In the coming months and years, I expect content curation tools are going to play a very important role in many different fields.
Via Robin Good, Timo Ilomäki, Lynnette Van Dyke
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janlgordon's curator insight,
November 9, 2013 11:10 AM
Angela Dunn has written a great piece on one of my favorite topics, curation - it was the lead post on our launh of Curatti last night. What makes a good curator? "You need to have the eye of an editor, a sense of taste like a chef, and your own unique Point of View. It is this Point of View – your taste – that can lead to authority and influence". Jan Gordon:
Curators who are driven by passion and purpose will be very important to the business community in their chosen niche - it's crucial that we preserve this information for the future. That is why the future of curation is definitely evergreen. Here are some highlights that caught my attention: The amount of content is growing exponentially, but our time is limited. Curators are our filters for information overload – the editors of chaos. The slew of content curation tools that emerged gave way to algorithms. Can a machine have a Point of View? Machines can influence your Point of View. The danger is they can also create a filter bubble. It is human insight coupled with machine results that can define the very best information edited from a trusted curator’s Point of View. Evergreen posts, such as “Curating Content for Thought Leadership”,, written by Angela in 2010 are important in that they stand the test of time. All good blogs need some such articles. The above, along with all of Angela's posts on the now defunct Postereus, have evergreen links due to a new tool for archiving the web – Permamarks. Selected by Jan Gordon for Curatti covering Curation, Social Business and Beyond Read more here: [http://bit.ly/1ewOFR1]
Alejandro Tortolini's curator insight,
August 6, 2013 4:21 PM
La curaduría de contenidos como modelo de negocios, por Robin Good.
Prof. Hankell's curator insight,
August 7, 2013 10:19 AM
Robin Good's insight:
Mitch Free writes on Forbes about the unique business value that curation can bring to those markets where there is already an abundance of choices.
"The web has revolutionized access to information. If you travel to a new city, you don’t have to wait to ask a hotel concierge or local contact which restaurants are worth your time: that information is at your fingertips long before you arrive. The web’s universality and ubiquity are also its weaknesses, however: even if all are listed online, choosing from the 25,000 restaurants in New York City still requires a local’s advice. While “curation” might bring to mind the image of a red-jacketed museum staffer scowling at you for taking flash photographs, in the digital age it’s becoming an increasingly critical – and lucrative – business model. No longer is access to information precious in itself. Information is overwhelmingly available, and those in a position to tame the tidal wave into a useful format offer a valuable service."
The articles uses as a reference example the case of a new restaurant listing site that curates the best 100 restaurants in 100 cities by charging qualifying restaurants.
Rightful. Interesting. 7/10
Full article:http://www.forbes.com/sites/mitchfree/2013/08/05/curation-by-connection-one-hundred-tables/
Ken Dickens's curator insight,
August 7, 2013 1:00 PM
Non-Profits are a commodity. There are over 1.5 million of them in the US alone, all with great causes, all with their hands out to ask for money. Enter Donor Fatigue. Want to stand out? Become "the" source of information on your cause. In other words, give to get. You will stand out. You will gain trust. And, you will raise money.
Louise Robinson-Lay's curator insight,
October 15, 2013 3:30 AM
Sometimes you need an archive of a site. Gret for slow bandwidth areas when you just want to show an aspect of a site. Here is how.
Stephen Dale's curator insight,
October 15, 2013 7:30 AM
A useful addition to the digital curator's toolkit.
Alfredo Corell's curator insight,
November 3, 2013 9:24 AM
When you Mummify a webpage—a news article, blog post, photo or tweet, for example— we make a permanent copy and back it up in the cloud. We then give you a new URL that looks like this: http://mummify.it/2452862 Mummify is free up to 100 mummies a month. If you need to Mummify more than 100 pages in a given month you can purchase 50 more for $5.
Mike Ellsworth's comment,
October 10, 2012 10:23 PM
Mala, thanks for the reScoop and many thanks to Robin Good for the crazy good mindmap!
Mike Ellsworth's comment,
October 10, 2012 10:23 PM
Mala, thanks for the reScoop and many thanks to Robin Good for the crazy good mindmap!
sanhdyuhjue's curator insight,
January 4, 2013 8:23 PM
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Giuseppe Mauriello's comment,
July 20, 2012 2:43 PM
Hi Robin,
in this period I am busy, and I have no time to discover news and curate my topic. Thank you so much for your great curation! |
Annika McGinley's curator insight,
December 19, 2013 11:45 PM
I'm always asked by academics about the copyright implications...
Víctor Alarcón's curator insight,
February 23, 2014 3:10 PM
Amazing catalogue of film clips which can be shared & embedded
Robin Good's curator insight,
November 6, 2013 6:11 PM
Pinboard is a social bookmarking service which allows you to easily save and organize any number of links, with no limits on text descriptions. Pinboard is characterized by having a no-frills, simple interface, by being very speedy and reliable and by being able to import, sync and export all of your links easily. Pinboard integrates also a powerful web caching and indexing feature available to "pro" accounts ($25/year) which allows you to keep a full cached and searchable copy of any bookmark you save. Advanced edit tagging, filtering and bundling features make it easy to oganize and find links even inside very large collections. Links saved can be set to be public or private. All of the bookmarks saved inside Pinboard can be easily exported in a standard file format. A set of basic APIs is also available. You can import all your existing bookmarks from Delicious, Google Bookmarks, Diigo, Firefox, Safari, and many other sources by following the instructions on the howto page. A very useful feature called Tab Sets allows to quickly save all of your currently open browser tabs to Pinboard having the unique advantage of being able to re-open them even if you're on another machine or in a different browser. N.B.: The site has a unique and now proven business model and is entirely self-funded. Ad-free. My comment: Excellent bookmarking service for anyone in need of a no-frill, reliable and fast tool. The archiving feature is particularly valuable as well as the auto-syncing with multiple services (Instapaper, Read It Later, Twitter. Delicious). The service has a one-time fee of around $10. Check it out here: https://pinboard.in/ *Switch from Delicious (why): https://pinboard.in/switch/ *must-read Tour: https://pinboard.in/tour/ HowTo: https://pinboard.in/howto/ More info: http://pinboard.in/about/ *Added to the Permanent Page Archival Tools section of Content Curation Tools Supermap.
ghbrett's curator insight,
November 7, 2013 8:48 AM
Thanks Robin for your usual very in depth review of the article. See below!!
ghbrett's curator insight,
November 7, 2013 8:50 AM
Thank you Robin for your usual very in depth insights! See his comments below.
Martin (Marty) Smith's curator insight,
October 16, 2013 4:02 PM
Henry Copeland (@hc) is the Internet marketing genius behind blogads and a good friend of my friend Phil Buckley's (@1918). I promise to do another post on how cool Blogads is (http://web.blogads.com/ ), but Phil shared something at lunch today that has my palms sweating it is so exciting.
That link is to Henry's PullQuotes tagged "innovation". Here is the link to all of his curated groups:
Every curator out there is now fully focused on THIS piece (lol). Not an easy feat, but that is the power of Henry's brilliant idea. Henry's PullQuote App is like a writers index cards ONLY there is a special secret.
malek's curator insight,
October 17, 2013 7:29 AM
Long live the content snippet in the content jungle. A very flexible tool to mine for pull quote.
janlgordon's comment,
June 19, 2013 12:38 AM
Mithu Hassan Sorry I'm so late in getting back to you - you're very welcome, happy you liked it!!
santina kerslake's curator insight,
September 5, 2013 3:11 PM
Do people actually read the content? Will it keep them following you?
Tom George's comment,
August 12, 2012 1:41 AM
Hey Thomas,
Great curation and thanks for sharing. I am the founder of Internet Billboards, a growing community of curators that use Scoop.it. I noticed your national express page as well, and want to invite you to share your curation with us on Internet Billboards if you like.
Liz Wilson's comment,
July 28, 2012 3:00 AM
Thanks for the review Robin and the clear explanation of what users can do. Much appreciated.
Beth Kanter's comment,
July 13, 2012 10:46 AM
I have been using his framework for the past year and a half to teach curation to nonprofits. Linking curation to nonprofit staffer work flow is a great way to get people to use curation!
janlgordon's comment,
July 24, 2012 11:22 AM
Thank you Robin Good and Howard Rhinegold for bringing this to my attention, it's excellent!
Anne-Solène Loiseau's curator insight,
October 30, 2016 2:45 PM
Excellente vidéo sur le concept mapping avec un exemple sur le cheminement de l'information à l'action (début à 1'42). Merci à Robin Good et Howard Rheingold pour le partage.
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A useful summary of the current shortcomings in content curation tools and services, and what we features and innovations we might see in this developing market. From the author:
"In the near future it is likely that new content curation tools will provide more dedicated features for specific application and uses while becoming more aware of user needs that so far have not been taken into serious consideration (attribution, archiving, monetizing).
While large content curation hubs and platforms are likely to start realizing that their best value yet to be extracted is in the content being curated by their users, new tools will likely target more specific and professional uses rather than the general public needing simply to collect and repost content on their blog or social media channel."
Link to the full article: http://www.masternewmedia.org/content-curation-tools-future-part2/#ixzz2nuOEQZag
Interesting write up on content curation tools from Robin Good (pt. 2)
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