The Social Web Steps Up

I have been amazed at how the Social Web has stepped up in the face of the VA Tech tragedy. The major news sources were the first to the scene, but with content mostly contributed by i-Reporters … shortly there after, youtube was flooded with videos showing different views of what what had unfolded and tributes to victims. If you spend some time at Flickr you can see first hand what was going on during and after the events on Monday. These sites gave us all a view that we would never had gotten prior to current user-generated scene we are all living in and was certainly the fastest way to start understanding what was going — news conferences just didn’t cut it.

Perhaps the most interesting and amazing of all these spaces is the FaceBook. Instantly, FB groups emergered from all corners of their networks. Within hours, the PSU FB Network had already errupted into a half dozen groups. I searched for stuff from my Alma Mater, WVU, and instantly found the same thing going on there. Here at PSU, students rallied together to decide to create a giant VT in the stands of the annual Blue and White Spring football game this weekend — all within the FB. Within hours of the group forming it had over 800 members … all of them committed to showing support for VT.

I think this my be a turning point in our appreciation of tools like the FB. Students understand the power of social tools and so many of us are now seeing just how amazing these tools are for creating instant community opportunities. What I am also finding so interesting is how traditional news and the social sites are playing off each other to round out each other’s coverage. A traditional news site pulling profiles of victims from friends’ stories all over the web is just one example. Almost all of what I found on the FB was publicly accessible, so I am sure reporters used these same self-organized social spaces to discover much of the information they are reporting in the traditional news environment. In great respect of the tragedy, I find it all very interesting and think we are stepping into new waters — waters where traditional news sources (and the general public) have gained a new appreciation for user-generated content. I also think it starts the FB down a path of general acceptance and as a hub of information gathering and distribution.

Google Presentations

We’ve all known it would happen sooner or later … well, it happened. This is certainly not new news, but it is a very good development — Google let the cat out of the bag for its forthcoming web-based version of PowerPoint, Google Presentations.

What is exciting is that this is collaboration on the creations side — unlike tools like SlideShare.

They got here by acquiring Tonic Systems and in the linked blog post they welcome to the Google team. I honestly have no idea if this can compete with PowerPoint — I know for a fact it can’t offer the slick look that Apple’s Keynote does. If it works as smoothly as Google Docs we could have a real winner on our hands. The reason to use Google Docs for me is all about collaboration … I know I’ve said it before, but when I have shown faculty, staff, and students Google Docs they instantly get it. It supports the way they work. Students are increasingly asked to work together to solve problems and the idea of pacing Word documents back in forth via email has become not only a pain, but completely outmoded given the state of collaborative technologies.

We’ve already freed those of you working in teams from the burdens of version control and email attachment overload when going back and forth on word processing and spreadsheets. It just made sense to add presentations to the mix; after all, when you create slides, you’re almost always going to share them. Now students, writers, teachers, organizers, and, well, just about everyone who uses a computer can look forward to having real-time, web-based collaboration across even more common business document formats.

If Google Presentations has the same level of collaborative capabilities then we’ve just found another tool that fits the workflow of so many of us — and our students. I spend a lot of time creating presentations … I also spend a lot of time emailing .zip files of these presentations to colleagues so they can reuse them. I also find myself collaborating with other staff a lot in the creation of presentations — and that is where this thing could be big. In addition to students writing together, we are asking them to create and present together more and more.

We aren’t ready to put away Office quite yet — the Google Docs and Spreadsheets tools aren’t at that level yet. I am very anxious to see how this one looks once it is released this Summer. I love tools that can support needs … now if I could just figure out how to feel 100% confident in letting my content sit on Google’s servers. That’s a post for another day.

VA Tech … What to Say?

At this point I am unsure of how to say what I am feeling … my community has been rocked. I don’t live in Blacksburg, VA but I might as well … I live in a sleepy college town and I spend all of my time in higher education. I know these kids — not the ones from Tech, but students just like them who are too young to really know what is going on around them … but yet old enough to know all too well what they are feeling. I feel for them and I want to find a way to reach out to them all.

I am hurting and I am saddened by the images I see on TV. I am dismayed at the lack of answers to the questions our media is asking and I have to ask myself how can this happen to so many innocent people. Several of my colleagues here at PSU have said that they haven’t felt this way since 9/11 … I haven’t either. What terrifies me is that we have a reference point for this kind of feeling.

I look into the eyes of my two children, babies really, and am horrified that they have to grow up in a place like this. A place where violence and death is real. A place where hate is palpable … a place where going to work in the greatest city in the world or attending classes in the Blue Ridge Mountains has become deadly. I am just at a loss for words and thoughts. My heart goes out to all the families of the victims … my heart goes out to all the students, faculty, and staff of VA Tech … my heart goes out to all of us.

I hope we can all look down the road and decide it is time to think differently about things like mental health, gun control, privacy, protection, service, and so much more … I am sick of political perspectives and I am sick of apathy. We are all members of our communities — higher education, towns, cities, whatever … it is time to step up. I am not sure if this is the last post I make on this subject, but I can guarantee it will not be my last thought. I am sorry to go off topic here, but at this moment, writing is the only thing that is keeping me from crying.

The greatest thing I have heard through all this is, “today, we are all VA Tech Hokies.”

Virginia Tech After Thoughts: How Can Information Technology Help

I know I am not the only one deeply saddened and disturbed by the events that unfolded on the campus of Virginia Tech yesterday. Blacksburg is a town not much unlike State College in many ways and it saw the deadliest mass shooting in the history of our Country. As a parent my body is filled with a dark feeling that I cannot shake — each of the 30-plus victims were the children of people just like us. I know what these college students are like — I see their faces every single day here at Penn State. I’ve taught the freshman on their first day of classes and have seen the fear and excitement in their eyes … I’ve worked with them as they’ve grown to be on the verge of graduation and have seen how driven and committed they are. What wonderful young people many of them are and the unlimited potential to be leaders in anything they set their minds to. In an instant yesterday 30 of them died, dozens were physically wounded, and thousands more left emotionally scarred forever. It is a dark feeling.

I have worried about a scenario like this for years on my own campus … I teach and there are times I feel unsafe. These same students who are so full of promise are also pushed to the edge of their breaking point via academic and social pressures. There are times you can see how people can snap. Many students find normal outlets for their emotional stress — sports, groups, clubs, parties, and many other activities that are designed in many ways to help balance the emotional strain higher education can inflict. I have worried about violence in my classrooms and in my office and I am thinking more and more about how we as information technologists could make a difference. I for one would love to know what you do on your campuses in the case of an emergency. I know there are others starting this conversation as well … as an update, there is a good article at MSNBC today.

Here are my early thoughts on using technology to help be proactive in times of emergency (and we can lump weather, pandemic response, and violent actions into this):

  • Cell Phones: Recent PSU survey data indicates that 93% of our students own cell phones. Many of these phones have text messaging capabilities. As a first line of communications, I think we should establish a campaign to have all students have a mandatory sign up to receive only emergency text messages from the University. We already have an “Alerts SMS” service in place … let’s leverage the infrastructure and take it to the next level through education and awareness.
  • Email: There is a huge push to not email stuff to students — we say they don’t read it. But at the end of the day it is a very low barrier to entry option that can and should be used for things like this. Educate them that only specific emails will come through from the University and use special subject lines to notify them.
  • Home Page & Blog Space: Pull the typical home page and replace it with the news burst. Not too tough, but a critical step in getting the word out. I would also link it to an emergency response blog or other easy to update news source that can be constantly refreshed as more information comes in. This could also be a first step towards an emergency RSS feed.
  • Twitter: Maybe not Twitter itself, but an instant ad-hoc tool that allows information to flow very quickly. Earlier this year when PSU closed because of weather most of the the people I know first heard about the closure via Twitter. The message provided by the University was a little confusing and the instant conversation that erupted on Twitter saved a lot of people the need to call or travel into work for clarity. I’m not sure how this would go down, but a quick and easy PSU Twitter environment would make sense.
  • ANGEL CMS: Last month we had about 70,000 students with activity in ANGEL. ANGEL is our University-wide course management system. Most students log in not only everyday, but several times a day. In the case of an emergency the log in page on ANGEL should be instantly replaced with any emergency related content. That could be done from anywhere on and off campus. Additionally, the impact from the canceling of classes for weather or pandemic purposes could be lessened with stronger training for faculty on the use of closure day activities that can be remotely scheduled and supported — post an article, open a discussion board, use Adobe Connect to give a lecture. The tools we have can support and inform students in extreme and not so extreme cases.
  • The FaceBook: In an age where most of us (I am pointing the finger at me as a higher education administrator and instructor) are bemoaning the effects of social network tools, we are missing one of the greatest opportunities of all time. 90% of PSU students are in the FB and many of them report at least daily log ins — 25% spend more than 5 hours a week in it! THis morning I searched for a list of victims at VA Tech and what turned up first (via digg.com) was a FB group started by VA Tech students. This instant community happened for many reasons, but the one that jumps out at me is that the FB is easy and instantly available to our students. In many cases, they can use tools like that to inform one another quickly. Why aren’t we working more closely with the FB people to find ways to leverage the environment in moments of extreme emergency? I could see an easy way that anytime someone logged into the PSU FB, they would see a massive alert before they could move on to their profile and other information. I know it is possible, it is a matter of making the connections with the FB people. How about a PSU account that we ask all students to become friends with so U-wide announcements show up in their news feed upon log in?
  • University Cable System: Students all have access to the PSU campus cable system in the dorms. We have our own channels … use them. Don’t over use them — save the use for extreme cases.
  • Greater Use of Card Access Systems: One of the things that jumps out at me in the VA Tech situation was the inability for faculty and students to keep the gunman out of the classrooms. Physical security can never be overlooked … in many cases, physical security is a critical first step in protecting anything. We lock the front doors of our homes to protect ourselves and our children — why not do the same thing for them while they are in class? Every corporate campus I visit is a total card access system — every single door. Might be time to consider this … we have the class lists, the ID cars have the information on it, we know what classes they are in, and can mange that within a system.
  • Kiosk Systems: In our student Union (the Hub) we have flat panels all over the place running advertisements for campus events, clubs, and other things. These should instantly flip over to a bold announcement … easy enough.

This is just a morning after brain dump … what are we doing wrong? Our campuses are huge — it could take you an hour to walk from one end to the other here at PSU. How do we physically secure these environments? I’m not sure we can, but we can be more vigilant and proactive in our use of the tools we have at our fingertips to help avoid another VA Tech situation. All of this costs money, requires resources, and screams for a plan — can we avoid doing it and feel good? I can’t.

Bryan Alexander at the TLT Symposium

I gotta tell you … it was too hard to get the good stuff here. Stay tuned for the podcast.

Social Media and Web 2.0: Two Themes

Emergence in Time and Space

How do we react to emerging technologies? In many cases it is with panic and hesitance … other times we trust venders who give us things, establish futurism methods, among others. How many of you are gamers? Not many hands … how many have played games — the whole room presumably. In academia we see games as childish.

We used to say social software to emphasis that software can be social … that has been replaced by the notion of web 2.0 … it is also important to note that the web has a real history. Bryan says web 2.0 is a series of micro-content items, authored by multiple authors — even on the same page. This kind of an approach leads to a networked conversation … discussions “rippling across the blogosphere.” Speaking of the blogoshpere, he spends a little time on Technorati and the number of blogs … will it be become the human race, or stay small and emerge into something as silly as the novel.

Loved this one … RSS is the most frustrating web 2.0 technology … it is a geek only technology at first blush.

This one blew my mind … CyWorld — In S. Korea nearly half of the population is in there.

Pedagogy

He says teaching with web 2 is not much different than web 1 … web 2 makes it much easier. Think of journaling and you can see how all this is supported in a very easy way. Flickr with notes and working on fine art projects — all through annotation and the conversation gets extended … “object oriented discussion.” Podcasting and blogging have brought discussion and discourse back into fashion.

Mobile devices offer the ability to access more content, annotate in the moment, and accelerates the ability to interact and change it all on the fly. His “mandatory device” slide was just great. The best covereage of the London Subway Bombing came from cell phone photos … why is mobility good?

  • Information on demand
  • Swarming
  • Spatial mapping
  • Mobile Multimedia, social research
  • So much more …

Gaming is an amazing cultural presence … that in and of itself is why it is important for us to understand. If gaming is this important we need to study it so we can help students understand it as a medium. Gaming is macro-content, unlike web 2.0 which is micro-content. How are games like web 2.0? I am guessing the social aspects. The SecondLife pedagogy advantage is virtual reality and emotional bandwidth (eb). EB is the ability in SL to watch people react — laugh, dance, smile, and other things. Half way between video conferencing and chatting. I need to explore Alternate Reality Games — new forms of digital storytelling.

I just couldn’t keep up … too interesting at the end. The podcast will be available.

Lee Rainie at the TLT Symposium

“Who’s blogging this right now?” That was the opening question from Lee Rainie, Director of the Pew Internet and American Life Project … over 20 people in a room of about 200 or so faculty, staff, and some students who are here to see what the day holds for them raised their hands. He then asked how many people planned to do so after the fact … wow, surprised me at the number of bloggers in our community. Great start and a nice way to make the point that events are and will continue to be more open than ever before … let me just say that this post is a weak attempt at trying to keep up with the self proclaimed, “rain man.”

Realities of the Digital Natives

Digital media ecology is ever expanding … in the 1970’s there were these little things that were in the home … phone, TV, radio and not much else. Now the world is so insanely crazy in the way in which we access and control information is outrageous. 43% listen to radio not on their radio … 20% watch TV not on their TV. What is going on is that the young are allocating their time differently because of all this — 8.5 hours a day consuming media. That is more time than they spend in schools, sleeping, or any other activity.

New gadgets allow people to enjoy media, gather info and carry on communication in real time … the cell phone is at the center of this. What is interesting is that they are using their phones for so much more than calls. Adults don’t take advantage of their phones — he calls it feature fatigue. Young people are sharing their pictures at a very high rate — somewhere between 50-67%. Big change was in 8/2005 more laptops sold than desktops for the first time — “the Internet has become the computer.” You can be present when you are absent, and absent when you are present. Presence has been changed by all this. The devices let conversations continue even after the face to face is over … “conversation is in the air just as oxygen is in the air” … interesting point.

The Internet (especially broadband)is at the center of the revolution … “if you can’t be found on Google you don’t exist.” We are now right around 50% of broadband in the home … broadband users are much more likely to be producers of content than dial up users. Young people are much more interested in the amateur video content and are much more likely to comment on it. The audience now wants to be a part of the media maker market … this makes multi-tasking a way of life. The availability of media adds more stress to our lives — we dare not come off the grid. Some research is showing that young people can toggle between activities much more quickly.

Ordinary citizens have a chance to be publishers, movie makers, artists, song creators, and story tellers … new report coming next week talking about teens and their use of social networks. 55% of teens have online profiles … they are sharing photos, videos (22%), and anything that they can make. A third of them are the ones who build and support websites and other technology for their families and organizations they belong to. 33% of college students have blogs. 20% of young adults have created avatars that interact with others online. In many cases they feel as though they are creating and sharing with a very small audience — mainly for a small group of friends.

Everything will change even more … in other words, buckle up b/c we have no idea where this is heading. Computing, storage, and communications power are increasing and growing at a very similar rate as Moore’s Law. In the next few years we’ll figure out how to push even more data through the air. Michael Wesch’s video on web 2.0 is the wrap up.

I gotta say, seeing 240 PSU people sitting and thinking about all this is inspiring to me … I’m sure I’ve missed stuff, but the podcast will be available soon!

Lee obviously cited his own work at Pew, but also pulled some very interesting results from the Kaiser Family Foundation report, Generation M.

More Apple TV Thoughts

I am now a full on Apple TV user … I know that shouldn’t come as much of a surprise to those of you who know me as an Apple FanBoy. What has surprised me is how the device has really changed the way I use my iPod. For the last 4 years or so I have taken my iPod to work with me everyday and instantly dropped it in the cradle upon returning home so it could drive music throughout our house. I killed the CD collection years ago and have been living in a digital music ecosystem since my iPods’ storage capacities started to match my old analog collection. The routine still includes me taking my iPod to work everyday, but I now walk in to music already playing throughout the house via the Apple TV … it is easy to use and everyone seems to like it.

I do have an issue though … my iPod is 80 GB and it stores all my stuff — Music, TV Shows, Movies, Podcasts, and Pictures without issue. Last night I was syncing the Apple TV after purchasing some new content from Apple and noticed things getting a little tight.

almost_full_02.png

As new podcasts, movies and shows that I buy come in daily the thing is syncing a lot in the background getting filled to the brim with content.

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The thing that has me very frustrated isn’t so much the ridiculously small 40 GB drive (which I am now considering upgrading via this kit) it is the poorly designed syncing limitations. I know simplicity is the goal, but what if I want all the episodes of the Office, but only the last 5 of another show? With the built in tools I don’t get the kind of granular control that I need to make the most of the 40 GB drive. There’s stuff I watch over and over — like episodes of the Office — and there is stuff I only want to watch once. One of the things my daughter loves is having all her Disney Channel shows at her fingertips … but if I set it for all episodes just for that reason, I put my hard drive in a serious crunch time situation.

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How about giving me the ability set a different sync schedule for each show? That way, the little lady can have all the episodes of Kim Possible ready to rock and roll, while I don’t need to have every episode of Its Always Sunny in Philadelphia (great show BTW) taking up HD space? All I want is a little more control … I shouldn’t have to feel like I need to hack my device or void the warranty to use it the way I need to.

It All Starts Tonight

After close to a year of planning, the 2007 TLT Symposium kicks off tonight with a dinner for invited guests. Tomorrow things kick into high gear and before we know it, it will all be over — and planning will start for 2008.

I just wanted to throw a quick post up here to point out that we’ve worked really hard to make sure the Symposium walked the talk this year. My colleague, Allan Gyorke was in charge of this year’s event and his use of Web 2.0 tools in the planning and execution of the event is well documented over at the Symposium site. I think it is very cool that we were able to build on what we learned last year and have exposed the power of these tools to support the planning of a massive event.

From Flickr, Moo Cards, BaseCamp, Drupal, to Twitter and Google Docs the whole thing has been supported by some very powerful tools. Just the way we approved the marketing materials and tracked the events leading up to the big day using Flickr was amazing … I’m sure those stories will get told as posts or podcasts at the Symposium site as well. Speaking of that, all attendees will be able to blog and share thoughts during the event just like last year. Should be interesting and will hopefully provide a place for the conversation to continue.

I think this is even more proof that social tools have a place in the organization on so many levels. I am curious about other stories of people using these tools to support events or activities in their world.