social networking:
Feedalizr is an Adobe AIR-based desktop application for posting and aggregating feeds from Facebook, Twitter, FriendFeed, Flickr, Jaiku (discontinued) and videovideo. We haven’t finished our introduction to the software, but you can be the first reviewer in Comments now.
Tags: Adobe AIR, aggregator, desktop, Flickr, Friendfeed, social networking, twitter
Posted in Social Site Reviews | No Comments »
We haven’t finished our introduction to Fuser, a Web service that collects email and messages sent on social networks into a single inbox. Be the first to review the site in Comments.
Tags: aggregator, email, Facebook, MySpace, social networking, twitter
Posted in Social Site Reviews | No Comments »
We haven’t finished our review of TypePad, but that shouldn’t stop you from adding your own in Comments right now!
Tags: blogging, comments, earn money, hosting, photo-sharing, social networking, video-sharing
Posted in Social Site Reviews | No Comments »
One thing computer networks let people do well is organize and, in a crisis, find one another to ask for or contribute help. While not strictly social, NetworkForGood.com has the spirit of social action. It provides people who want to contribute money or their time with an easy-to-search database of charities and non-profit organizations, then [...]
Tags: charity, social networking, tax deductions, volunteers
Posted in Social Site Reviews | No Comments »
Facebook. MySpace. Instant messaging. Wikipedia. Flickr. Heard of them? Has someone asked you “Are you using Twitter?” At Lenovo we believe everything human is social, and that computer networks are beginning to catch up to people’s desire to share and discuss issues great and small. We’re here to help. In this guide and community — Lenovosocial — we will try to help you make the decisions that will change your computing experience forever for the better, for social, the personal and interpersonal.
Tags: introduction, social network, social networking
Posted in Lenovo Feature Articles | 6 Comments »
Social networking starts with your closest friends and family, because they are the people who matter most to you. The network is a remarkable tool for keeping families close. According to the Pew Internet & American Life Project, technology is bringing American families together throughout the day and across continents as children grow up and move away.
Tags: kids, parenting, parents, privacy, safety, social networking
Posted in Lenovo Feature Articles | No Comments »