About Political Gastronomica
Political Gastronomica is a discourse on technology and online activism - how the marketplace of governing and ideas is improving with the efficiencies of the Internet.
Author Sanford Dickert, former CTO of John Kerry for President Campaign, works with political campaigns, non-profits and private companies from the Fortune 500 to startups.
Dickert leverages online community engagement techniques and technical vision for brand and message management through effective application of social media and organizational processes.
Popular Posts
Blog Roll
- Political Commentary
- Daily Kos (L)
- Florida Politics (L)
- St Pete The Buzz (NB)
- Crooks and Liars (L)
- MyDD (L)
- Red State (C)
- Swing State Project (L)
- Political Grind Network (M)
- Political Thought
- Jon Garfunkel
- Personal Democracy
- Ed Cone
- Britt Blaser
- Greater Democracy
- Micah Sifry
- Talking Points Memo
- Zack Exley
- Bivings Report
- Political Technology Commentary
- e.Politics
- PoliticalWarez
- FrogLoop
- IPDI blog
- Politics and Technology
- Politics Online
- Mobile Democracy Blog
- Tech President
- Technology Thought Leaders
- TechCrunch
- MobileCrunch
- Scott Rafer
- Occum's Razor
- Howard Greenstein
- David Spector
- Jerry Michalski
- Doc Searls
- MoPocket by Justin Oberman
- Friends/Thought Leaders
Tag Archives: @anncurry
Speed of a Meme: Is all there is but twitter and Facebook?
But as long as the networks exist – and they may be for a little while longer – these issues will continue to grow. The utility of twitter with its API and ubiquity on all mobile phone platforms (both smart phones and normal) and the thrall of Facebook to our information-hungry communities combined with the social network graph and the APIs that allow for even further fine-tuning of our interests when we need them – this is a challenge that governments both here and abroad are going to need to address. Continue reading
Posted in Personal Thoughts
Tagged @acarvin, @anncurry, @brianstelter, @davidclinchnews, #Egypt, #realtimepub, #SWM11, Facebook, speed of memes, twitter
Comments Off on Speed of a Meme: Is all there is but twitter and Facebook?