Where Have You Been?

That’s what a lot of people (if you count the four or five people who visit this site as a lot) have been asking the last several days. No, I haven’t dropped off the face of the earth, but I have been both very busy and very distracted the last week or so. Things have been nuts at work and we have been getting some new initiatives running, so that’s good. We have been spending most of our time between rolling out the few fixes that are needed to the CMS we built to drive the School’s web presence and investigating several open source tools for our blogs@ist project and a few kick ass project management and bug tracking tools. Its kept me busy.

Some other things on the personal side of my life — I am a real person — have also gotten in the way of posting. As a matter of fact they are the kinds of things you’d love to post about, but just know it wouldn’t be a good idea to do so. Some of the things I have been working on and trying to pull together have taken quite frankly all of my time and mental energy and it hasn’t left me with anything to say. I can say this, stay tuned … some interesting things are in the works.

Here’s something I will rant about for a second … the whole podcasting, Daily Source Code thing has gotten me a bit down. I’ve been a daily listener to the Source Code since around October or so and have always loved it … I am seeing the end of the run for me though. The content just doesn’t seem as inspiring to me anymore and podcasting in general hasn’t been getting me going like it did the past several months. My podcasting guys (who we do our weekly show with) and I haven’t even posted our last two shows … I’m just not feeling it. I need some new, good content to get me excited again. Or maybe that I am moving on to the next round of thinking with all this stuff …

Anyway, more to come on the new ideas front shortly … a few last wrinkles to work out. I will try to get the posting juices flowing again and get this thing back to where there’s actually some discussion related to Innovation & Learning. And oh, by the way, Let’s Go Mountaineers (WVU in the Sweet 16)!

AIM is Bugged?

I am going to follow this up tomorrow, but I had to post something now. I just read this post over at Contentious, Why You Need to Quit Using AOL IM … holy shit if this is true! What does it say? Well, in a nutshell, AOL owns everything you type in any AIM session … they can do whatever they want with it.

We use AIM for nearly everything at IST and I use it so much with all my sponsors … makes me sick! Certainly makes me want to use the phone a little more to discuss sensitive issues … let alone all the file transfers we do over the AIM network. The piece doesn’t mention iChat AV — its what I use. I do know Apple uses the AOL infrastructure, but I’m not sure if the terms of service are any different. Time to read the fine print!

If you’ve seen this and know more, please post a comment. I just sent a note to our copyright/legal expert in our School for him to look at it as well. More tomorrow …

Update: Just read this post over at Corante’s Copyfight blog … short, but has a few good pointers.

Strange Weather …

All I have to say is that the weather has been strange. Yesterday we woke up to more than 4 inches of snow, then it was all gone by 1 PM, and then we had over an inch by dinner time. Today it was decent, then out of nowhere it started snowing the biggest snowflakes I’ve ever seen. The picture below, looking up towards my house, doesn’t capture just how bizare it was.

Strange snow

Just weird … Spring must come soon.

Blogging Via Email in WordPress

You know, this seems a lot harder than it has to be. I have to keep looking because if this turns out to be easier than it appears, I’ll be using it a lot with all sorts of devices. Off to test more! At least this post was sent via eMail … one step at a time.

Update … looks like it is working, but what a pain in the ass! I was really hoping for a way to write something on a handheld device and have it show up instantly … or use the export as eMail feature for a project I’ve been working on. I did find some great resources to help with the whole experience. I’ll keep trying to get it working just right. Another problem I am having is that every now and then it will repost previous eMails. Not really sure why, but I’ll keep looking … Any advice?

Blog to the Rescue?

I had a meeting a couple of weeks ago that I was supposed to do something about … until now, I haven’t acted on it at all. Things have been nuts, so I don’t feel too bad. But, the time is right and I thought instead of just typing up a proposal in Word, I’d post some of the thoughts here and see where it takes me.

The meeting in question was a get together that the Dean of our School pushed us to have. Quick background … he received an email (more of a spam) from a Dean at another University’s I School. The email contained a video introduction to the Dean, to the University, and the I School at that University. I said ho-hum, he said, “cool, let’s do the same thing.” He ended up asking our Marketing Manager, Director of Development, and myself to make it be so. The three of us met to discuss this idea and luckily I wasn’t the only one who didn’t think it would be appropriate to spam prospective donors, students, and faculty with multi-megabyte movie files of talking heads. That just doesn’t speak to me as being something a School like ours should be considering.

I started showing the others in the room blogs and blogging software, started discussing the power of RSS, and we talked about how this could be a very powerful publishing engine to drive traffic to the School. We discussed a scenario in which the Development folks would contact key members of our Advisory Board (these are heavy hitters in the IT world) so that they could contribute a post once a week or so … the Dean would have two tasks, one would be to moderate some of the postings from Advisory Board members and the second would be to post original thoughts about the School, the state of IST, and other things that make sense to our stakeholders. Guess what? They loved that! So the IST Leadership Blog Space may be coming soon. We’ll couple it with a bit of marketing materials and see where we end up.

I don’t pretend to think this will be a perfect solution … its been said before, but content is king and without content who is going to read? That will be a big test of this … I’ve been involved in so many “must haves” at the School only to see the huge effort to create them be wasted by inactivity and a lack of content. We’ll see … but what a better approach than sending our audiences spam. Makes me happy.

EDU Blogging Research

We are working on an article and a new toolset that has sent us down the path to investigate Blogging in Education. Robert Shedd, an IST student working in the Solutions Institute, and I are working together on this to see what we can figure about how blogging is being utilized, what role rich media plays in blogging, and if there is a need for tools to create content quickly and easily. In the commercial spaces, there are tools and services available, but it is still a back room effort here in higher education. I thought I’d throw this page together for a landing place for our research efforts … at least for the time being. Feel free to browse this space and as always, contact us or leave comments. Thanks.

ARTICLES

Content Delivery in the ‘Blogosphere’
Richard E. Ferdig, Ph.D., and Kaye D. Trammell, University of Florida
T.H.E. Journal Online: Technological Horizons in Education

The Blogs are a Comin’
Con Rodi
Center for Human-Computer Interaction and Department of Computer Science
Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University (Virginia Tech)

Functions of New Media: Understanding Weblogs
(a major challenge to make the study manageable and get comparative information)
Eric C. Williams

Blogging as a Course Management Tool
Jon Baggaley

An Exploratory Analysis of Weblogs
Michael Tyworth

DOCUMENTS FROM PROQUEST

Back-to-School Blogging
BROCK READ. The Chronicle of Higher Education. Washington: Sep 3, 2004. Vol. 51, Iss. 02; p. A.35

Classroom Use Of Web Logs Raises Concerns
Kevin J. Delaney. Wall Street Journal (Eastern edition). New York, N.Y.: Oct 27, 2004. p. B.1

Educational Blogging
Stephen Downes. EDUCAUSE Review. Boulder: Sep/Oct 2004. Vol. 39, Iss. 5; p. 14

A Student Pundit’s Venture Into Poli-Cyberspace
ANDREA L. FOSTER. The Chronicle of Higher Education. Washington: Aug 13, 2004. Vol. 50, Iss. 49; p. A.33

Composing at the keyboard Taking their passions to the web, bloggers invigorate classical music scene; [Home Edition]
PIERRE RUHE. The Atlanta Journal – Constitution. Atlanta, Ga.: Feb 6, 2005. p. L.1

‘Blogs’ Help Educators Share Ideas, Air Frustrations
Mark Toner. Education Week. Washington: Jan 14, 2004. Vol. 23, Iss. 18; p. 8

Blogging and blogspots: An alternative format for encouraging reflective practice among preservice teachers
Gary M Stiler, Thomas Philleo. Education. Chula Vista: Summer 2003. Vol. 123, Iss. 4; p. 789

Put another (B)log on the wire: Publishing learning logs as weblogs
Christian Wagner. Journal of Information Systems Education. West Lafayette: Jul 2003. Vol. 14, Iss. 2; p. 131


Scholars Who Blog

DAVID GLENN. The Chronicle of Higher Education. Washington: Jun 6, 2003. Vol. 49, Iss. 39; p. A.14

‘Blogs’: The latest option in raising your voice online
Reid Goldsborough. Consumers’ Research Magazine. Washington: Jun 2003. Vol. 86, Iss. 6; p. 32

IST 110 Fall 2004 Posts!

After days of trying to get it to work … moving my blogger posts AND comments into this WordPress blog … it is complete! What a pain in the ass however. I followed some great directions on how to get posts and comments out of blogger and into a Moveable Type format and then tried to use the WP import MT feature, but couldn’t get that working perfectly. I found that if I did individual imports of the posts with the comments it all worked well.

So … a little grep searching in BBEdit, some manual labor, and a dose of patience and I am done! You can take a look at all the blogging that went on in my 110 class last semester by following the 110 Fall 2004 category link. The posts are just posts, but some of the comments are great … I just had to keep them. Now, I may actually be able to get back to writing here.

WordPress Import … Argh!

Sorry I haven’t posted much in the last couple of days … work has been busy, life has gotten in the way, and I have been driving myself crazy trying to get my IST 110 blog into this WordPress space … its easy to pull a blogger blog into WordPress — if you don’t want to keep your comments. I found this great pointer to the Moveable Type support area on the WP Support site to take the posts out of blogger and into a Moveable Type format and then finally into WP — comments and all.

Problem is that it hasn’t worked through two frustrating days. The first time I did it, all the posts came in as separate posts as they are supposed to, but each one only had one comment that contained all the original comments for that post. Looking back, I’d prefer that now. In subsequent attempts all I get is a single post with all the comments and posts in the WP comment field. Driving me crazy. Anyone willing to help me with this?

One other quick note … read today that the Elgg system is going to go open source very soon. This is a very cool thing as I have been anxious to get a community blog site that incorporates social networking for a potential client. The idea is to give all the members of this community blog spaces and allow them to create their “friends” network. We’ll be keeping our eye on that one!