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Entries Tagged as 'Nate Nash'

Over Hard

September 14th, 2009 · 2 Comments · Nate Nash

“Most business information technologies do not deliver great experiences.”
Man. Aint that the truth.
This quote is from a recent blog post by one of my favorite Enterprise 2.0 authors, Paula Thorton.  It literally jumped off of the screen, landed in my mint julep, and was ported directly into the underwhelming organ I refer to as my [...]

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Walker

September 2nd, 2009 · 2 Comments · Jay Hariani, Nate Nash

The restaurant was bustling with activity around an oversized circular table at a moderately trendy steak house in downtown Boston. Dressed in my best “I don’t care what I am wearing, but I care what you think” outfit, I was out to dinner with various characters from the enterprise wiki postercompany, Atlassian. Both Jay and [...]

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Back in Blue

August 24th, 2009 · 17 Comments · Nate Nash

For those (5) of you keeping score at home, I feel it necessary to inform you of a recent mark in the W column for the half tactless (me), half talented (Jay), full-tilt team of trans-national transparency here at E2oh. Fire up your boombox and rifle rack because ladies and gents, rising like a $12,000 enterprise-wide, [...]

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Stand a Little Closer When You Call Me A Band Geek

June 25th, 2009 · 4 Comments · Nate Nash

While perusing my Google Reader subscriptions the other day, I came across an interesting post from Venkatesh Rao on the Enterprise 2.0 Conference Blog. Please read the post/comments yourself, but to paraphrase, the basic idea is that as Web 2.0 style technologies move within the firewall (ala E2) they become boring. The “exciting” and “consequential” [...]

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Data for Development

June 22nd, 2009 · 2 Comments · Nate Nash

Jay and I had an interesting conversation with Peter Corbett from iStrategy Labs a few days ago. If you aren’t familiar with the firm, they are the brains behind the acclaimed data-off sponsored by the DC City Government – Apps for Democracy. The idea was frankly brilliant in both its elegance and execution. So much [...]

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