Transparency and Turning Up the Opacity

Today was insane … early breakfast to start, typical Monday AM administrative meetings, a two hour talk to a group of faculty in our College of Education, a race to pick up the little lady from school, back to the office to sign annual reviews, and then home to enjoy the last fleeting moments of an absolutely beautiful day here in State College. It was the kind of day that keeps you from email for four and a half hours only to find 75 of them waiting for you — after 5 PM. It was the kind of day that Twitter sort of stays off the radar screen and it was certainly the kind of day that keeps me from firing up the IM client even for a quick check.

It was the kind of day that requires me to reduce my online transparency and really crank open my face to face interaction. I live for the kinds of opportunities I had today — I got to show peers and leaders the insides of the new PSU Blogging tool getting set to go into pilot in a matter of days and engage them in really smart discussions about things I haven’t even thought about. When you get a chance to ignore the typical topics that go on in administrative meetings and talk about nuances and the opportunities a tool like a publishing platform can empower you are having a good day.

From there I was lucky enough to be asked to talk with a couple dozen faculty in our College of Education … let me tell you that going into a room with recognized leaders in the teaching and learning space can be awfully intimidating. But this didn’t turn out to be anything but a stimulating two hours. I talked to them about student expectations, trends on our campus, and what it is that we (central information technology) are doing to address these challenges. The conversation was rich and the response seemed very positive.

It all leads me to wonder how connected all of this web 2.0 stuff really is — is living and working in a very open and transparent way helping to get the ETS mission out there? I had someone today ask me to tailor the ETS Talk Podcast to be closer to their workout length — first of all, who in the world would listen to us talk during a workout and I just couldn’t believe that someone from the CoE would be one of them. I guess that is part of the answer though — people are listening (not thousands) and they are trying to engage. Without us making the time to provide the first conversation starter it wouldn’t be going on. I am becoming more and more amazed at how open and transparent the community I live in is becoming — blogging, sharing photos on Flickr, sharing tags on del.icio.us, and Twittering — all of it is changing the way we interact.

Days like today reinforce that going off line and turning up the online opacity as you work the physical rooms is a necessary part of the equation. Going transparent in the real world means taking a day off in the online space every now and then. The face to face things I did today will drive new opportunities that will take us all in new and exciting directions … one is not more important than the other — they are connected and need each other to create long term partnerships. Today is proof that online conversations create face to face conversations that will create new online conversations that will … you get the idea (I hope).

4/30/07: Presentation: Platforms for Digital Expression PSU College of Education

I was lucky enough on Monday to talk to a group of faculty (and a few grad students) from the PSU College of Education. Amazing hour and a half … one that left me feeling very good about the relationships we are developing there. In general I would classify the faculty there as both innovative and very interested in the use of technology to appropriately enhance the learning environment. I should have written about this as soon as it was over, but I didn't.
The talk was really focusing on the infrastructure we have been trying to put into place to support digital expression. I spent time on everything from trends and key statistics we are collecting our campus, to FaceBook, Net Generation expectations, to what we are doing to support it all. I spent quite a bit of time actually showing faculty the insides of both Penn State on iTunes U and the Blogs at Penn State toolset. There were great conversations related to how one might integrate these things into their classroom experiences.
Slides are available as a PDF.

Twitter Updates?

I am trying to decide if it makes sense to have a daily digest of my tweets show up here on my blog … is that blurring the lines — you know, crossing the streams too much? I am using the really nice Twitter Tools plugin to make it all work. But just because it can doesn’t make it the right thing to do. Any thoughts for me?

Twitter Updates for 2007-04-28

  • @brlamb & dnorman: It is potentially very dangerous to have two of the best minds of our time in the same place. I hope Canada has security! #
  • Broadband at my house has been a mess for weeks. Getting tired of it – up and down, repeat. #
  • Spending lots of energy thinking about my upcoming talks. They are actually keeping me awake at night. #
  • made homemade (w/ Wegman’s dough) Soy Pizza for the little lady. Going out to Kelly’s for a real grown up meal w/o the kiddies 2night. Wow! #

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Twitter Updates for 2007-04-27

  • @eab14 You are in the pilot. #
  • Too much email tonight. Things blowing in fast … keeps you jumping! #
  • Ahh, ETS Talk 22 tomorrow … I think! #
  • Friday! I really don’t care that it is raining out. I get a day to think and do the things I think are important. Oh, and the weekend starts #
  • Lots done this morning! Love it when there is time to think and act! #
  • ETS Talk 22 is available! I enjoyed making this one http://tinyurl.com/3yqr4f #
  • WTF, Twitter has gone all Canadian eduBlogger on me! It is nice seeing what goes on north of the border tho 😉 #
  • @cogdog wow, was that preso for real? Funny it was delivered on youtube. #

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Twitter is Evolving … A Bit

I know I haven’t been posting all that much here … I have been spending most of my time over at my PSU Blog getting ready for the launch of the Blogs at Penn State project. Just today, Brad Kozlek setup about 100 users to extend the pilot offering … it is getting crazy. I am predicting a solid Fall turnout — maybe a 1,000 PSU Blog bloggers on campus. I have no idea what students will do, but I bet over a two year cycle there will be some nice traction. Either way, keep an eye here for a big post exposing the whole process — from selection of tools to rollout strategy. It does feel very gratifying to know we are on the verge of potentially changing he way faculty, staff, and students perceive web publishing.

Ok, on to the topic of the post. My use of Twitter has been reduced to a few tweets per day … I think that is a result of a very busy schedule and a bit of personal backlash towards transparency. I’ve been trying to focus on a less is more strategy as I organize my thoughts for a couple of speaking opportunities that have come my way … trying very hard to organize all these random thoughts into a not so random stream of thinking for an audience is something I haven’t had to do in a year or so. I have spent a ton of time working my space here on campus and haven’t ventured out to give many talks other than a web 2.0 infrastructure talk at Apple a few months back — and to tell you the truth that was 9/10th briefing and not so much a talk. Anyway, back to the topic … am I rambling again?

I have noticed that Twitter is evolving a bit. I have been noticing for quite some time that those people who have been a part of the Twitter stream for several months are changing the way they are using he environment. Most of the people I talk to are saying things like, “I am using Twitter in a more intelligent way …” I would have to agree that I am finding real value in Twitter that I didn’t expect in the early days of my lustful utilization. Allan Levine has an amazing piece of infoporn that describes the typical lifecycle of Twitter use … I am completely there with him on that.

I am seeing more and more people use it to invoke conversation between individuals and within a community. I am seeing that many of the people in my friends list are always keeping either Twitter itself or Twitterific open all the time … stalking tweets to gain inspiration from their trusted sources or direct pointers to things that must be explored. Last night while watching a few new friends move up the Levine Twitter Law Curve I saw a new feature emerge — the “in response to” tag under a tweet. This to me signifies a new realization on the part of the Twitter developers that this tool can serve as a powerful organizational/friend/social communication tool. They have essentially invoked public IM in a way I never thought people would want to engage in. Conversations can now be part of a massive broadcast or directed to an individual — but both are in the open. Is this the result of the whole open, connected, and social space many of us are trying so hard to be a part of or is it simply an ego trip — is it simply an, “I want everyone to see my thoughts” trip? At the end of the day, my blog is open to everyone, but the way Twitter works it feels (and potentially is) tied more directly to the community I am a part of. No idea, but I am interested in the thoughts out there … maybe I should have Tweeted this — oh wait, the Twitter WP plugin will do that for me.

in_response_twitter2.png

4/21/07: Featured Presentation: ITS Event

This past week I did two sessions at the ITS Event and Expo. From the reports I received there were well over 1,100 people who walked through the show floor. Both of my sessions focused on podcasting and blogging at Penn State … they were only 25 minutes a piece, so I had to leave out the wiki portion of what I had planned to do. I have had several requests for the slides, so I have linked them here as a PDF … enjoy and please feel free to leave comments.
Download the presentation … BTW, sorry the file is so big (11 MB). I used a few high-resolution photos in it.

Google Moves

No, they aren’t leaving their sprawling campus … they just continue to make moves in the whole enterprise support space. When they bought Writely and turned it into Google Docs it was interesting. Then there was Spreadsheet and just the other day they announce Google Presentations. This morning I was sent email by several people that pointed to various reports of Google making another big move — this time they purchased Marratech.

If you are unaware, Marratech is a cross-platform desktop conferencing and collaboration environment. It allows people to do all sorts of things such as video conference, share desktops, applications, presentations, and other things in that space. It appears to me as though we are starting to see a major push by Google to own the new suite of business applications — all managed and accessed via your Google identity (Gmail account). We’ll have to keep an eye on how this one starts to shake down.