Jay Cross

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Jay’s blogs fork

Jay Cross

Ten years ago I was writing several daily blogs: In 2001, these joined together to become the Internet Time Blog, one of the earliest blogs about learning: Five years later, writing my book on Informal Learning, I added a blog of the same name. That left me with two nearly indistinguishable blogs.

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Your favorite 2009 posts on Internet Time Blog

Jay Cross

Streams, not blogs? Like classrooms in training, blogs will always be around. But also like classrooms, blogs are ceasing to be the primary source of value. My blogs show but one of many perspectives of Jay. Tags: Blogging. Top Ten Tools. I don’t know how my friend and colleague Jane Hart does it.

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Walkabout Review

Jay Cross

I’d like to blog and site for Harvard Business Publishing or Forbes. It’s an elderly blog. I enjoy writing in HTML because it lets me combine text and graphics and pointers, is searchable, and is the standard. Writing in Keynote is fun, too. jaycross.com is where I’d send them.

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Jane Hart’s Top 100 Learning Tools

Jay Cross

I buy a new black book at KaDeWe in Berlin every year to draw and write in. My blog is where I reflect on things and share them with others. My blog is where I reflect on things and share them with others. I’m still old-school on this, writing whatever I feel like.

Tools 36
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Internet Time Blog » The moving finger writes and having writ moves on

Jay Cross

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Just gotta be me

Jay Cross

This is also a trial balloon for new blogging behavior. Actually, my original blogging behavior. The site seemed too polished and stylish to accomodate my shoot-from-the-hit personal writing style. So my blog posting slacked off. . “Around the age of 12, the brain goes through the equivalent of an earthquake.”

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Walkabout Reflections

Jay Cross

I think of my rambunctious blog as one never-ending roll. Looking back at 60 days of blog posts is easier with Friendfeed. I’ve been writing about dealing with complexity in the workplace, bring emotion out of the closet at work, making people happy and more fulfilled, and the Stoos way of doing business. Change college.