Yeah.  At first LI didn't do it well - the first few I got left me with no 
option to return the favor.  However, they eventually rigged it up that when 
you log in to LI (not just go to a forum discussion), you get presented with a 
mini-app with four people you should know and what they've said they do.  I 
usually click a few, if I know for sure that the person has expertise in the 
area.  I think they're using the information put in by the LI user - frequently 
the topic areas are really broad (like "Security").

Ray Parks
Consilient Heuristician/IDART Program Manager
V: 505-844-4024  M: 505-238-9359  P: 505-951-6084
NIPR: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
SIPR: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> (send 
NIPR reminder)
JWICS: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> (send NIPR reminder)



On Oct 29, 2012, at 2:48 PM, Owen Densmore wrote:

Cleaning out my email, due to a recent 6-week long trip, I think I'm seeing a 
very odd phenomenon: Linked-in endorsements are increasing considerably!

I'm wondering if this is a nifty power-law example where someone gets an 
endorsement, that reminds them to either endorse back and/or to endorse friends 
that they've been meaning to endorse.

Anyone else seeing this?

   -- Owen
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