Are social media silos holding back business results? - ZDNet
Social Networking in the 1600s - New York Times
Social Networks Shape Monkey 'Culture' Too - Science Daily (press release)
Social networks steal billions of dollars from economies - Pravda
Mormon missionaries taking task to social media - WJLA
Are social media silos holding back business results? ZDNet This was true of social media as it was of earlier communication revolutions. Yet the contrast between the widepsread use of social networks in people's personal lives and the same phenomenon by the enterprise is often stark. Much has been made ... |
Social Networking in the 1600s - New York Times
New York Times | Social Networking in the 1600s New York Times LONDON — SOCIAL networks stand accused of being enemies of productivity. According to one popular (if questionable) infographic circulating online, the use of Facebook, Twitter and other such sites at work costs the American economy $650 billion each ... |
Social Networks Shape Monkey 'Culture' Too - Science Daily (press release)
Science World Report | Social Networks Shape Monkey 'Culture' Too Science Daily (press release) June 27, 2013 — Of course Twitter and Facebook are all the rage, but the power of social networks didn't start just in the digital age. A new study on squirrel monkeys reported in Current Biology, a Cell Press publication, on June 27 finds that ... Squirrel Monkeys First Discovered the Power of Social Networking: Study Monkeys first to discover power of social networking |
Social networks steal billions of dollars from economies - Pravda
Social networks steal billions of dollars from economies Pravda Social networking has been accused of all mortal sins. It deprives people of live communication, makes citizens dependent on the internet, and causes a number of other psychological issues. But these are not the only troubles caused by social networks. |
Mormon missionaries taking task to social media - WJLA
Mormon missionaries taking task to social media WJLA The strategy shift reflects the growing importance of social media and people's preference to connect over sites such as Facebook rather than opening their homes to strangers, church leaders said. "The way in which we fulfill our responsibilities to ... |
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