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Stephen Collins

As a TEDster, the emergence of the TEDx events gives us the opportunity to share the TED experience with our friends, colleagues and interest groups in a smaller, more intimate, less big bang (and definitely less expensive) setting.
At acidlabs we’re incredibly proud to announce that TED has granted us the right to host the very [...]

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By now, many of you will have seen the ReadWriteWeb confused as Facebook saga.
It’s an object lesson in the capabilities and expectations of everyday web use. And it’s one that we who make our livings by purporting to understand people and the way they use the web and other technology ought to be both abundantly [...]

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When you’re given just 20 minutes to cover the notion of the more open business models the proliferation of social networks encourage, there’s not a great deal of time to waffle. Hopefully I didn’t the other day, when I gave this talk to close off the speaker sessions at the Technology to Drive Growth workshop [...]

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This afternoon, Jason Langenauer posted a well-argued piece with respect to the issues he sees in the national discussion we’re having over the imposition of the Labor government’s Internet filter. Initially, I thought it was a good piece. It’s clear, makes sense, sensible. But Jason is wrong on several points.
First, I should point out that [...]

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Want to help improve passport information and  online passport applications in Australia?
We are working to help the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade and their service providers to improve the service offered by the Australian Passports web site. Your input to this research will have a measurable effect on the conclusions we draw and the [...]

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Off to the Growth Summit

February 10, 2010

in posts

Next Thursday, I’m speaking at the Technology to Drive Growth workshop at the National Growth Summit conference in Sydney.
I’ll be doing a short presentation entitled Cluetrains, Conversations, Trust and Openness that I hope will open some eyes to the opportunities businesses can realise if they deal with their customers and stakeholders as their principal concern [...]

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The hype around social media continues unabated – business, marketing, government, NFPs; everyone is getting involved. But to my mind, we’re still somewhat missing the point. Making it a part of our lives in a way that avoids the hype and adds real benefit to our own lives and the lives of others will be [...]

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The next step

February 7, 2010

in posts

An emergent theme of my posts of late has been change. Whether that’s technology, user experience, reform of education, public sector and government, conferences or business (including my own), it’s a constant.

Image by trib via Flickr

Equally, I’ve had many conversations in physical and virtual environments about change. Those conversations, to my very great benefit, have [...]

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How it’s done

February 4, 2010

in posts

This is how you do a public service announcement. It’s a part of the Embrace This campaign.

They’ve extended to other social media as well, including Facebook.
It hits all the right notes – family, love, fear, death, safety. There’s no way you can’t engage. Their research and audience focus work must have been amazing. I’d love [...]

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Image via Wikipedia

This post started as a comment on my pal, Linda Johannessen’s blog post about TED and conference organisers. Then it got long, so I figured I’d bring it over here. Not least because I want to discuss conference models this weekend at BarCamp Canberra 2010.
I’ll start with a story.
Attending something like TED is [...]

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