Posts Tagged: links


2
Oct 07

News Organizations and Social Networks

The other day, I took a phone call from Steve Outing of Editor and Publisher, who wanted to talk about how news organizations should approach Facebook. The resulting interview was published yesterday, and it’s a good read. As an avid news consumer (both print and digital), I’m of the firm belief that news organizations should spend time and effort trying to integrate their content into our lives. Facebook, and other social networks, afford news organizations this opportunity, and I’m looking forward to seeing how organizations use this to their advantage.

News is social – it always has been – so the idea of leveraging social networks for content-sharing is a no-brainer. To this extent, I’m still waiting to see news organizations develop meaningful apps. The Political Compass app developed by the Washington Post is insulting, to say the least. A world class paper predicting political beliefs based on a cheeky ten-question survey? If that’s the kind of content news organizations think their emerging markets want, perhaps that explains the downturn in the industry. Give us good reporting, editors we can trust, and a true fair and balanced point of view – and give it to us in our RSS readers, on our mobile devices, and in our social networks. It’s about good content on our terms.

Not all agree. Jonathan Kaplan-Moss, lead developer at the Lawrence Journal-World, says: “In a nutshell, our attitude towards Facebook is ‘this too shall pass.’ We see no reason to buy into Facebook’s walled-garden approach; our time is better spent serving OUR audience instead of trying to feed on Facebook’s detritus like a Ramora.” Style points for Jonathan.


31
Aug 07

Blog Day

Did you know it was Blog Day? Me neither, until a kind commenter left a note. Now, I judiciously avoid any of these viral blog things (sorry if I’ve offended anyone in the past), but I deem Blog Day significantly un-viral so I’ll play along. What I’m basically supposed to do is tell you about five blogs I like. Here goes:

This Old Network – Terrell Russell. My SILS and ClaimID partner-in-crime, his posts always evoke contemplation.

Lorcan Dempsey’s Blog – A must-read in my circles, for very good reasons.

Tiara.org – Alice Marwick
– It’s always a joy when one of Alice’s posts shows up in my reader.

The Academic Productivity Blog
– Great stuff for academics too easily distracted by YouTube and Wikipedia.

120 Minutes Playlists – This guy finds videos from 120 Minutes on YouTube and posts them to a Tumblr blog. Why I need the Academic Productivity blog.

Honorable mention:

The Scobleizer – His posts about Facebook are just priceless. Faceslamm!


29
Jun 07

Blog of Note

I stopped by to check email today and noticed that my blog was listed as one of Blogger.com’s blogs of note. That’s a cool little achievement, thanks Blogger team. You’ll all be hearing from me again next week when I return from vacation, its been a lovely week here at the shore.


24
Jul 06

BarCampRDU Wrap-Up

This weekend, over 150 geeks of all flavor gathered at Red Hat HQ on NC State’s Centennial Campus to have a BarCamp. I’m still recovering, but I think it is safe to say the event was a success, and a great model for future BarCamps in the area. It was just a fantastic, positive experience to bring all sorts of different folks together, from all walks, and to spend the day sharing, collaborating and learning. With help from Paul Jones, here’s a roundup of the BarCampRDU coverage.

Media:

Blogs

Pics

Of course, BarCampRDU wouldn’t have happened without its host, sponsors, committee, volunteers and donors. Here’s a list of those who helped so generously.

Venue

Sponsors

Donors

Design

  • Kelly Marks – Designer of the awesome T-shirts and Banner
  • The Merch – Screenprinters of the awesome T-shirts

Organizers

Volunteers

  • Lourdes Cueva Chacon
  • Wayne Sutton
  • Adam Constabaris
  • Michael Habib
  • Ben Adlard
  • Scott Lundgren
  • Jerry Waller
  • Didier Deshommes
  • Katie Jamison
  • Erica Tsai

Of course, thank you to all of the people who brought routers and power strips, to those who led sessions, to those who helped clean up and leave Red Hat sparkling. Thanks to those who came up to me and introduced themselves and said nice things. Thanks to those who came out and believed that we could pull this off. I hope this list shows that an event like BarCampRDU is only possible with the help of many individuals. This team came together like super bowl champions.

At the beginning of an unconference, it is common to ask for a show of hands to see how many people had attended an unconference before. I did this at the beginning of BarCampRDU, and I’d say about 5% of the room raised their hands. The beauty of the format is that once you do it, you get it – and can see its uses in many different contexts. At the end of the day, many people were talking about doing smaller unconferences, unconferences within their companies, and so on. Of course, there was also a lot of talk about when the next BarCampRDU was going to be. I do believe a hallmark of this event’s success will be the fact it lives on. Hopefully, many more will be able to experience triangle-area BarCamps in the future; I have a good feeling this was just the first of many BarCamps will have in the area.

PS – If I’ve forgotten anyone on my thank you’s, please let me know so I can add them to this list. My apologies in advance.