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Front Porch Forum: to knit your neighborhood together

Tour_visit

Front Porch Forum - not yet available in the UK, but there maybe equivalent services:

"Your neighborhood's forum is only open to the people who live there. It's free and requires no work from you. Simply join and receive occasional email newsletters written by your neighbors. Contribute messages as you like. It's all about helping neighbors connect."

Very high adoption rates are reported, probably in well-heeled areas where the proportion of households with an Internet connection is high. Would this work in the UK?

[23/1/2007. See also the helpful demographic and uptake information below from Michael Wood-Lewis of Front Porch Forum in the comment below.]

Posted on 10/01/2007 in Oddments | Permalink | Comments (1)

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Presentations from Boston University Conference: Software Patents - A Time for Change?

Thanks to Jim Farmer for sending this archive containing the programme, background, and summary, and 211 presentation slides [3.2 MB PDF] from a 17 November 2006 conference on software patents.  The event was co-sponsored by the Berkeley Center for Law and Technology, the Computer & Communications Industry Association, the MIT Sloan School of Management, the Public Patent Foundation, and Research on Innovation. 

Posted on 09/01/2007 in Resources | Permalink | Comments (0)

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INFOBITS in continuous production for 13 years. Now with RSS feed.

INFOBITS, written by Carolyn Kotlas has been published for 13 years by the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Each month Carolyn monitors and selects from a number of information and instructional technology sources that come to her attention and provides brief notes for electronic dissemination to educators. I've subscribed to it for at least the last 10 years. I always make a point of at least scan reading it, and usually find at least one item of interest.December 1993 issue. December 2006 issue. RSS feed. Web subscription form.

Posted on 08/01/2007 in Resources | Permalink | Comments (0)

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Learning Light, Sheffield - Jane Hart and Vaughan Waller move on

Picture of Vaughan WallerPicture of Jane Hart
Vaughan Waller and Jane Hart

I've reported occasionally about Learning Light, a publicly funded not-for-profit company in Sheffield that describes itself as "a centre of excellence in the use of learning technologies (e-Learning) in the workplace and organisational learning best practice"*. Last year, Learning Light recruited Jane Hart (previously Jane Knight) as its Head of Research Services, and acquired Jane's e-learning centre web site. Later in the year, Vaughan Waller joined Learning Light as Head of Membership Services. Until recently, Vaughan was Chair of the UK e-learning network, where Fortnightly Mailing is syndicated. Jane and Vaughan have now left Learning Light and set up a consultancy called WallerHart - Learning Architects.

* Disclosure. PA Consulting had the contract for getting Learning Light established, procuring a web site for it, and commissioning some research reports for Learning Light to subsequently provide to users of its services. I wrote two of these with David Jennings and David Kay, Camilla Umar, and Liz Wallis of Sero Ltd.

Posted on 08/01/2007 in News and comment | Permalink | Comments (0)

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Teenage use of social networking sites

Via Jane Hart's excellent E-Learning Pick of the Day I came across the latest report - actually a 10 page "data memo" rather than a full report - in the Pew Internet and American Life Project, under the Family Friends and Community topic: Social Networking Websites and Teens. The survey, conducted by telephone between October 23 and November 19 2006 among a national sample of 935 youths ages 12 to 17, asked about the ways that teenagers use these sites and their reasons for doing so. 55% make use of such sites, use of which "rocketed from a niche activity into a phenomenon that engages tens of millions of internet users".  For a well informed commentary on the survey, including some interesting points about the Pew research methods, read this piece by dana boyd.

If any readers know of current UK data on the use of social networking sites, please post a comment below.

Posted on 08/01/2007 in Resources | Permalink | Comments (0)

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"Search Wikia", an eventual alternative to Google or Yahoo?

Updated 6 January 2007

There has been extensive coverage of Wikia Inc.'s project to develop a "new kind of search engine, which relies on human intelligence to do what algorithms cannot".  (Wikia Inc. is a for-profit company co-founded by Jimmy Wales, that lives alongside, but is discrete from, Wikipedia.) This updatable list of links to some of the stories, annotated by Wikia Inc., provides the flavour, and this 23 December 2006 statement by Jimmy Wales summarise the Search Wikia vision.  You can also join a mailing list (busy, with plenty of high level contributions, but there is a digest option) about the project, from where you can find, for example, this more detailed and sceptical assessment of the prospects for the project, by Danny Sullivan, or this lucid 3 January 2007 piece by Jimmy Wales summarising his views on how the project might take shape. Currently (6/1/2007) there is interest in an Open Source "distributed peer-to-peer web-indexing application" called Yacy. If I were Google, Yahoo, or Microsoft, would I be worried? Not yet. But I think people who use search for primarily narrow intellectual pursuits rather than in areas where there is a lot of active commerce, are maybe unaware of the extent to which spam and porn on the web damage the value of conventionally obtained search results. Search Wikia would, amongst other things, aim to solve this problem.

See also this 1 February 2007 link to, and extract from a New Scientist interview with Jimmy Wales.

Posted on 06/01/2007 in News and comment | Permalink | Comments (0)

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Grid computing, Facebook, and YouTube (and other technologies) summarised in useful EDUCAUSE 2 page guides

Last year I wrote a short piece about the excellent EDUCAUSE 7 things you should know about... series, each of which provides a practical 2 page overview of a particular learning technology, summarising how it works, where it is going, and why it matters to teaching and learning.

Since then, EDUCAUSE has published several more in the series. As with similar "how to" guides I think there is a case for publishing them in wiki format so that the community can weigh in and update them, and I wonder if EDUCAUSE considered this approach. Here is a complete list, current on 5 January 2007:

  • November 2006 E-Books;
  • October 2006 Google Earth;
  • September 2006 YouTube;
  • August 2006 Facebook;
  • July 2006 Mapping Mashups;
  • June 2006 Virtual Worlds;
  • May 2006 Google Jockeying (!);
  • April 2006 Remote Instrumentation;
  • March 2006 Screencasting;
  • February 2006 Virtual Meetings;
  • January 2006 Grid Computing;
  • December 2005 Collaborative Editing;
  • November 2005 Instant Messaging;
  • September 2005 Augmented Reality;
  • August 2005 Blogs;
  • August 2005 Video Blogging;
  • July 2005 Wikis;
  • June 2005 Podcasting;
  • May 2005 Clickers;
  • May 2005 Social Bookmarking.

Posted on 05/01/2007 in Resources | Permalink | Comments (0)

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Comparison of CMS, Course Materials Life Cycle, and Related Costs

Thanks to Mark van Harmelen for sending me this link to Scott Leslie's recent posting about a July 2006 report for MIT [444 kB PDF] by Scott, Bruce Landon, and Russ Poulin. Scott writes:

"My colleagues Bruce Landon and Russ Poulin were commissioned last year by MIT to produce a report which compared the CMS practices and costs, as well as the life cycle of course materials, at 'peer' institutions in an effort to provide a benchmark for future decision making. I was just informed that MIT has generously made the report more widely available online at the above location. In addition to MIT itself, the peer institutions surveyed included Carnegie Mellon, Stanford, Columbia, Berkeley, Harvard (College of Arts and Sciences), University of Chicago, Middlebury, University of Texas at Austin, Princeton and Yale."

Posted on 04/01/2007 in Resources | Permalink | Comments (0)

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BBC Music web resources updated and integrated

Link to image on BBC web site

Useful short piece by David Jennings, who recently emerged from book-writing purdah (and with whom I've collaborated in the past on several commercial projects), summarising changes in the way the BBC organises its online music resources and pointing out that the BBC is now linking extensively to Wikipedia entries about music and musicians:

"There have been previous cases of online sites like GoFish and Upto11.net placing their trust in Wikipedia instead of licensing commercial sources like Muze or AMG, but is the BBC the first large traditional media corporation to do so?"

Poking about on the BBC 6 web site I see that the BBC is also now freely linking to search-returns from MySpace and YouTube.  See, for example, the "across the web" links on the right hand side of this page about Bob Dylan's (excellent) Theme Time Radio Hour, which sadly seems only to be available in archive form if you have a UK IP address.

Posted on 03/01/2007 in Resources | Permalink | Comments (0)

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A walk in the software patent forest - with an interesting "concept map" - by Derek Morrison

Longish essay by Derek Morrison (whose long-running Auricle web log has been quiet of late) examining the implications of software patents on e-learning, from a UK/European perspective, followed on by Part 2, which contains this interesting active concept map [225 kB JPG], but is about the use of concept mapping tools rather than about software patents.

Posted on 02/01/2007 in Resources | Permalink | Comments (0)

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