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Are Blog Comments Dead? | Justin Levy

Justin Levy

Justin Levy Marketing and Social Media Home About Archives Contact Disclosures Newsletter Speaking Are Blog Comments Dead? Written on July 30, 2010 by Justin Levy in blog , community , facebook , interactions , social media , twitter 23 Comments - Leave a comment! Sometimes the comments are even better than the post.

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The Bamboo Project Blog: 21st Century Workplace Literacy: What Does that Mean and How Do We Engage More People in the Discussion?

Buzz Marketing for Technology

I find that when it comes to learning and instruction, I tend to run in two different circles, as evidenced by the "Learning" tab in my feed reader. David Warlick, for example, has some ideas here. I think, for example, that being able to learn new materials and skills quickly is a fundamental workplace literacy.

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5 Things True Social Media Experts Do Online

Techipedia: Tamar Weinberg

There are a few jokes going around the blogosphere right now regarding what it means to be a social media expert. Right now, you’ll find the likes of Tamar , Jonathan , Lisa and Rebecca in my feed reader, and consequently, in that box. Take my own situation as an example. Follow him on Twitter.

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The Bamboo Project Blog

Buzz Marketing for Technology

Comments (2). |. Comments (5). |. Leave me a note in comments with your suggestions and any reasons why youre making the nomination. Comments (8). |. In Tonys screencast example (below), "Moodle" and "WizIQ" are the two search terms hes using. Comments (0). |. through the lens of Web 1.0,

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October Trends + The 10 Horrors of Blogging

ProBlogger

Gruesome typos and grammatical errors, ghastly headlines, confusing echo chambers, dreadfully empty comments sections, and more! is an example of a post with clear tags, author information, and date information. Have you checked recently to ensure that your RSS feeds are working? The Horror: Ghost-town comments sections.

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Mass Engagement: How to Get Hundreds of Tweets & Comments On Your.

Viper Chill

Even though I do such little promotion, many posts get hundreds of retweets and comments. Comments help you to show a form of social proof that you can’t fake without a lot of time and they allow you to see if people are really interested in the type of content you’re putting out there. The reasons why are quite simple.

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Want to Friend Me on Facebook? Please Use My Public Page or.

Techipedia: Tamar Weinberg

Take my husband’s grandfather as an example. These examples above illustrate a typical usability question faced by Facebook users (well, except for Grandpa). A few weeks ago, jwz posted a great piece on how to access Facebook via a feed reader. There really aren’t 350 million members on Facebook.

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