A solution has finally come. In this post at ReadWrite Web, they point out a new application they’ve found so you can block all application requests except friends, groups and event notifications. At Ignoreall.com, after installing their application there will be more requests to join the vampire group or join the virtual cocktail party. Now your professional Facebook profile is one click closer.
Blog Archive
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2008
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January
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- Xythos: Extending its Collaboration Efforts
- Enterprise 2.0 and your workforce: Start offline
- Moli: The next big step in social networking
- Why Have One When You Can Have Them All!
- Blogs: Successful with Business Travelers
- Twitter Watch Out!
- Are you tired of the applications on Facebook?
- Five Challenges to address right now for Enterprises
- Mashups in the Air!
- What do CEOs have to say about Facebook?
- We Need RSS
- More on Alfresco
- How Do You Motivate People to Collaborate and Share
- Facebook evolving
- Businesses turning to blogs for promotion
- Flock 1.1
- Wikis in the workplace: Corporate Examples
- Enterprise Blogging
- Microsoft: Taking the Lead in Enterprise Search
- Industrial Style Management: Posing problems to th...
- Let’s Get Corporate Blogging Up and Running!
- Enterprise 2.0: Is there any more room for growth?
- Twitter: Is There True Enterprise Value?
- Next in Search Engines: Human-powered?
- Enterprise Intranets: A Detailed Picture
- To Ban or Not to Ban: Social Networking in the wor...
- Oracle and BEA: A Day of Reckoning for Portal Impl...
- Web 2.0 Skepticism: It Still Exists
- IBM in 2008
- ImageNow to Interact With Microsoft SharePoint
- Open source software predictions in 2008
- Keep your employees on board: Uncap the power of E...
- Happy Birthday Wikipedia!
- Enterprise 2.0 on the Move!
- Coghead: A Step in the Right Path
- McAfee v. Davenport: The Debate
- What Not to Do in Your Business Blog
- Collaboration Tools For the Enterprise
- The Importance of Information
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January
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