a Non-Residential Fellow at Stanford's Center for Internet and Society and a Visiting Fellow in the Department of Journalism at City University, London. Robin blogs about the collision of social media and journalism, online community, blogging, citizen journalism and, sometimes, media law. [more...]

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