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Topic: David Weinberger

  

Project Mismanagement

Frank Patrick picks up on today's First Impression featuring David Weinberger, adding his own commentary to Weinberger's remarks on centralized management. Trying to control the uncontrollable is the source of much of what goes ...READ»

CULTURE   |  Comment

An Office Life Worth Living

Shades of Steve's recent entry on people who love their jobs, David Weinberger posts a thoughtful commentary on what he misses about office life in Worthwhile today. On his short list: Bumping into people he likes Eating lunch ...READ»

Professionals, Publishing for the Public

If it's true that markets are conversations, business blogs might help corporate conversations scale globally.READ»

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What's Broken in Marketing?

Listening in on a group discussion of senior marketers on "The Future of the Marketing Department" led by David Weinberger at the 2006 Innovative Marketing Conference (by Corante and the Center on Global Brand Leadership at Columbia ...READ»

Marketing is Broken - Here are the Repair Tools

A stimulating day which included an animated discussion led by David Weinberger about what's broken in marketing. Plenty seemed to be the consensus, but plentiful also were the ideas about how to fix it. There was a clear consensus ...READ»

3Q's: David Weinberger

David Weinberger is our avant theorist of connection. The co-author of The Cluetrain Manifesto followed with Small Pieces Loosely Joined, which maps the deeper implications of the Web's "world of pure connection." David blogs about ...READ»

Only Connect

David Weinberger is a fellow at Harvard's Berkman Institute for Internet & Society. Co-author of The Cluetrain Manifesto and Small Pieces Loosely Joined, he writes about technology, philosophy, and marketing. His closing presentation ...READ»

Internet 101

According to ''The Cluetrain Manifesto'' coauthor David Weinberger, the Web has been underhyped. That's right, underhyped. In his new book, ''Small Pieces Loosely Joined,'' Weinberger offers a unified theory of the Web -- and rules for tapping into its real power.READ»

Bloggers in Our Midst

These Fast Company Webloggers demonstrate the variety and virility of this new-media phenomenon. Welcome to their world.READ»

E-COMMERCE   |  Comment

Between the Lines: Six Degrees of Competition

The author of Fast Company's social network software Web exclusive takes a look at the complicity -- and competition -- among several company founders.READ»

The Blogging of Business

Contributors to FC Now try to avoid being too self-referential -- if you want to know what Fast Company is working on, it's probably best to sign up for Fast Take, our weekly email newsletter -- but we just put the April 2004 table ...READ»

the clue train

Twitter's Investors Missed the Cluetrain - Here's Why

Twitter, the microblogging service that changed everything, hasn't changed all that much argue the four co-authors of The Cluetrain ManifestoREAD»

Best Blog Ever

When Fred Graver, executive producer of VH-1's entertainment news show "Best Week Ever" started planning the program, he didn't turn on the TV for inspiration, he turned to the Web.READ»

CONFERENCES   |  Comment

Autumn in Camden, Maine

I'm up here in Camden, Maine for the 2.5-day PopTech conference. It's one of the best annual gatherings on the cultural and personal impact of technology. This year, it seems more science-oriented than in past years. Just heard from ...READ»

Post(er) Boy

Robert Scoble, a technical evangelist and active blogger at Microsoft, offers tips and tactics that can help your company thrive and survive on the Web.READ»

It's a Blog World After All

Blogs were once the domain of angst-ridden teens and doomed presidential candidates. But the likes of Verizon, IBM, Microsoft, and Dr. Pepper are all climbing on the blogwagon. Turns out, Web logs are a nifty knowledge-management tool. And companies also see them as a promising medium for advertising (naturally).READ»

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Fast Company Library

Books previously featured in Fast CompanyREAD»

E-COMMERCE   |  Comment

A Little Help from Your Friends

Forget online dating. Online business networking is where the really sexy stuff is happening.READ»

Clued In? Sign On!

The interconnection of hundreds of millions of people via the Web doesn't represent just another sales channel or merely another opportunity to do the same work faster. It offers the potential to reframe some fundamental questions about business.READ»

Do IT Yourself

Doc Searls is senior editor of Linux Journal. What follows is a partial transcript of his Supernova remarks: This is the after-lunch session so you need the red pill rather than the blue pill. I don't know if I have enough time to ...READ»

Digital Identities

Moderator Rafe Needleman works as editor for CNet's Business Buying Advice. Marc Canter is CEO of Broadband Mechanics. Andre Durand serves as CEO for Ping ID. Dirk Hardt founded and works as CEO for Sxip Networks. And Philip Rosedale ...READ»

Schwartz Kicks off Supernova

Here at the Supernova conference in San Francisco, Jonathan Schwartz is making a case for executive blogging. Schwartz is the president and COO of Sun Microsystems, and he's also probably the highest-profile exec in the Fortune 500 ...READ»

Joe Trippi's Killer App

Howard Dean's campaign manager has used the Internet to turn an obscure ex-governor into a real presidential contender. It's anything but politics as usual. Will it work?READ»