Technology

Entries related to technology.

#PodcampNYC Day 1 recap

#PodcampNYC Day 1

There is no way that a day of a podcamp can adequately be summarized in a single blog entry, especially when sitting on a train back to New Haven, after having had several Gin and Tonics. However, there are many impressions that are worth sharing.

During the introduction, there were talks about simple logistics. The WiFi was down, but they were resetting the router. People spoke about the infectious joy of learning and a desire to spread that. One person spoke about learning astronomy from his grandfather when he was five years old and dedicating his Podcamp experience to his grandfather. There were discussions about the importance of the 'rule of two feet', meaning that if you are in a session that you are not getting a lot out of, don't feel bad about walking out and finding a session that is better suited to your needs. They spoke about the importance of tagging, and if you don't know what tagging is, ask someone near you. They some about the importance of Creative Commons, and the whole idea that the podcamp experience is based on sharing information. It was noted with humor that this was perhaps the first camp where people asked for press passes.

Then first session had several good sessions. I went to Teachers Teaching Teachers. Paul Alison and Susan Ettenheim had many great comments. Several of which I captured on Twitter. Since I am sitting on a train without Internet connectivity, I will have to simply try to remember as much as my Gin laden brain can remember.

The session started, in true podcamp style, with everyone introducing themselves and talking about what they hoped to get out of the session. Peggy Sheehy, whom I knew from Second Life and the Second Life educators list, and who describes herself as a consultant in Virtual World Education, summed it up quite nicely by stating that she was all over anything that gets people engaged. Another person in that session, whose name escapes me as I take the train home, is a . Another was an artist, who, because of the small living space that he currently lives in, creates his sculptures in SketchUp. I wish I got his name, or a link to some of his SketchUp sculptures.

One comment that especially jumped out at me was the observation that before we put our kids on school buses, we make sure that they understand the rules and etiquette of riding a school bus. Yet when kids get in trouble online, we don't stop to think about what we've told them about the rules and etiquette of riding the information superhighway. To original quote was a bit different, but I think it captured the sense of what was said.

A different session during the same time period was Michael Carrasquillo's "Video Podcasting for Musicians". I heard a lot of good comments about this session.

During the 11 o'clock session, there a couple sessions that drew overflow crowds. Alan Levy of BlogTalkRadio spoke about "how to build and sustain a social community". He told various stories about BlogTalkRadio and I think I will see about adding them into my social media mix. Perhaps I can set up a weekly podcast featuring Fiona. Concurrent with that, Dave LaMorte spoke about "Using technology for differentiated instruction" and Cliff Ravenscraft spoke about communicating with your audience: Building community around your podcast. Cliff's session was overflowing as well, and I confused the two sessions in a couple messages I sent to Twitter. Cliff had great comments about responding to every email and about using sites like TalkShoe, as well as either j2.com or k2.net for voicemail.

After lunch, Peggy Sheehy and AJ Kelton spoke about 'Second Life: Shifted Learning". I liked their approach to the divide between digital natives and digital immigrants, noting that some older folks, like Peggy and myself, are perhaps closer to being digital natives than some teenagers growing up in a digital native culture. Instead, looking at it in terms of a shift in culture and education, and thinking about those who have not made the shift, many digital immigrants, and those who have made the shift, many digital natives, seemed particularly useful. There is probably some play on words about those who are 'shiftless', but I will leave that as an exercise to the reader.

Peggy made reference to a book, "Don't bother me mom, I'm learning", which sounds like a book worth exploring. She also noted a T-shirt that says, "I'm not ADD. I'm just not listening". There were many great tidbits from that session. Peggy suggested that one of the worst things teachers can do is to teach students about technology without talking about the ethics of how to use it responsibly. She spoke about how kids come into schools, full of media rich experiences, and how schools shut these kids down. She told a wonderful story about one day when a pigeon flew into her classroom. It walked over to a computer and started walking on the keyboard. Peggy called someone to get her digital camera out of the locked draw in the desk in her office. Yet by the time the person arrived with the camera, just about every student had taken a picture with their cellphones. Students these days are well versed in the use of digital media tools.

She did note that 21st century literacy is based on traditional literacy, such as reading and writing. There wasn't any reference to the Pew report that just came out, and it seems like this is a good area to explore.

There were several other sessions I was particularly interested during this time slot. Lisa Thurmann ran a session entitled "Using Podcasting to Connect with Children Re-entering School After Having Been Treated for Cancer". I didn't get any details about the session afterwards, but many people said it was going to be a great session. Another session was "Music in Podcasts-Pandora.com", lead by Kevin Seal. Later in the day, many people told me that this was the best session, in true Podcamp style, with a very lively and informative session. I had a brief chance to speak with Kevin at the bar at the end of the day, and it does sound like this was a great session.

During the 2 PM time slot, Christine Cavalier spoke about 'Social Media Parenting". The crux of her talk was about how we need to teach kids about digital technology. Yet it is the kids that understand digital culture, better than their parents. She took the Digital native/Digital Immigrant dichotomy and ran with it to a great place. Parents are like the first generation immigrants in America. They need to learn technology as a second language, so they can communicate with their kids growing up in a digital culture. What we have to worry about are the parents that are afraid of technology, and help them ratchet down their fear factor.

I think her points were right on mark, but as people explored what it meant, it felt like a bunch of digital immigrants returning to their fears of being online. As someone whom so many of the new digital natives meet as they first explore their surroundings, as a digital immigrant since 1982, I felt very frustrated by the discussion.

This session was followed up by Whitney Hoffman talking about "Education 2.0 - How New Media is Changing Education". I would be tempted to retitle her presentation to "How New Media Should be Changing Education...” She had many great comments about encouraging students to set up Wiki's, mailing lists, blogs, and other tools to make sure that their educational experience is as fulfilling as it should be. Whitney was a key organizer of PodcampNYC, and if anyone 'gets it', it is probably Whitney. I bookmarked a few sites she highlighted and started following her in various social media sites.

By the time the four o'clock session rolled around, I was close to information overload. The session I sought out didn't have the presenter appear. So, I headed out, in search of another session. On my way, I ran into Ann Marie Mathis and Howard Levenson of Cheil Worldwide. Cheil is an advertising agency that seems to 'get it'. I first met Ann Marie and Howard at the Virtual Worlds 2008 conference. They are fellow residents of Second Life. As I spoke with them, I wondered why there were no other advertising agencies apparent at PodcampNYC. This was a gathering of some of the leading content creators, as well as people who could be potential clients for advertising firms. Is it just because Cheil is the only firm forward thinking enough to get beyond strict adherence to ROI thinking? Just because people haven't figured out, yet, how to measure something, doesn't mean that there isn't great value there.

As I sort through the business cards and brochures that I received, I find a few other sites that deserve mention. At the bar, various firms deserve shoutouts. I believe that Raw Voice and Culinary Media Network bought the first round, Blip.tv bought the second round, and mDialog bought the third round. This does illustrate a problem. After a long conference, and a couple hours at a bar, some of the details get a little blurry. Let me simply say that I have been a long time fan of blip.tv. mDialog is a company that particularly caught my interest early, during the show. While blip is a great way to upload videos, and I'll probably keep uploading my videos to blip, mDialog looks like a great way to create channels of video content, whether you use their own site, blip.tv or other sites. I need to explore their system in much more detail when I get a chance to catch up. That said, I may be confusing them with Magnify.net. When the dust settles, I'll try to figure it out.

Another site that caught my attention, in part because they had a table, thanks to their sponsorship of PodcampNYC, was redlasso.com. Redlasso gives you the ability to search TV and radio broadcasts and then clip and share the stories on your own blog. I look forward to seeing what they can really do.

Other sites that I picked up cards for, mostly because the people involved seemed like good interesting people were Travels with Child, Leisure Creative, Queens Artists, including their podcasts, Karol Duclos Photography, and Terrific Teaching Ideas, although the site isn't fully functional yet.

With that, I've done a mind dump of the first, very full day of PodCampNYC. Tomorrow, I'll be speaking at the first session, gathering more information, hopefully, writing another blog post, and then crashing in exhaustion. If you were at PodCampNYC, and have additional information, please drop me a note at aldon dot hynes at orient dash lodge dot com.

Social Network Fatigue

Yesterday, I was in meetings and mostly offline for much of the day, so my unread emails have sky rocketed again. On top of that, I was told about two new social networking tools yesterday I want to explore.

The first is SpokeO. I kicked it around for a while, but so far, I’ve been pretty unimpressed with it.

The second is onaswarm. This site is overwhelmingly cool. I played with it for a while last night. It is supposed to support OpenID, but I tried to log in with OpenID today, and it said they weren’t accepting any new users. I guess they got swamped last night. Perhaps I can find how to associate my OpenID with my existing account.

It did go out and import 18 social networks that I’m part of. Today, it is asking for validation of a couple of them. The validation is returning blank pages, but seems to have worked. Well, it is a beta, after all.

When I go out to explore my contacts, well, that is where it starts go get overwhelming. It pulls in friends list from various sites, as well as picks up microformat tags. With that, it picks up over sixty sites that are identified as ‘me’. It grabbed another hundred general sites. It grabbed about a hundred from Livejournal and about 350 from Twitter. Other sites will a small number of friends added about another hundred althogether. These sites included Blogger, buzznet, Jaiku, last.fm, Myspace, Pounce, StumbleUpon, Tribe, Typepad, Upcoming and Vox .

Some of these sites over lap, although onaswarm doesn’t seem to recognize these overlaps yet. In my case, there was also some interesting stratification of the social networks. One group of friends were people that I knew from LambdaMOO. Many of them ended up on Livejournal and Tribe. Then, there were my friends from the 2004 presidential cycle. Some of them also show up in places like Livejournal and Tribe. Others of them have remained more active or connected than some of my old MOO friends.

It was curious that onaswarm brought in only two of my friends from StumbleUpon. I checked and saw that I had closer to a dozen. I also saw that a lot of people added me as friends on StumbleUpon that I haven’t added as friends yet. So, I spent a little time updating that. Now, if only I can figure out how to get onaswarm to recheck my updated friends on StumbleUpon.

One thing that I liked was the way onaswarm sorted my friends, by network, and then by name. I know that people have been looking for nice ways to get a sorted list of people they are following on Twitter. Onaswarm seems to do that.

The friend adding was slow, tedious, and didn’t really seem to bring much benefit. The sorting of entries in the feed didn’t seem to work all that well, and I’ve already got enough different sites that do this. What is interesting is that onaswarm, as well as many of the other friend feed type sites make their feeds available via RSS, so you can subscribe to them on other systems.

As I wrote in A maze of twisty little passages, all alike and Tracking the Twisty Mazes, there are all kinds of interesting and potentially horribly confusing things you can do in trying to link all of this together. Onaswarm just takes it to one more level.

So, I’ll poke around onaswarm a bit more when I don’t have hundreds of unread emails waiting for me, as well as a fun conference coming up.

Over on Twitter, a few people have been asking who is going to #PodcampNYC. If only I could get Onaswarm to check out who is going to be at Podcamp and come of with a list of people to say hello to.

Aleady, I know quite a few friends and fellow twitterers that will be there: Faye Anderson, Joyce Bettencourt (@rhiannonsl), Christine Cavalier (@PurpleCar), Tom Guarriello (@tomguarriello), Chris Hambly (@audio), Noel Hidalgo (@noneck), Dean Landsman (@deanland), Joshua Levy ( @levjoy), Drew Olanoff, Heath Row (@h3athrow), Liza Sabater (@blogdiva).

So, hopefully, I will rally and find the energy for all this social networking, not to mention, catching up

Mark Kingdon to become new Linden Lab CEO

At the Metanomics session Monday the 21st, Mitch Wagner of Information Week and Gartner Fellow Steve Prentice expressed concerns about the future of Second Life. As a business collaboration tool, it is loosing ground to competitors like QWAQ.

Yet the back channel seemed more concerned with whether or not Mitch at Steve were analyzing Linden Lab properly. Is Second Life an application that needs to be constrained? Is it a platform that can serve many applications? Is it a community based upon a platform? Much of this will be questions that need to be answered by the new CEO.

Today, the new CEO was announced. His name is Mark Kingdon. He has been CEO at Organic, a leading online marketing firm, since 2001. During his time there Organic doubled in size.

Everyone is pouring over comments Mark has made, blog posts, interviews, etc., to get a sense about what he will bring to Second Life. Yet the view of what Linden Lab was looking for can be found in an interview Philip Rosedale did with Reuters in March where he said they were “someone who has experience with and a passion for growing this type of company — a software platform company.”

Presently, residents of Second Life expressed cautious optimism, waiting to see what sort of changes Kingdon will bring. Some of this reflects the different views about what Second Life is all about that different residents have.

A good summary of Mark’s background, and some of his articles can be found at ClickZ

The blog post from Linden Lab about Mark can be found here.

(Categories: )

Drupal and Graphviz – Working notes

The other day, I got a phone call from a person interested in creating some social network graphs similar to those that I did with MyBlogLog. Those graphs were created with Graphviz, a very graph visualization package.

For the images I created, I did them all from command line prompts. I gathered the data and then ran a program that created images from the data. I then uploaded the images to Flickr.

However, there are supposed to be packages to create the graphs on the fly. One is Webdot, which is based on TCL and a simplified version that is supposed to work in perl. Unfortunately, the webdot code comes in an RPM installer, which I haven’t figured out how to use on my Ubuntu machine and the perl looks like it probably needs a little bit of hacking to set up.

So, I was pleased to find that there is a Graphviz filter for Drupal. Currently, it is set for Drupal 5, but by adding a couple lines to the info files, you can get it to work in Drupal 6, or so it seems.

I installed the Graphviz filter on one of my machines. By poking around a little, I found that I needed to install the Graphviz PEAR package as well. The way the Drupal Filter is set up, it seems like the best approach is to install the Image directory as a subdirectory of the Drupal filter’s directory. With all this in place, I the filter started working, with one minor exception. It gave me the error message:
“There was an error rendering the Graphviz file using format svg.”

Well, it turns out that the host I was working on doesn’t have Graphviz setup. So, the filter and the PEAR package appear to work, but the call to Graphviz itself didn’t generate any images. Oh well. Next step, install Drupal 6 on a machine I have that does have Graphviz running and/or get Graphviz installed on the machine where I’ve setup Drupal 6, the filter and the PEAR package.

Meanwhile, I’m still spending time upgrading various sites to Drupal 6.2. Beyond that, it is a beautiful spring day. Kim’s brother and his family are in town visiting, so I’ll probably leave the rest of this for a bit later.

(Categories: )

Updates

As I go through my emails, there are all kinds of different things I want to highlight. I’ve attempted to sort them and put them into context.

Connecticut Political News

John Hartwell, who is running for State Senate reports that he has picked up the last few donations he needed to qualify for public financing and is now spending his time communicating with voters about the important issues facing the state. You can get more information at John Hartwell’s campaign website.

Connecticut Teach Against Genocide reports that the genocide education bill, House Bill 5595, has passed the Education and Appropriations Committees and is moving on to the full house.

Sheila at Woodbridge Dems reports having been called by Mountain West Research, a firm that has been accused in the past of doing push polling for Lieberman. I’m curious, has anyone else been recently called by Mountain West here in Connecticut?

She also mentioned a great report by the League of Women Voters about Emerging Media and Internet Issues: E-Democracy for Connecticut. It is a great report worth reading.

One Connecticut has sent out an email about a bill, 5618, in the Connecticut General Assembly regarding the Husky program. They are encouraging people to contact the Insurance and Real Estate Committee and urge them to pass it as well, and without any amendments!

Beyond Connecticut

Project Laundry List is reporting that Colorado passed a Right to Dry law. HB 1270 would prohibit Homeowners Associations from restricting energy efficiency measures. They also announce that April 19th is National Hanging Out Day.

Jubilee USA reports that the Jubilee Act, (HR 2634) has passed the House and is now headed on to the Senate. Jubilee USA is seeking third world debt cancellation.

Global Kids and the International Human Rights Law Institute are holding ICC101, Learn the Basics about the International Criminal Court on Thursday April 24, 7-9:30PM EDT. For more information, check out the Justice Center online.

Protests

On April 25th, President Bush will attend a fundraiser at Henry Kissinger’s house in Kent. CT Opposes the War is organizing a protest. 9 AM to 1 PM at 50 Henderson Road, Kent.

Dream for Darfur is organizing a Protest at Coke Headquarters on Sunday April 27th from 2:30- 3:30 pm at 711 5th Ave on the northeast corner of 55th St in New York City.

The spoke and sung word

There will be a production of Hair at the Palace Theatre in Waterbury on May 9th. Details can be found here.

I got an email that Vienna Teng will be performing at the Green Apple Festival at Central Park, Rumsey Playfield, in New York City Sunday, 20 April 2008 at 12:00 pm. I heard Vienna last year at Falcon Ridge Folk Festival. If you’re in New York, you should stop by and hear her.

Lauren Doninger wrote about The Moth, a not-for-profit storytelling organization. I pointed out LibriVox as well. Both are great sites for picking up stories to listen to.

Digital Social Media

digitialmediawire has two interesting articles up right now about YouTube. The first is that YouTube Says User Partners Have So Far Earned $1 Million. Then, there is the article that Egal, the company that created Lonelygirl15, has raised $5 million in its first round of financing. I’ve been a fan of Lonelygirl15 for quite a while, and I’m pleased to see them get funding.

Shelly Palmer at JackMyers.com has another interesting article up. This time she’s writing about why she doesn’t think it’s
an even remotely credible prediction that you could have 345 million digital television ready (able to interpret and receive signals from local broadcast television signals) handsets in the market by 2012
. As a person that shoots video with my cellphone and sends them to friends and to the web, I think she’s on the right track, even though I would have liked to hear her talk more about the disruptive nature of people shooting their own videos and sharing them online.

and finally

Leslie Weinberg writes about the Hope in Motion, Walk, Run, & Ride 2008 fundraiser for Stamford Hospital’s Bennet Cancer Center. The event will take place on June 1st. Contribute if you can.

Syndicate content