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Knowledge Ecology Fair 98
KE Book Store: Virtual Communities
- Recommended by Knowledge Ecology Fair crew
- We've compiled a list of books that we think you'll find useful. For your
reading enjoyment we selected the very best books in this category.
Hosting Web Communities : Building Relationsships, Increasing Customer Loyalty, and Maintaining a Competitive Edge, by Cliff Figallo
Former director of the Well, recent consultant to America Online, and current director
of community development for Salon Magazine, Figallo knows what it takes to
create a true community in cyberspace and what kinds of mistakes will torpedo the
effort. Figallo believes that community comes from people, and so he begins by
focusing on the human element. He writes about the groups that form online
communities and how a community builder can foster the process. Figallo includes a
great section on building a quality online staff. While he keeps technical aspects in
perspective, Figallo doesn't shortchange them--he fully discusses types of interfaces
and technical tools. Amazon.com's price: $23.99 |
Net Gain : Expanding Markets Through Virtual Communities, by John Hagel, Arthur Armstrong
"Net Gain" is the first book to identify where the next level of value lies
on the Internet. Hagel and Armstrong lay out the first economic model
quantifying the revenue potential and the investment required to build a
successful virtual community.
Building relationships with customers has been a buzz phrase in many
business circles for years. Now John Hagel and Arthur Armstrong declare
that's not enough. They make a strong case that business success in the very
near future will depend on using the Internet to build not just
relationships, but communities. The payoff, they maintain, will be
phenomenal customer loyalty and high profits. But, they warn, this race will
definitely go to the swift. Here's a cyberspace book that could make your
business future. Not everyone agrees with Hagel and Armstrong, but with
stakes so high they deserves a serious reading. Amazon.com's price: $17.47 |
The Virtual Community : Homesteading on the Electronic Frontier,
by Howard Rheingold
Cyberculture authority Howard Rheingold was the first to write about online
communities in this style that is part-travelogue and part-anthropological guide. This
groundbreaking classic explores the entire virtual community, beginning with a
selective but probing look at the author's original online home, The Well. Rheingold
relates plenty of anecdotes that demonstrate the upsides of online life, such as how
he was able to get information on removing a tick from his child before his doctor
could respond to his phone call. But the bulk of the material relates to how
individuals interact online much as they do in a face-to-face community.
Rheingold speaks to how both friendships and enmities are formed online and how
people come together to support each other through misfortune. He gives the
example of how computer-moderated communication enabled members of one Well
community to send vital medical aid to a friend hospitalized halfway around the
world. Rheingold goes on to show how communities can form by various electronic
communication methods, using the conferencing system of The Well as one
example. He also examines how people interact through mailing lists, live chat, and
the fantasy cyberenvironments of online role-playing games. In the process, he
questions what kind of relationships can really be formed in a medium where people
can change their apparent identity at will. If you place an order we may be able to find you a used copy within 1-3 months. |
The Wired Neighborhood,
by Stephen Doheny-Farina
A level-headed analysis of the nature of community in the online world, and the effect
of the online world on real-world communities. Contains some of the best
discussions I have encountered about the substantive qualitative value of projects
such as the National Public Telecomputing Network, which, to my mind, could serve
the same balancing service for the future of the Internet that National Public Radio
and the Public Broadcasting Service have served for radio and television in the U.S.,
Recommended Amazon.com's price: $30.00 |
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