Social media, consultancy, training and advice from a flâneur of the internets. Blogger, writer, broadcaster and runner of Birmingham: It's Not Shit.
January 31st, 2009

Freedom Town

Freedom Town is in Sierra Leone, but it’s also the name of an art project connecting schools in Birmingham (UK) with schools in Freedom Town. It’s being run by the education department of Birmingham’s Town Hall & Symphony Hall, along with a local artist and will feature the associate musicians of the organisation. The aim is to eventually enable the schools to collaborate — and a website is the ideal tool to achieve that.

I’ve really enjoyed building it, and working with the team to make sure they understand how best to use it.

The website is just starting to be used by the children this week, and they seem to be having fun already — as well as blogging for themselves (moderated by their teachers)  they are being encouraged to comment on the posts of others and also write about how they are finding the project.

Some of the first work they’re doing is to make sure their School’s homepage on the site is up-to-date, and they’re also thinking about how the site should look (it has been purposely left very plain, so they can change it to suit themselves).

Technically the site is a instalaltion of WordPress, with plugins and tweaks to handle the expected use of video and audio later in the project and also the moderation issues of having hundreds of young people posting.  So far it seems to be working well, and the children have found blogging quite easy. I’ll post a link to the site when it really gets going — looking forward to reading and hearing the results.

January 30th, 2009

The Bounder

I’ve moved my personal blog from this site to thebounder.co.uk, which is a Wordpress MU site that I’ve been using to store quick projects.

WordPress MU (Multi User) is great for quickly setting up blogs (or sites) and very powerful in regards to controls over those blogs from a central interface. I used Sandbox to help set up the new design — and as usual it really helped wrestle the different parts of the theme together.

If you already follow the blog (formerly at /ramblings) then you shouldn’t notice the change form the RSS feed, nor should there be any broken links. If you don’t read it, but fancy seeing the strange things that I find on the Internet or reading the odd things I write that aren’t about social media — then you should get over to thebounder.co.uk now…

January 19th, 2009

onBirmingham – let’s try local news on Twitter

Twitter is now pretty much established as the place where news can break most quickly — when news happens it’s becoming more and more likely a Twitterer will be somewhere nearby, or be one of the first to hear it.

But unless it’s huge World news whether you hear it quickly (or at all) is dependant on who you’re following. If you’re not following the “newsmaker” then you’ll wait until someone you do follow mentions it, or until a blog or even a newspaper picks it up (queue the “Twitter is fast at news” news story). There have been some attempts to use search or trends to help the process along, so you can follow one Twitter account that will notify you when a story reaches a critical mass — thing is for the more niche story that may never happen. Which is where the idea behind onBirmingham comes in.

The onBirmingham Twitter account retweets (with attribution) direct messages sent to it — from people that the account is following. Like this:

Kings Heath ...
Uploaded with plasq’s Skitch!

It rests on building up a network of “newsmakers” around Birmingham, who have a nose for news and an itchy Twitter finger. onBirmingham will only follow those it trusts, and if they use the service to spam, then they’ll be unfollowed — it’s as simple as that.

So follow onBirmingham to get the news, and if you’d like to help make the news send the account an @ message and it’ll follow you back. And we’ll see how well it works.

January 16th, 2009

DIYcity: reinventing your city by building web apps

A very interesting looking site, that wants people to try and test their ideas about using the web to help improve our living spaces.

"Twitter bots, aggregators, social software, mobile apps – we use these things more and more in our daily routines to make our lives better. But can we also use them to remake our cities altogether? DIYcity is a place where people figure these things out by actually building and launching applications that address the problems around them." [link]

by Jon Bounds | Posted in del.icio.us | View Comments | Tags: , , ,
January 8th, 2009

Will Jonathan Ross break Twitter?

My latest blog post for the Birmingham post explores what happens when a social network goes mainstream – invariably it stops working. [link]

by Jon Bounds | Posted in del.icio.us | View Comments | Tags: , , ,
January 8th, 2009

Ze Frank's new blog on online partcipation projects

Ze Frank has long been the master of mass participation on the internet, if he's involved with something you can be sure that all the barriers for people to join in have been broken down. He's started a new blog with "notes and advice to someone like me" — which is you if you're going to try anything online that you hope people will join in on. [link]

by Jon Bounds | Posted in del.icio.us | View Comments | Tags: , , , , ,
January 2nd, 2009

It’s behind me. Twitter pantomime, a social media experiment

Pantomimes have taken a good couple of hundred years to evolve from ballet and variety acts, they’ve at times been four-hour sprawling shows with a lavish ballroom scene. These days they’re more likely to be a string of doubles-entendre hung loosely over a plot that gives a TV personality a chance to expand his or her range beyond looking fetching in swimwear.

In their heyday they were so engrained into the British culture that it would have been hard to imagine any media outlet that didn’t shoehorn its presenters into an in-joke laden panto – to the delight of the audience and also the schedulers that could fill up hours of festive programming. That they’d also turned into a fiesta of cross-dressing, was just a bonus.

They may not be as culturally relevant now, but the traditions are well-established and they are even starting to see signs of a post-modernist revival.

Panto is an ideal format for a community project, as it has well established traditions – and just a few basic plots. If a show is Robin Hood, Puss in Boots or Alladin the audience know that the basic plot will be boy meets girl, boy gets girl, while thwarting “baddie”. Maybe it’ll be the girl that does the thwarting, or maybe (Beauty and the Beast) the baddie will be our own prejudice that looks are more important than personality. Whatever, there’ll be slapstick, there’ll be a slushy dance scene and something will be quite obviously behind someone else – while they are seemingly doomed never to catch a glimpse of it.

But why did I organise one online, and why twitter?

Read the rest of this entry »














Powered by Wordpress using the theme bbv1 Content © Jon Bounds