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Intridea has other similar products that they offer, but I have not tried them myself (yet).
As you state above, "import, share and discuss RSS feeds from other web sites" does not mean that users are able to lifestream their personal activities. It would be nice if you had actually tried this feature before writing the article.
If you want to lifestream use Friendfeed or Socialcast. Those are both real lifestreaming applications.
used the service. Second, I used the phrase "lifestreaming for
business." What I am describing is bringing in all of the relevant
information that an employee might care about into a single stream.
Perhaps the phrase "businessstreaming" would be more appropriate but
even fewer people have heard of that buzzword than they have heard of
"lifestreaming."
If you had read my article, you would have also noticed my references
to Friendfeed.
In any case, please help me think of new buzzwords instead of getting
all pedantic on me.
Yammer is providing the ability to import RSS feeds and discuss them. They are not attached to individuals in the same way a life streaming service would but rather more like an RSS reader (which most do not consider RSS readers to be lifestreaming apps).
From Yammer's blog post:
http://blog.yammer.com/blog/2009/02/yammer-rele...
"You can now import RSS feeds relevant to your company, allowing your users to quickly find them, comment on them, and share them around your network. The importing process is easy."
If you look at the RSS implementation of Yammer, it is a real stretch to say that it provides the same lifestreaming experience as tools like Friendfeed, Facebook, or Socialcast.
Since you're being pedantic about it, I'm going to refer you to more than a hundred years of Supreme Court decisions:
http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/data/constitution...
http://www.ratical.org/corporations/SCvSPR1886....
Yammer is a microblogging service for businesses. Twitter-esque. They may be a good one to go after for the next Digiday: Social.
-Sarah
It's clear it won't reduce email overload as Yammer has claimed (http://poprl.com/K1a )
Good thing tho, that they now offer in house versions and allow companies to set their own terms of use.
We’re a software company ourselves and larger, especially listed companies we work with are all extremely concerned about privacy, information security, and information archiving and access. They have related auditor requirements which have to be met.
(Our company is also in internal comms technology - very different to Yammer tho, as we’re focused on transforming traditional push messaging into visual/multimedia messaging). www.cutthroughcommunications.com
But I wonder how Legal or IT guys are going to STOP other employees from signing up on Yammer and sharing company information between themselves. All they can do is sign up too, pay to monitor, and set up a code of conduct, I guess.
So I think Yanmmer've got a very powerful business model, building take up from the ground up and really obliging companies to pay in order to monitor it. Are there any companies upset about this??