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Posts Tagged ‘Twitter’

The Sound of Music

November 8, 2010 Leave a comment

I’m not one to blow my own trumpet – but if I was, would I be more or less able to ensure that factually correct information about me, was out there in the Public Domain?

Source: Ed Yourdon

Once we publish anything about ourselves on the Information Superhighway/InterWeb  – hopefully, I’ve annoyed a few people there including myself and Douglas Coupland – we lay ourselves open to data hijacking.  I’m not talking about whizzing multi-millions of $$$ worth of trade secrets from a large corporation.  I mean data about myself that I have posted, either on purpose or by mistake.

Go on – Google yourself.  What comes up in the top 10 or 20 hits?  Is it something you actually produced, or something that has been clipped from a site and re-purposed?  I’ve found lot’s of my Tweets or references to this blog have been clipped and posted up on the most bizarre sites – I often wonder what the sites are supposed to be there for?

Join the club

November 6, 2010 3 comments

If there’s an online social network/application/tool out there, I’ve probably joined it.  I never thought of myself as ‘a joiner’ but, over the years I’ve surprised myself.  You see, I always identified with the Woody Allen introduction to Annie Hall (one of my all-time favorite movies).

I often wonder what I’ve signed up to, what is happening to my personal data, who can read it?  etc. etc.  But then I started not to worry about that… after all – If anyone wanted to find out about me, there are easier ways than browsing random Web2.0 sites.  I got more interested in has data storage and archiving.  Not ‘What’ is happening to my data but rather ‘Where’ is is stored?

I began to try and unsubscribe from these sites.  Needless to say – I couldn’t remember which ones I’d signed up to.  3 hours later… I think I’ve removed myself from everything I no longer use… I must admit – I rashly signed up to a lot of sites with the intention of using them, but never did (research?)

I’m back at a core set of services that I use regularly… most of which can be found as links on this site.

Will anyone ever come up with the Killer-App, that enables you to customize and organize your entire online life under one roof? I could’ve gone to the one site and selectively unsubscribed.

Did you miss me?

June 24, 2010 2 comments

Over the last few weeks, I tried a little on-line experiment.  I decided to stop blogging, Tweeting, etc. in my professional capacity – and take-up personal Web 2.0-ing instead.

I was interested to see how easily I could join on-line communities as a lay person.  I created an @AltWirral persona (Alternative Wirral) which was to try to look at alternative lifestyles, culture, arts etc in my local geographical area.

Surprisingly (to me), I gained 68 followers on Twitter – mostly local to the Wirral and a few new friends on Facebook too – within a few days.  Wirral has a lively Twitter community (even has a regular Tweet-up!),  I also had a couple of existing contacts to help me gain the ‘in’ – but I was accepted and people interacted with me.

So, why did I do this?  Well initially, I did want to try to split my personal and professional Tweets and postings – so that I wasn’t publishing my political/social rants in the same stream as my technical/academic posts.  It was quite easy to set-up a separate account on Twitter but I found it much harder on other Web 2.0 services, mainly because I had limited social use for YouTube, WordPress, Flickr, etc.  although I do have some personal postings on these services.  Once I had set up @AltWirral I did begin to wonder about online personas and safeguarding, etc.

Where do you draw the distinction between on-line personal and on-line professional?  Should we draw lines/merge/mix or leave-out certain aspects of our lives on-line?  Why do we publish things on-line?

I posted a blog entry to say that I was not going to be doing so much eLearning work next academic year – I didn’t receive any feedback to that post at all… Should I have expected any?  If not, why did I post it?  I doubt I’ll actually be giving up my Learning Technology work at all – I love it and I firmly believe in it as a practical and positive method of educational delivery.  Would anyone have missed me if I had stopped blogging or tweeting as @colhawksworth ??  Perhaps I’ll get a response to this blog entry?

The MindMug Midnight-hour

New post coming up at Midnight (BST) tonight


http://www.flickr.com/photos/vinish/581160509/

.fin.

December 27, 2009 Leave a comment

Logic tells me that this blog post *should* be in chronological order… however, I suspect that as with most of my other blog entries, it will wind-up being a stream of consciousness.  This will be a ‘blog-in-progress’ – as I remember all the noteworthy things that happened in 2009.

This year (2009) seemed to be hectic all the way! – considering the recession there were  plenty on conferences to attend and project funding to bid in for.

  • I didn’t have a good start to the year and for personal reasons ended up not being able to finish my OU Post Grad studies.  Though, as the year went on, I missed studying and  decided to start a CTTLs course – so I can teach Post-16 courses.
  • Our college successfully managed to get a MoLeNET Phase3 project – and so far it’s been a wonderful and inspiring experience.
  • I made lots of new contacts across the globe via tools such as Twitter, FriendFeed, etc. It’s rather incredible to think that I have far more dialog with folks I’ve never met, in other parts of the world – than I do with some colleagues at my own college.  I guess that’s something a psychologist would probably have a field-day with… though a sociologist might simply shrug and tell me that it’s because we have a commonality and Community of Practice, rather than simply working at the same location with nothing else in common.
  • I got an iPhone – a major improvement (as far as I’m concerned) to the iPaq Windows phone I previously had and the Palm Treo before that, etc, etc.  I love Apple and I love the iPhone – yes, I am aware that there are major flaws [3g had no video, etc] BUT Apple tech is simple and functional.  Whenever I have to use a MS Windows PC now, I find it such a pain and far too cumbersome.  I want my tech to be as intuitive as it is functional.

Don't Tweet Me This Way

November 11, 2009 3 comments

Does anyone know what has happened to TwittFon? (sic) I can still use it on my desktop… but the App has gone from iPhone store…
I even searched the web and found nothing to hint at it’s demise. :( I got quite attached to that App

Categories: mLearning Tags: ,

MoLeNET3 Project Managers' Meeting

October 17, 2009 2 comments

I was down in London again on Friday for the MoLeNET3 Project Managers’ Meeting.  Up and out early on the 7am Liverpool-London express train.  It was a great event and for me, it got the project off to a positive start – a good opportunity to meet the other Project teams and the MoLeNET Mentors.

The one thing I did notice though, was the lack of mobile device use during the day. :(

This is my Twitter feed from the event… (obviously, the timeline is in reverse – most recent, first)

  1. @xlearn demo of multi-port ePortfolio #molenet 2:42 PM Oct 16th from Echofon
  2. this is a great day – feels like a good Community of Practice :) excellent support network :) #molenet 2:27 PM Oct 16th from Echofon
  3. @jamesclay does @didaw have more tech than you??? ;) #molenet 2:18 PM Oct 16th from Echofon
  4. now in afternoon MoLeNET Mentors session – getting to know them all :) #molenet 2:10 PM Oct 16th from Echofon
  5. looks like I’m going to be out quite a lot on Action Research days at the LSN #molenet 2:08 PM Oct 16th from Echofon
  6. @jont he’s like Inspector Gadget pulling stuff out of his jacket!1:39 PM Oct 16th from Echofon in reply to jont
  7. #molenet @jamesclay passing round tech from his bag of tricks – is he super-insured for walking round London with that lot?! ;) 1:12 PM Oct 16th from Echofon
  8. listening to what was technically successful in MoLeNET2 #molenet 1:03 PM Oct 16th from Echofon
  9. @xlearn we’ve been working on identifying good devices already. I’ll look at our docs – I have a guy who could make it a page with ratings1:01 PM Oct 16th from Echofon in reply to xlearn
  10. @RC_AJF nope – no sockets over here :(
  1. @RC_AJF cheers : but my battery is getting zapped :( 12:46 PM Oct 16th from Echofon in reply to RC_AJF
  2. ensure cross-college collaboration & dialog; then non MoLeNET college folks can buy-in to concept. #molenet 12:37 PM Oct 16th from Echofon
  3. talking about logistics Re: insurance for offsite use, loan agreements etc. #molenet 12:33 PM Oct 16th from Echofon
  4. our MoLeNET project sounds like it could be the most sustainable! building a core moble service. #molenet 12:22 PM Oct 16th from Echofon
  5. @jamesclay not sure I have concerns :) I love innovation & challenges! #molenet 12:17 PM Oct 16th from Echofon
  6. James Clay has entered the building! fresh from a BBC interview. We’re now in project breakout session. #molenet 12:15 PM Oct 16th from Echofon
  7. @xlearn @MalBlack : yes, we could do a molenet database of tech devices. #molenet 11:50 AM Oct 16th from Echofon in reply to xlearn
  8. @ravenevermore hahaha – let out a loud cough, I’ll know where u are ;) 11:39 AM Oct 16th from Echofon in reply to ravenevermore
  9. @MalBlack you forgot to mention that we’ve had WiFi since 1999 @BSFC – now rolling out to placement providers for thin.clusion #molenet 11:36 AM Oct 16th from Echofon in reply to malblack
  10. are we all looking at running systems over WiFi and/or 3g ? not everyone has mentioned the ‘how’ – more talk about the ‘where’ #molenet 11:29 AM Oct 16th from Echofon
  11. a few projects mentioning Twitter as part of their bid – but no one seems to be Tweeting here??? #molenet 11:15 AM Oct 16th from Echofon
  12. @dsugden are you still in the UK – or stuck in Latvia? ;) 11:12 AM Oct 16th from Echofon in reply to dsugden
  13. people still using mLearning & eLearning terminology – is that good or bad? #molenet 11:08 AM Oct 16th from Echofon
  14. @jont he’s not here yet; something far more important at the BBC first!11:05 AM Oct 16th from Echofon in reply to jont
  15. interesting range of projects so far… all pretty unique in some aspect. #molenet 11:03 AM Oct 16th from Echofon
  16. is no one else Tweeting here yet? #molenet 10:59 AM Oct 16th from Echofon
  17. lots of MoLeNET 1&2 colleges here -plenty of experience to share :) #molenet 10:52 AM Oct 16th from Echofon
  18. listening to overviews of MoLeNET 3 Projects #molenet 10:49 AM Oct 16th from Echofon
  19. @xlearn At MoLeNET meeting are we hashtag #molenet ?10:46 AM Oct 16th from Echofon

There are a mixture of general MoLeNET related Tweets here; some direct conversations with colleagues both at the event and at other locations, etc.  One thing I made note of was the lack  of Twitter back-channel, at what was after all, a mobile learning project managers’ event.  A few colleagues made reference to the fact that Twitter would be used to facilitate dialogue as part of their projects – so why only a few of them Tweeters/Microbloggers?  Were some people using other microblogging applications?  I would guess, mostly they were not aware of the #molenet tag.

I’ve set-up a separate blog for our MoLeNET Project – called ‘thin.clusion’

They don't give two Tweets!

I’d been reading over ‘Wikinomics‘ by Don Tapscott and Anthony D. Williams. I’m not interested in the economics aspect, but am interested in the technology and the ‘social’ Web. There were a few interesting sections that caught my attention, I found that these two in particular,  seemed closely related to a discussion taking place on my Facebook page this week:

‘The Web is no longer about idly surfing and passively reading, listening, or watching. It’s about peering: sharing, socializing, collaborating, and, most of all, creating within loosely connected communities.’ (p.45)

‘A generation of young people are entering the workplace with a radically different philosophy of work… they will bring high-technology adoption, creativity, social connectivity, fun and diversity to the companies they work for, and increasingly, to the companies the found themselves.’ (p.240)

I think these extracts link nicely to my previous blog entry about the apparent lack of interest in Twitter by teenagers (in the UK)…

‘Teens’ verdict on Twitter? They don’t give two Tweets – Apparently. Thoughts anyone?

I’ve managed to spend some time reviewing the comments people had posted up to my Facebook page – (with permission to post some edited highlights)

My starting point was this: “The thing about Twitter, it’s less visual – and you can [...] Tweet into the Internet void. Social Networking, such as Facebook, relies on visual stimuli and constant ‘chatter’. As for feedback… I get far quicker and more informative replies to my Tweets than I do on Facebook. I guess, if you don’t like something and don’t have a use for it – move on…”

K‘: “my kids love [...] multiple (simultaneous) conversations with one person each. Dozens of separate windows. Whereas twitter is one window in which we all converse together. I ask my sons why they don’t just put all their conversations together in one window and they say they don’t like that – they have different things to say to each person. They must have to repeat themselves a lot!”

B‘: “Must admit I started on Twitter and hated it. Felt it wasn’t the best social network to be on…MSN and Facebook seems to suit better…My daughter is 10 and loves MSN… ok the chat is a bit one worded but give her Twitter and she wont know what to do with it!!!!!”

[...] Not every app is for everyone – it’s all about needs and choice. One thing I will add is, why does everyone assume that social networking is just for the under 21s? And if they don’t use a particular app, then it must be crap – not every kid likes tech and to be honest most kids can’t use tech properly (that is a myth).

K‘: “I’m so with you, there Col. So sick and tired of the digital natives myth! I’m way more socially networked than my kids!”

BB‘: “[The] kids have better things to do than waste time in front of computers.. seems like a hefty bit of research to me.”

I wouldn’t want to just generalize and say they’re ‘wasting their time’. To some people, reading a book is a waste of time, because they like to be out doing things like climbing mountains.

K‘: “My kids live much of their lives through their computers. They spend more time ‘with’ their friends than I ever did as a kid. I *wish* I had had things like MSN. I was at boarding school, so knew no-one near my home and the holidays were awful as a consequence. My kids spend time chatting to friends all over the country and, indeed, the world. Between their phones and MSN, they’re never out of contact [...]“

B‘: “But what about face 2 face social interaction? The next generation need 2 get out + enjoy playing, climbing or whatever, we need a healthier future [...]“

K‘: “They do that, too [...] my kids are 18 and 16. Playing and climbing are not really on the radar for them. Now it’s music and game consoles. For them, f2f and online comms are seamlessly integrated. They will go to town [...] and meet up with friends they have been talking to online. [...] I have developed really close friendships with people I have never seen in the flesh… all thanks to social media [...]

James Clay‘: “Functionality is never important when it comes to social networking, it’s all about the social network, the community. SMS has no visual appeal but is well used by Teens. Teens don’t use Twitter, because teens don’t use Twitter. It’s never about what is better or worse, interfaces, functions, visual appeal, etc… it is about the conversation and the community.”

Yes, good points (as always) James – could a big factor be ‘peer-pressure’? Feeling that you need to join the community that all your friends are on.

James Clay‘: “Peer pressure is always going to be a big factor.
One thing that people forget is that online social networking often results in increased face to face social networking. People use Facebook and Twitter to organise their social life and events. It never us an either or situation. People who use social networking often have a better face to face social life than those who don’t.

B‘: “I think it all depends [...] parents don’t let them out as much as we use to [...] When I was 10, I was out everyday playing out – no computers etc. Today I wouldn’t let my child out like that [...] with under age drinking and drugs on the street and who knows what else, parents tend to wrap children in cotton wool unfortunately.’

BB‘: “People who use social networking often have a better face to face social life than those who don’t”. Where’s the evidence for that?

J‘: “I agree – in fact would suggest the exact opposite is true. My son is 9 and would happily spend his life on Facebook if I allowed it [...] He can make arrangements to see his friends in person and by phone and this is what we do – call us old-fashioned ;-)   Our business is internet-based so we’re online pretty constantly [...]  I’ve recently found it hard – and quite dull – to hold face-to-face conversations of any length and serious content. Is FB eating my attention span?”

BB‘: “They should take out the word ‘social’ because it is everything but social. It is networking granted and useful as a business/academic – call it what you will – tool, that is handy for organising events etc, and also, in my experience helping my research. If I want social that takes place in the real world.

James Clay‘: “Various studies have been undertaken which show the benefits of social networking.

Of course for some individuals their use of social networking is making them withdrawn (and that can be said for social networking, reading books, football, climbing mountains etc), but overall for most people the benefits are there.”

J‘: “I really don’t see how this is proof of social benefit. I suppose it’s rather dependent on your definition of “community”, isn’t it? I seem to recall another thread of Col’s (was it?) regarding the quality of interaction. Yes, I am part of a vast online society with many different communities, but the “real”, personal, relationships are very shallow – nice, but shallow! Being in contact with many people is not the same as being social.”

JCO‘: “From a conversation I had with students at work, they didn’t see the point in twitter as it was just the ‘status’ bit of Facebook, & Facebook is so much more than just that one statement of ‘what are you doing?’ – therefore twitter is limited. [...] Many ‘teens’ will have a lot of mates that they know through school, they are also likely to move in different social circles & be members of different groups, therefore conversations with one person or group can be completely different to another – hence twitter not working.”

Teen-Tweets cloud

Teen-Tweets cloud

It was really interesting to see that there is such a range of views on what constitutes ‘social’ networking and how those networks should fit into our lives.

Personally, I still feel that one application will never suit all users (which is a good thing), but there will be apps that become ‘preferred’ networking tools largely due to peer pressure from early adopters. I still think that the look & feel of apps is a big contributing factor to both user take-up and longevity.

On a social level – I’m not sure I understand what the problem is about people spending time on social networks rather than another activity. Who decides what is a meaningful activity anyway?

If someone is using an app for totally social purposes, then it is a ‘social’ network. If it is used to extend their working life, etc. is that still a social network? I have a real mixed-bag of contacts in all of my online communities, there are relatives, friends, work colleagues, academic contacts, etc. I tend not to compartmentalize my life into work-home-social, etc. I just get on with it and that works for me.


Does anyone ONLY have work OR social contacts as their online friends?

Spent some time over the weekend looking…

Spent some time over the weekend looking at generating and uploading photos… I use Twitpic directly on my iPhone, to post up to Twitter and automatically thru to Facebook. I sometimes post direct to Facebook, either via Facebook Wall or Facebook exporter for iPhoto.
I have a Flickr account, which has been a little under-used – I think it’s due more to the balance of work and priorities. So, I’ve uploaded some new content from iPhoto using the Flickr exporter. I’m just going to check on a Flickr App to see if I can upload directly from my iPhone (without having to be Pro Flickr user).

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