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... and others. I'll post a link to the transcript when it's available. Presumably (hopefully, hint hint) it will be available on DipNote or America.gov, two new media outlets the Under Secretary's overseas. Otherwise I ... National Strategy for Public Diplomacy and Strategic Communication (NSPDSC) is still in force. DipNote posts on the roundtable and gives a link to the audio of the call. How Can Public ...
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... , and then connects it up to the promise and peril of cloud computing (concluding with a wistful note that "maybe it's time for CIOs to be superheroes.")
There are misses, to be sure. Fastlane, the Secretary of Transportation's blog, and DipNote, the State Department's blog, both suffer from serious cases of bureaucratic speak.
Do you read and government blogs? If so, which ones and why?
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... for its lively, personable, sharp-tongued, and attention-getting roll of official bloggers among the diplomatic corps. Unlike the canned public relations style and drearily impersonal writing on Dipnote, the official blog of the U.S. Department of State, British bloggers generate engaging prose. However the title of "Zimbabwe bloggers shine a light on their troubled country" may be misleading, ...
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... -/pamphleteering media of the Fifth Estate with their own Blogger Roundtables where the discussion was propagated by the bloggers. Instead, Sean used new media – YouTube, Facebook, and State’s own blog DipNote – to field questions from the general public and respond directly within the host format. Also unlike the Roundtables, where the principal comes to the table with at least one topic to ...
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... country profiles and travel advisories on Twitter." Lucky for you? Jaunted said that there is no mention of the Twitter feed on the State Department website, despite another official Twitter feed (DipNote) being listed, and that it's direct message to the CSI State Twitter editor has so far been ignored. Other arms of the US Government with a Twitter presence include NASA, The White House and both ...
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