TC: “The activity stream which Socialtext makes visible is very particular to its products, and in fact is designed to keep employees engaged with those products. Any time someone changes a page that you’ve created or edited in the past, it shows up as an activity.”
Mashable: “Frankly, Socialtext’s approach makes a lot more sense than some of what we’ve seen so far in the ‘Twitter for business’ market. By connecting status updates with a broader suite of business applications and activity streams, it would seem to make connecting the right people and information easier, versus needing to use yet another application. Of course, it also means you need to implement Socialtext within your organization, which is a decision that will be based on a lot more than just its microblogging features.”
Gerrit Eicker 07:19 on 4. March 2009 Permalink |
TC: “The activity stream which Socialtext makes visible is very particular to its products, and in fact is designed to keep employees engaged with those products. Any time someone changes a page that you’ve created or edited in the past, it shows up as an activity.”
Mashable: “Frankly, Socialtext’s approach makes a lot more sense than some of what we’ve seen so far in the ‘Twitter for business’ market. By connecting status updates with a broader suite of business applications and activity streams, it would seem to make connecting the right people and information easier, versus needing to use yet another application. Of course, it also means you need to implement Socialtext within your organization, which is a decision that will be based on a lot more than just its microblogging features.”