During our meeting I remembered that one my friend could be interesting addition to RCom. He already worked with me on the Wikimedia research issues two years ago [1]. Basically, this page [2] and its subpages are the product of our work. The edits are mostly mine, but significant part of the work is his, too.
So, I talked with him and asked him to write something about himself to present himself to other RCom members [3].
I would add that he has initiative and that he would help us to be better organized, too.
[1] http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:Contributions/Goranmilovanovic [2] http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/User:Millosh/Wikimedia_research [3] Goran S. Milovanović is a PhD student at the Department of Psychology, Faculty of Philosophy, University of Belgrade. He started his PhD program at New York University, Cognition and Perception, where he took his first two years of PhD studies. He is currently working on his PhD thesis focused on problems of rationality of cognition at the Belgrade University.
Goran has been involved in Internet related research since 2002, when he founded the Center for Research on Information Technologies (CePIT, http://www.bos.rs/cepit/eng/) in Belgrade. He co-authored and edited five books on Internet research in Serbian. Since 2002. he was involved in various Internet and Information Governance related research, including Internet Governance studies such as "Internet Governance Forum: Identifying the Impact" (http://www.diplomacy.edu/ig/impact/) with DiploFoundation (http://www.diplomacy.edu). He has worked as Research Coordinator and Research Manager with DiploFoundation (http://www.diplomacy.edu), Web Manager with Ebart (http://www.arhiv.rs/) in Belgrade and as a Consultant on research projects with UNICEF. More information is available from http://www.milovanovicresearch.com or Google: Goran S. Milovanovic. He was born in 1974. in Belgrade, Serbia.
Does anyone want to talk with him via Skype or so? (If so, please note it here and I'll send to you contacts privately.) I really think that he would be a valuable addition to RCom. He has already passed the most of our documentation.
On 05/20/2011 01:22 AM, Milos Rancic wrote:
During our meeting I remembered that one my friend could be interesting addition to RCom. He already worked with me on the Wikimedia research issues two years ago [1]. Basically, this page [2] and its subpages are the product of our work. The edits are mostly mine, but significant part of the work is his, too.
So, I talked with him and asked him to write something about himself to present himself to other RCom members [3].
I would add that he has initiative and that he would help us to be better organized, too.
[1] http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:Contributions/Goranmilovanovic [2] http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/User:Millosh/Wikimedia_research [3] Goran S. Milovanović is a PhD student at the Department of Psychology, Faculty of Philosophy, University of Belgrade. He started his PhD program at New York University, Cognition and Perception, where he took his first two years of PhD studies. He is currently working on his PhD thesis focused on problems of rationality of cognition at the Belgrade University.
Goran has been involved in Internet related research since 2002, when he founded the Center for Research on Information Technologies (CePIT, http://www.bos.rs/cepit/eng/) in Belgrade. He co-authored and edited five books on Internet research in Serbian. Since 2002. he was involved in various Internet and Information Governance related research, including Internet Governance studies such as "Internet Governance Forum: Identifying the Impact" (http://www.diplomacy.edu/ig/impact/) with DiploFoundation (http://www.diplomacy.edu). He has worked as Research Coordinator and Research Manager with DiploFoundation (http://www.diplomacy.edu), Web Manager with Ebart (http://www.arhiv.rs/) in Belgrade and as a Consultant on research projects with UNICEF. More information is available from http://www.milovanovicresearch.com or Google: Goran S. Milovanovic. He was born in 1974. in Belgrade, Serbia.