Yahoo奇摩 網頁搜尋

搜尋結果

  1. creations instead of reproducing the developers mantra that "my stuff is simply the best because I do it out of fun" (sorry, did not mean to hurt anybody!) Criteria Stefan Merten: "The word "best" in all the suggestions is perhaps the hardest thing. What ...

  2. Badges are used for a variety of reasons including rewarding achievement, encouraging different forms of user engagement, or simply for the fun of it. Badges can provide a good way for potential friends, collaborators, co-workers and employers to size you up.

  3. This method promotes the use incentives and the integration of play into labour. It argues that work should be fun, workers should permanently develop new ideas, realize their creativity, enjoy free time within the factory, etc. The boundaries between work time and spare time, labour and play, become fuzzy. Work tends to acquire qualities of ...

  4. This conception formed the backdrop for all the policy proposals that Bauwens and his FLOK colleagues developed with the aim of empowering ‘the direct creation of value by civil society’ (P2P Foundation 2017). Thus, in the context of FLOK’s policy documents, the Partner State is synonymous with a state government that supports cooperative ...

  5. 2019年8月24日 · Enspiral Website - lots of good stuff in every section, links to articles and video content, etc. Enspiral Blog (on Medium) is regularly updated Open Enspiral - a series of short video presentations from different Enspiral Ventures, which we did as part of the Open Source // Open Society conference (which I organised earlier this year) - good way to get a sense of the people and diversity of ...

  6. The 'concluding' chapter then finally attempts to describe the seven alternative values that would typify the hacker ethic: - 1) passion. - 2) freedom, (with passion+freedom = the hacker work ethic) - 3) social worth and 4) openness (this replaces the 'money ethic' as motivational force) - the nethic, defined by the values of 5) activity and 6 ...

  7. The Concept. "Netocracy was a term invented by the editorial board of the American technology magazine Wired in the early 1990s. A portmanteau of Internet and aristocracy, netocracy refers to a perceived global upper-class that bases its power on a technological advantage and networking skills, in comparison to what is portrayed as a ...

  1. 其他人也搜尋了