A presentation given in Taiwan to the Association of Digital Culture (www.adct.org.tw) about how social computing is changing the way disaster information management will be done.
Citation preview
1. Disaster Social Computing
Crowds, Clouds and Crisis
Gsli lafsson
Disaster Management Technical Advisor
Microsoft Corporation
Email: [email protected]
Blog:http://blogs.msdn.com/disaster/
Twitter: @gislio
2. Introduction
The Crowds
The Clouds
Way Forward
Agenda
3. Port-au-Prince
Haiti January 12, 2010
4. Social Media
5. Facebook Hotel Montana
6. Open Street Maps
7. Project 4636
8. CrisisCamp Haiti
9. CrisisCamp Haiti
10. Information Management
11. Coordination on the ground
12. Information Management on the ground
13. Big World Small World
14. The Crowds
15. What are the issues and limitations?
Information silos
Time zone differences
Organizational boundaries
Information capture/persistence
Lack of efficiency/delays
Version control issues
Security violations
Access issues
Etc.
Consumersocialnetworks
Phone
How People Work Together Now
E-mail
Fax
Face-to-face
Messaging
File shares
Paper-based
16. Organizations 2.0
17. Mobilizing
18. Facilitated
Knowledge Management
Collaborative
Workgroups
Social
Networks
Evolution
19. Discussion Boards
Comments
Podcasting
Shared Calendars
Microblogging
Versioning
Profiles
Document Libraries
Team Sites
Tags
Blogs
Task Lists
Wikis
Surveys
Ratings
EnterpriseCollaboration
Capabilities
SocialComputing
Technologies
DisasterCommunities
The Need for Communities
20.
Team Sites
21. Blogs, Wikis, Podcasts
22. Tag Profile Pages
SHARE
CREATE
Office Client Co-Authoring
23. Enterprise Wikis
24. Mobile Access
25. Rich Media Support
26. SharePoint Workspace Offline access
27. Team Sites
28. Outlook Synch & Social Connector
29. Ratings
30. External Access
31. Note Board
32. Office Web Apps
SharePoint 2010 CommunitiesPlatform
Social Bookmarks
33. Ask Me About, Colleague & Expertise Suggestions