Clark Quinn

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Cultural Comment Shift

Clark Quinn

The phenomena is that we’re seeing a cultural comment shift; comments are now coming from shared platforms, not directly on the site. With the proliferation of places to go: from Facebook and Twitter and LinkedIn to a variety of group tools and Instragram and Pinterest and…the list goes on. The question is why.

Culture 134
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Social Media Strategy thoughts

Clark Quinn

Here is some thoughts about how that maps out in two areas: Facebook, and Twitter. The same is true of a FaceBook page. There are different ways to be on Facebook: as a static page, or as a ‘presence’ with dialogs, groups, etc. Twitter/Facebook Integration. Having a twitter account is a necessary start, maybe several.

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My Professional Learner’s Toolkit

Clark Quinn

Facebook is largely personal. here), and I use Rapidweaver for my sites: Quinnovation and my book sites. I’ve used Zoom to share. A range of social networks : I use LinkedIn professionally, as well as Slack. And Twitter , of course. I stay in touch with my ITA colleagues via Skype. I use Google Maps for navigation.

Toolkit 122
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Top 10 Tools for Learning 2016

Clark Quinn

It’s often a gateway to Wikipedia, which I heavily rely on, but a number of times I find other sources that are equally valuable, such as research or practice sites that have some quality inputs. I’m looking up things several if not many times a day. Books are still a major way I learn.

Tools 100
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You know you’re mobile when…

Clark Quinn

With the caveat that if the organization is blocking access to some sites (e.g. any search term like ‘game’ or social media site like Facebook and Twitter), you’re highly likely to use your mobile device to get around this. You may be having meetings, making a site visit, whatever.

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Intelligent Content

Clark Quinn

You’ve seen it in Netflix and Amazon recommendations, and sites that support powerful searches. As I state in my boilerplate response: “I deliberately ignore what comes unsolicited, and instead am triggered by what comes through my network: Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, Skype, etc.” But where do you learn?

Content 163
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2015 top 10 tools for learning

Clark Quinn

Facebook: there’s another group that I use like the Skype channel, and of course just what comes in from friends postings is a great source of lateral input. Twitter: I am pointed to many amazing and interesting things via Twitter. So that’s my list, what’s yours? I note, after the fact, that many are social media.

Skype 100