public marks

PUBLIC MARKS with tag linkedin

2011

2010

Rechercher du contenu dans vos appilcations / Services Web

by Giraultises & 3 others (via)
Greplin est un moteur de recherche qui vous permettra de rechercher du contenu dans vos services Web comme Gmail, Facebook, Twitter, Box, Linkedin, ... Bref une jolie initiative pour retrouver plus facilement ce que l'on a déjà vu.

HootSuite | hootsuite.com

by simon_bricolo & 12 others
tool for managing multiple Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn and Ping.fm accounts

2009

Loic Le Meur blog [FR]: Comment je suis 3500 personnes sur Twitter et j'adore cela

by kemar
Très intéressant le post de @loiclemeur sur sa manière d'utiliser twitter http://tinyurl.com/2aqye2 [from http://twitter.com/kemar/statuses/769229925]

Twitter dépasse Digg, LinkedIn et le NYTimes.com

by dszalkowski
Ce n'est plus une vague, mais bel et bien un raz de marée. Avec 32 millions de visiteurs, selon Comscore, Twitter vient de passer devant Digg, LinkedIn et... le site du New York Times. tout un symbole !

Ten Ways to Use LinkedIn to Find a Job | guykawasaki.com

by simon_bricolo
quelques conseils pour utiliser LinkedIn pour trouver un job

LinkedIn tire profit de la crise financière par Neteco.com

by kasi77
Bien que le contexte économique actuel soit peu favorable à la prospérité financière, certaines sociétés tirent leur épingle du jeu, c'est notamment le cas du réseau communautaire professionnel LinkedIn.

2008

The LinkedIn Blog » Blog Archive LinkedIn en Français is now a fait accompli! «

by srcmax (via)
We’re en route to introducing LinkedIn in more languages as part of our global development efforts and I’m very happy to announce that LinkedIn en Français is now a fait accompli.

Go Beyond the Connection - LinkedIn

by François Hodierne
LinkedIn new home page is more interesting.

2007

Who Is Cloning Who? Business2.0, try again

by nhoizey
[...] a list of clones per country of 4 star Web2.0 companies: Digg, Facebook, YouTube and LinkedIn. There is just one problem, the information is pretty much inaccurate and even wrong. Let’s take France for example.

RussellBeattie.com - Linking Out after Two Years of Linked In

by mozkart
After almost exactly two years I've finally closed my Linked In account. When it was first created, I thought it was interesting and thought it'd be beneficial to have my information there, both for me to contact people and for them to contact me. I gave it plenty of time to be useful, but it just hasn't done anything at all for my life. First, though I had 106 contacts, I didn't know most of the people. Neither in person or virtually. What happened was that at first I invited anyone to link into with me on my blog. That was the "game" right? He who has the most contacts wins. At first you were even listed by the number of contacts you had, remember? Then later once I realized how annoying and useless it was to have people connected to you that you don't actually know, I had a hard time saying "no" to invites. I should have made a hard and fast rule like Jeff Clavier has where if I haven't met you in person, then I don't link with you. That may have made this service more useful, but I doubt it. The only time I ever interacted with Linked In was to approve invites. Over the entire life of the service, I've gotten maybe three or four requests to pass on messages/contact information. Only one - which happened within the first few months - actually was a real business contact where I added an important middle layer of introductions. The last time was just today where I was asked by someone I don't know to pass on a message to another person that I also didn't know, and I decided enough was enough. I just emailed customer service to cancel my account. Yes, I thought about just deleting the people I didn't know, but each deletion of a contact requires an individual request to customer service (it's not just a check box and submit operation) so I finally just decided to cancel the whole thing. I think in general, people who would want to use this service are pretty contactable without using this system, no? At least to me they are. I mean, I had my email and web site in the bottom of my profile as did many others. And if you're a hard to reach person, you're most likely not using this sort of thing anyways. Anyone can contact anyone in five hops, so what real use is it? Maybe I'll add myself back in at some point in the future and only connect with people I actually know, but I doubt it. I should've seen much more value in the two years of using the service, no? I think so. Yes, the Social Networking craze, to me, is now officially over. There really is no there there.

Active users

oseres
last mark : 04/12/2011 21:16

François Hodierne
last mark : 21/05/2011 11:15

Giraultises
last mark : 09/09/2010 08:23

simon_bricolo
last mark : 24/02/2010 08:47

webs
last mark : 31/12/2009 14:04

kemar
last mark : 23/12/2009 09:03

dszalkowski
last mark : 26/05/2009 03:59

kasi77
last mark : 02/01/2009 20:49

srcmax
last mark : 26/11/2008 09:32

krachot
last mark : 29/10/2008 10:00

tadeufilippini
last mark : 09/06/2008 01:50

wrijneveld
last mark : 22/03/2008 10:40

chernobylnews
last mark : 14/01/2008 11:16

anhn
last mark : 09/10/2007 08:31

nhoizey
last mark : 09/08/2007 19:43

mozkart
last mark : 19/06/2007 14:35

bertier
last mark : 22/02/2007 12:01