LOVCOP Presentation wiki

The wiki url is : http://a-mtype.apsc.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/wiki.pl?TheFuss for those of you participating….

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LOVCOP’s on the scene…

If you read Alan or D’Arcy (and if you don’t you should), you already know that we will be co-presenting a teleconference presentation for Educause’s Learning Objects Virtual Community of Practice entitled What’s the Fuss about RSS?.

It would be delightful to attract a contingent of participants that extends beyond the usual LOVCOP crowd — to charge the discussion and to illustrate that this subject deserves better than fringe status in the discourse around reusable media. Although there’s plenty of interest when I mention RSS, and colleagues here at UBC have been keen and supportive, there’s still a sense that this is somehow not the “real”, grown-up way of doing things. I personally would like this approach to move from the sideshow and become accepted as a viable mainstream strategy (one of many).

I recognise that to most of the people reading this weblog I need not make that case. One of the things we hope to discuss tomorrow is how this loose online community has generated discussion and moved work forward without central structures or funding. I’ve said this before, but thanks to all of you for providing me with so much useful information, stimulating conversation, feedback and support.

Alan and D’Arcy have both noted that we put this together remotely using email, iChat and wikis… and speaking for myself had a blast doing so. I hope it all comes together tomorrow (and at the MERLOT conference next month)… though I’m so impressed with my collaborators that I’m confident things will be cool, so long as I don’t speak too much.

Our wiki will serve as something of an outline for our discussion (Alan is hosting a stable version). Hope it’s not too dense, and that it makes sense. Suggestions are welcome. Hope you can join us tomorrow.

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What’s The Pitch?

A novel online resource proposal by David Wiley:

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Total Government Awareness

The folks at MIT’s Media Lab have set up Open Government Information Awareness, in the hopes of creating “a Google of government, a massive Internet clearinghouse of information to help citizens track their leaders as effectively as their leaders track them. …GIA hopes to create an enormous but self-sustaining community where users do the work of keeping it running and credible.”

Some excerpts from the mission statement:

As the government broadens internal surveillance, and collaborates with private institutions to access data on the public, it is crucial that we maintain a symmetry of accountability. If we believe the United States should be a government “of the people, by the people, and for the people” it is of central importance to provide citizens with the power to oversee their government. At least as much effort should be spent building tools to facilitate citizens supervising their government as tools to help the government monitor individuals.

The Open Government Information Awareness suite of software tools acts as a framework for US citizens to construct and analyze a comprehensive database on our government. Modeled on recent government programs designed to consolidate information on individuals into massive databases, our system does the opposite, allowing you to scrutinize those in government. Citizens are able to explore data, track events, find patterns, and build risk profiles, all in an effort to encourage and motivate action. We like to think of it as a Citizen

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N.NE: roadmap for a new syndication standard

Laura Trippi with a characteristically amusing and useful overview of machinations in the tangled world of emerging (converging? diverging?) RSS standards… worth quoting at length:

The Log Format Roadmap page lays out the plan. This will be a new syndication standard for personal publishing, marking up and exchanging content, potentially replacing RSS.

Gasp!, say some developers. Groan!, say the content-coders who have finally managed to bushwhack their way through the thickets of RSS, get their content encoded correctly enough to pass muster, and maybe a little RSS reader running on the side. But, as Tim Bray at ongoing points out, the complications — confusion, controversy — plaguing RSS are precisely the point:

There are multiple 0.9* versions, the RSS 1.0 crowd, the plurality (maybe majority) favorite RSS 2.0, and the confusion is intense enough that Mark Pilgrim and Aaron Swartz create joke versions with

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generate | regenerate | transform

HorizonZero is an online magazine published by the Banff Centre dedicated to Canadian digital arts and culture.

This month’s issue is built around the theme of the remix, touching on “DJ/VJ cultures, Aboriginal hip hop, peer to peer collaboration, collage philosophy, and art remixing science.”

I’ve done a lot of complaining lately that much of the thinking around new media in education is hidebound, stuck inside a mindset that ignores digital media’s special attributes, and out of touch with developments in the wider web culture. Such whining is oddly satisfying to me, but useless, so over the next few weeks I’m going to be revisiting some of the articles in this issue more closely… checking out some old haunts such as Rhizome.org, and hopefully stumbling across some happy accidents along the way.

It might be fun, or more likely degenerate into pretentious wankery. For those of you wondering what relevance such dabbling might have for practitioners of online learning, I’ll quote at length from Sara Diamond’s introductory essay, “quintessence: art history shake and bake”:

Technology-dependent creativity tends to require intensive collaboration between individuals and practices. Artists often share their creative space with scientists, engineers, and technologists. “Collaboration” and “interdisciplinarity” are emerging as trendy catch phrases, especially at the institutional level, but collaboration remains a challenge for traditional institutions to support.

The relationship to collective production opens a different space for the audience; a space enabled by – but beyond – the everyday use of peer-to-peer technologies.

Over the past fifteen years, new media artists have been inventing tools. Artists invent for several reasons: either to critique existing technologies, or to make a gadget to run their show, or to genuinely create something new at the source. Sher Doruff’s team at the Society for Old and New Media in Amsterdam created KeyStroke (www.keyworx.org), a tool designed to enable artistic exchange in a shared collaborative environment. (It allows numerous artists to work together in real time online in a digital audio, graphic and textual jam session while audiences watch via their computer screens.) …This artistic practice has resonance in the world of software design. Some software architects have always considered themselves to be artists or writers.

The open source movement was built on the history of the free software movement. The latter believed that software was a fundamental resource and should be freely available, not owned. The open source movement is a less radical version of this: it believes that collective minds are necessary in the development of tools and complex systems. Progammer-collaborators co-own the software they develop. Versions must be credited and, if commercialized, paid out down the line. Arts organizations such as V2 or C3 all hold to the open source credo, and most artists who develop software choose to open source it. Some few, such as the UK’s Simon Pope, have pointed out that open source is a very masculine culture where competition for the best code drives production, and where collaboration is actually less present than might be imagined. Still, the culture of programming increasingly demands collaboration.

Horizon may be viewed in HTML or (much groovier) Flash 6 version.

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Convergence: it’s not just for breakfast anymore…

I’ve been hearing a bit of buzz about the 0.1 release of Chandler, and yesterday finally gave it a go… at this point it merits its miniscule version number, but the notion of integrating email, scheduling, a personal repository integrated into a peer-to-peer network, RSS feeds and more within a single open source application is something to look forward to.

Laura Trippi of net.narrative environments points to a further refinement:

[Chandler is] way too “skeletal” for the likes of me. But, seems they got a grant from the Mellon Foundation to design a version specifically adapted for higher education, code-named Westwood.

Westwood? As in Vivian? Quite a fashion statement for a college iPIM.

After working closely with representatives from a number of universities we concluded there were four key recommendations for incremental functionality in Westwood:

# Nomadic usage and central Repositories
# Standards based Calendar Access Protocol (CAP) Client
# Full interoperability with standards based infrastructure
# Robust security framework

Great! Well, very promising. We’re drowning out here! PowerPoint, Executive Summary, and full report available on the site.

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hypertext/hypermedia/literary weblogs

A colleague here at UBC asked me to assemble a short list of “interesting, inventive and creative weblogs”, particularly ones that “focus on hypertext/hypermedia/literary issues.”

I only had a bit of time, during which I compiled the selection below. I know I’m making some terrible omissions… if you care to round out the list, please add a comment, or annotate the unformatted wiki page I’ve been tossing the links into.

[BTW, I hired a student to do a CSS for my wikis, which he did… but he also recommended I install a more comprehensive suite such as SnipSnap — an excellent idea, but it’s also work, and these are frantic days, indeed.]

Hypermedia

  • grandtextauto – “smashing up digital narrative, poetry, games and art”
  • hypertext kitchen – “Fresh news about the craft of hypertext — on the Web and off.”
  • hyperfiction – “hyper(text)fiction thoughts, links, and bits from noah wardrip-fruin”
  • Kairosnews – “A Weblog for Discussing Rhetoric, Technology and Pedagogy”
  • Literacy Weblog – “Online and Offline Links”
  • Mark Bernstein – “”We don’t have to worry about making it interesting; all we have to worry about is getting rid of the pig.” — David Mamet
  • Weblog Kitchen – “a Wiki about research in weblogs, wikis, and related hypertext technologies.”
  • jill/txt – “I mostly write about the web, writing, blogging and networked literature and art.”
  • Seb’s Open Research – “Pointers and thoughts on the evolution of knowledge sharing and scholarly communication”
  • A List Apart – Not really a weblog, but…
  • net.narrative environments – “performing in/as code”
  • alienated.net – “you do your own thing”

    Literary/cultural

  • In a Dark Time
  • Literary Saloon
  • Arts Journal
  • wood s lot – “fictive things wink as they will” (frighteningly prolific and eclectic)
  • Riley Dog – cut and paste poetic magic
  • MOBYlives
  • Waggish – “The capriciousness of belletristic thinking is a very bad thing!” (Schiller)
  • Ftrain
  • Cassandra Pages – “Who was Cassandra?”

  • Posted in Administrivia, Emergence, Webloggia | 6 Comments

    STLHE Workshop resources

    Back from Newfoundland, where I gave a rather ill-tempered presentation at the CADE conference.

    As much as I’d love to do an hour or two of high-wire, catch-up weblogging… I’m presently occupied putting the finishing touches on a pre-conference workshop I’m delivering with Michelle Lamberson for the Society for Teaching and Learning in Higher Education. We’ve entitled it “Mining Shareable Content from Your Online Course Environment”, and hopefully it will be a useful experience for the participants.

    Supporting resource links have been tossed into an unformatted wiki page.

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    Light postings ahead…

    Not that I’ve been prolific lately, but this space will be quiet until mid-June… taking some holidays and then presenting at CADE in St. John’s and then the STLHE back here in Vancouver. I should be a wreck at the conclusion.

    Peace out.

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