Northern Voice Presenter Schedule Released

One notable development over the holidays was the release of the Saturday Schedule and Speakers list for Northern Voice 2006. I’m very excited about the roster, once again a nice mix of big names and local talent.

I should note that I am nominally in charge of the “Blogging in Education” panel, and it features three Vancouver-based bloggers: Daniel Mosquin of the wildly popular UBC Botanical Gardens Blog and Photo of the Day, Dave Smulders from BCIT’s blogging project, and Jon Beasley-Murray (Posthegemonic Musings, and Latin America on Screen). But that’s not all — there will be another bonus happening during the panel, though I can’t say exactly what form it will take. All I know at this point is that it involves Moose Camp and some, ahem, amigos of mine.

Speaking of Moose Camp, it is slowly taking shape and more details are forthcoming. And speaking of amigos, thanks to D’Arcy for the moose image that now graces the sidebar of this weblog.

Posted in Webloggia | 3 Comments

How do you like the new design?

Move over D’Arcy, I’m gunning for your “most beautiful” title.

Update: I should note that the line above was my feeble attempt at humour. I made an ill-advised attempt to refresh my templates (our crack support staff did an upgrade to MT 3.2 over the holidays), and somehow made a total hash of things. Perhaps I shouldn’t have tried to do this during the course of New Year’s Eve revelrie. Getting things done, indeed.

Thanks to my intrepid colleague Frank for restoring order.

Happy New Year, everyone.

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See ya on the other side

Work-family balance

As of now, I’m theoretically on vacation. I wish I could claim victory over my commitments, but alas I will be taking the last pieces of my grading with me to Vancouver Island, depending on the kindness of my students to the (hopefully not-so-)bitter end.

But the vibe is already different. A palpable lightening of the spirit is at hand. My thoughts turn to family and friends, curling up and connecting with analog media, playing some atrocious guitar, and perhaps resuming my seasonal search for the perfect Manhattan.

I may do some blogging for fun (I do have a backlog of ideas for that), but promise not to discuss anything of relevance to professionals in my field until school resumes in the new year. (So in a sense, it’s business as usual here over the holidays.)

But before I pull the plug, allow me to say that whatever others might think, 2005 was a banner year for Abject Learning. If nothing else, it was my portal and lifeline connecting me to some brilliant peers and wonderful friends. Thank you for commenting, linking, arguing or just stopping by… And I wish all of you the best of the season, however you choose to celebrate.

Posted in Administrivia | 6 Comments

Quickie Folksonomy Screencast

FolksonomyCast.jpg

I bashed out this screencast on the basics of folksonomies (requires QuickTime, 19MB). This one was recorded live with the built-in laptop mic (so my keyboard rattles like cannon fire). It does not pretend to be a comprehensive or deep account of folksonomies and tagging — it just focuses on a few of the common applications and demos one way these principles could be applied in a course.

All materials and references on the companion wiki.

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Linux on my Mac

I’ve been doing an increasing amount of grumbling about the performance of my Mac, which may be unfair as I likely need to upgrade some hardware and do some file maintenance and cleanup. But I’ve also been noting some behaviour from the good ship Apple Corp that has lately been rubbing me the wrong way (disclosure: many people think I’m a perpetually disgruntled pinko anarchist, and I’m OK with that).

Going back to Microsoft is not an option, which means I’ve been casting longing glimpses Linux-way, though I have my doubts whether I have the technical chops to run the system. But it also occurs to me that I am increasingly using my Firefox browser as my interface for more and more of my apps (Flickr for photos, Writely for word processing, etc…). So when my partner said she wanted a laptop for writing we agreed to buy a cheapo PC and slap the most humane Linux OS we could find onto it. When we learned that our friendly neighborhood corner shop (named “Weblog Computer” of all things) specialised in Linux apps and support, we took that as a sign and decided it was all systems go.

Christmas came early to OLT today, as a clever staffer had ordered a bunch of Ubuntu install and demo discs some time back. To my surprise, Ubuntu can be loaded onto my Apple PowerBook — who knew? I’m not quite prepared to ditch OSX, but I am able to get a sense of the Ubuntu environment via the live demo disc. So far it seems pretty slick, and though the instructions warn that the demo disc runs slower than the installed OS does, right now it’s noticeably faster than OSX.

In this instance, I’m easily convinced. Now to find a cheap laptop to liberate from the clutches of proprietary software…

Posted in Uncategorized | 9 Comments

OK, OK, I finally get it…

I might be slow, but I’m sure…

So if there was any anticipation about how Yahoo intends to position itself after its acquisitions of Flickr and del.icio.us, with the announced hosting partnership with Movable Type it’s clear now. What do they offer? End to end management — you can pick your own domain name, have it all set up with blog software installed, and roll. Jeremy Zawodny (via Boris) notes that in addition to the array of MT plugins that there are “plugins for all your favorite Yahoo services, from Flickr to del.icio.us.” They’re bookend applications. And the crowd goes wild. It will be interesting to see how well these apps are integrated into the interface, and if being under the same roof means these toys will play better with each other as tent-poles under the Yahoo Hosting Big Top than they do out in the world wild web.

Note that blogging integration is just one component of Yahoo’s package of small business tools. When I think “small business” and “the web,” I think of all the people I know who are making their way in the world as independent consultants, or itinerant contract workers, or people who simply want to establish a web presence to enhance their professional profile. All these people know they need to establish some sort of online identity, they each have something to offer the global conversation and some of them are very keen to do so, but almost all of them are intimidated by the amount of technical and cultural knowledge involved with maintaining a groovy web presence. Doing what I do, I take it on myself to butt uninvited into their personal and professional affairs and offer unsolicited straight-talking advice. Up till now, I had no option but to recommend a three or four step plan, some of them requiring technical chops (and which, though I talk trash, I have none).

Yahoo seems to be telling these people that they can start out with a web presence (with no visible branding from Yahoo in the domain or in the site) that is preloaded with all the bells and whistles of a Web 2.0 bleeding edge digerati guru right away.

Wonder if wikis, or podcast software might get rolled in too?

Interesting that it’s a hosting arrangement, not an acquisition. Whither Typepad? And I wonder if Yahoo tried to buy out Six Apart the way they did Flickr and del.icio.us. Dave Winer suggests that a WordPress arrangement is forthcoming. So maybe it’s possible the actual blogging platforms will serve as a delivery layer, but not part of the integrated firmament like the bookmarking and photo sharing apps…

Then again, maybe it’s all about making us nodes in Yahoo’s massive consumer data set.

Hey look — I just wrote a technobuzz posting! And my first reference to Winer! Better add my tags:

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Posted in Abject Learning | 5 Comments

The real big news…

Forget about the latest confirmation that the Web 2.0 business model is to get bought by Yahoo! or Google. My own big news is surviving the day that is circled in blood-red ink on my calendar every year. We met the TLEF application deadline, submitting our office’s raison d’etre a full hour before the doors slam shut… now all that remains to be seen is if the University powers agree with our justification for existence.

It was the usual administrative root canal. Not as bad as previous years, though that’s not saying much. I work with some very talented people with loads of great ideas, both in my own unit and across the campus, which makes the whole process just bearable.

I mainly blog this for people wondering why I haven’t been responding to their emails, or who are waiting on other work from me. I am now moving to address the massive slushpile of shameful neglect. I’m almost afraid to look.

Posted in Administrivia | 6 Comments

Politics 2.0?

I started this as a comment to D’Arcy’s post on how Canada’s political parties stack up as adopters of social software, but since my output here is so slim, I decided to cut and paste it into my own space.

D’Arcy and Rob before him make lots of good observations and assessments on the various approaches to the web demonstrated by our political parties in the heat of an election. At the same time, however, I wonder if such assessments account for the limitations of blogging here at the end of 2005.

I agree that if the political parties are going to use the web effectively, then blogs (real blogging, which as D’Arcy notes is not really what these blog-like substances are) will eventually be part of it. But it’s likely that candidates are not blogging with real abandon because they feel that their time might better be spent doing the things candidates always need to do to win votes in their ridings — making a lot of appearances, trying to make news in the big media sources (which may be dinosaurs, but still reach more real voters), raising money for media buys, and just getting out and meeting voters in coffee shops, bus stops, and in their homes.

All it will take to get blogs added to that set of tried and true campaign tactics is for some candidate to turn effective blogging into votes, including votes from outside the digerati (who are a minuscule percentage of the electorate). The case of Howard Dean in 2004 is instructive. He blogged like crazy, did everything in fine Web 2.0 fashion, did guest-blogger spots with Lessig (et al), had David Weinberger and the rest of the social software aristocracy drooling all over him… And in the early primary campaign stages, it seemed to be working. He was able to use the power of tools like Meetup.com to gather impressive crowds, and he raised a lot more money than a longshot candidate should have been able to do. (It helped that he was pretty much the only serious candidate who was clearly against the Iraq War at that time.) The blogger crowd went nuts with this success, began drinking its own kool-aid and started talking about a revolution in politics. The mainstream media, impressed by the crowds and the money that were rolling in, not to mention being intimidated by this new-fangled technology they didn’t really understand, began declaring Dean the frontrunner. By the time that actual primary voting was set to begin, Dean was seen as unbeatable.

But a funny thing happened on the way to the White House. The appearance of massive support online did not match the sentiments among voters at large. The echo chamber effect of the blogosphere had massively inflated Dean’s real appeal. Voters in Iowa and New Hampshire (who prize their tradition of personalised, “retail” politics) didn’t care what A-List bloggers thought and took their votes elsewhere. The mainstream media then showed how it can destroy a candidate when it senses weakness (by incessant and out-of-context replays of the “Dean Scream”), and in a flash Candidate 2.0 was Candidate Dot.Com flameout.

Another thing to keep in mind when assessing how politicos use blogs is that while blogs prize candour, informality and spontaneity, those qualities can be death to a politician. Citizens can complain about candidates spewing talking points like automatons all we want, but face it, every time a politician goes “off message” it is usually framed as a gaffe, and is exploited to the advantage of her or his opponent.

I’m not arguing that new technologies can’t be useful to politicians. RSS, wikis, or whatever can be very useful for tapping voter sentiment, building strategy, staying on top of developing news stories, and generating rapid and accurate responses to the twists and turns of a campaign. I don’t doubt that the NDP’s decision to go with Drupal will save the party money, hassle, and make it easier to scale its web presence. And there’s one new technology that is apparently indispensable to Canada’s federal politicians and strategists — the Blackberry.

But as it stands, I don’t think blogging is the killer app for Canadian politics.

Posted in Webloggia | 2 Comments

Screencast feedback for a student’s work…

Interesting example of multimedia student feedback, with some challenging questions in response from M C Morgan:

…it also shows how significantly commenting would have to change to make it useful in screencasting. Let’s talk about micro-management. Let’s talk about the pedagogical value of the student being able to skip around in the commenting.

As a demo, it’s curious, in part because it highlights the weaknesses of the tutor-at-the-table approach.

And, as an afterthought, it certainly makes the student a passive receiver of the message: there’s no room in a screencast for dialogue. You can’t even change the channel.

Tagged | 3 Comments

Doing it Writely on the wrong side of town…

I know I’m not exactly breaking a hot new story here, but I wanted to offer a shout-out for Writely, a very slick writing app that is a cross between a synchronous wiki (that allows multiple concurrent editors) and an online word processing program.

I’d poked around the tool before, but it isn’t until you actually have to use it for something that you can really assess an application. As it happens, this week has provided me a useful comparison — I’ve used both Writely and Microsoft Word 2004 (just upgraded) for nearly identical collaborative writing projects with distributed partners. At pretty much every step of the way, I was pleasantly surprised by Writely, and dismayed by Word, which if anything has taken a step back in terms of usability and basic stability. In all honesty, I can’t think of a single feature or experience in which the desktop application was better. I wasted a great deal of time wrestling with the Word UI, fighting elements that might have been bugs, might have been features, it really was hard to say. Writely, on the other hand, was an absolute breeze… it has required virtually zero experimentation or fiddling to get up and rolling.

Given that Writely lets you export your files in both Word and OpenOffice format, it’s hard to think of any circumstance in which I would use a word processor, at least so long as I have an internet connection.

Writely is still in Beta (though so far very stable), and who knows what licensing will look like when they take this thing onto the market. But for 24 hours or so, I will not roll my eyes when some zealot raves about the promise of Web 2.0…

BTW, if you’re reading this, the API that lets me publish directly from Writely onto my blog worked like a charm.

Posted in Uncategorized | 4 Comments