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Social Tech Brewing Vancouver: May 4 at the Whip

by Alexandra Samuel – April 19, 2006 - 4:28pm

If you work at the intersection of technology and community-building, we hope you'll join us for a May 4th gathering of Social Tech Brewing's Vancouver chapter. Social Tech Brewing brings together folks from nonprofit organizations, community service, social activism, social ventures and technology to share ideas -- and beer!

Our May 4th event will look forward to the June meeting of the UN's World Urban Forum (WUF) here in Vancouver. WUF will bring a remarkable range of government leaders, community development workers and urban activists to Vancouver to talk about the future of sustainable cities. And the lead-up to WUF has already featured one of the Net's most ambitious online dialogue efforts to date, the Habitat Jam.

The STB meeting on May 4th will feature a short panel and Q&A session to illuminate some of the innovative technology projects that are happneing around the WUF meeting. We'll hear from one of the members of the Habitat Jam team about what was learned from the Jam experiment. And we'll also hear from Steven Forth of the Global Urban Sustainable Solutions Exchange, a Vancouver-based information and social networking resource that will launch at the WUF in June.

The panel will start at 6:15 and wrap by 6:45, so please come early so you can be part of the discussion. And plan to stick around for another hour after the panel to be part of the beer drinking, gossip exchange, and general consipracy-hatching.

We hope to see you there! Please RSVP on Upcoming.org 

 Event details

Social Tech Brewing Vancouver
Thurday, May 4th
6pm-8pm
at
The Whip (map)
209 6th Avenue East (at Main), Vancouver

RSVP on Upcoming.org 

Any questions? Email info@socialsignal.com

Monster mashup: get the latest on the programmable Web

by Rob Cottingham – April 14, 2006 - 11:57am

One of the most powerful aspects of the new web (some people say it's the defining aspect) is how so many web sites are actually applications that can share data with each other. One simple example is a blog, which can share its content with other blogs or with news aggregators.

The natural outcome is the site that synthesizes data from two or more sources (usually, other sites): the mashup. Some mashups include Flood Maps (combining Google Maps with elevation data to show what would happen to coastal communities if sea levels rose by a few metres), Bashr (combining Wikipedia entries with Flickr photos) and Diggdot.us (bringing together top hits from Slashdot, Digg and del.icio.us). As you can guess, they range from the completely frivolous to the very useful.

Now you can check out the latest in mashups thanks to the Web 2.0 Mashup Matrix, compiled by the mashup-tracking site ProgrammableWeb. The site maps nearly 600 mashups by plotting 78 Web 2.0 sites against each other (kind of like one of those distance finders you see on a road map). It's incredibly addictive... and an inspirational snapshot of some of the innovative energy out there on the new web.

(Link found at Evan Leeson's blog, blurt.info)

First look: Google Page Creator

by Rob Cottingham – April 4, 2006 - 9:23pm

Late last night, I received the e-mail from Google. No message, just a headline: "Google Page Creator: sign up!!" It's still in an invitation-only beta, but here's what I found:

  • The interface is very straightforward, although a little more complicated than your average Google page. The work area (what will ultimately be your web page) takes up most of the screen, with dotted lines outlining the various areas of the page: title, subtitle, main body, sidebar (if applicable) and footer. Buttons down the left side allow formatting, linking and adding images. For the brave, the lower left-hand corner has an "Edit HTML" button.
  • You can click to choose from one of nearly 50 templates, or change to a one-, two- or three-column layout. Your changes – at least for a simple, one-page site – appear very quickly, although not instantly.
  • How do you create a new page? Just select some text, click the "Link" button and – when the dialog box pops up – enter the title of your new page. From now on, when you click on that link, you'll have the option of editing the link, editing the new page or testing the link.
  • You don't just have to link to a new page. You can upload a file, link to a page elsewhere on the web or link to an e-mail address. This is cute: if you're creating a link on the web, some very basic help text appears discreetly  under the field for the URL, explaining how to find a web address.
  • If you're creating, say, a sidebar, it would be helpful if the link manager would remember what kind of link you last created and offer that to you the next time you create a link. Instead, it constantly defaults to your local web pages. If most of what you are linking to is the external web, that gets old pretty quickly.
  • One nice little touch: instead of using the cryptic "H1", "H2" or "H3" tags, the interface offers users the choice between creating a heading, subheading or minor heading.
  • Want to tell the world about your page? After you click publish, a link appears asking if you want to e-mail your friends. Click it, and a Gmail window appears, already filled in with an invitation to "check out this page I created using Google Page Creator." You just have to add your friends' e-mail addresses.
Much appears to be driven by AJAX, the desktop-application-like technology that lets you do things like saving the page without requiring a reload. AJAX is also responsible for some of the handier little things that make all the difference in ease of use, especially for beginners – for example, the box that appears above any link you click on in your workspace, letting you edit or test it.

And that's the key lesson from Page Creator: a lot of those little things, carefully tested and applied, can add up to a much more intuitive, accessible application. For those of us aiming to broaden online participation, it's a lesson worth heeding.

Bottom line: very simple, very easy. If you can use Blogger, you can use Google Page Creator.

P.S. – One small problem: Page Creator is the wrong solution for people keeping their Gmail addresses secret. The URL that Google creates for Page Creator is (your Gmail address).googlepages.com.

A directory of the best in Web 2.0 applications

by Rob Cottingham – April 3, 2006 - 2:09pm

There's a lot of innovation going on in the new web right now, with ground-breaking applications coming from individual developers as well as big, well-funded companies. It seems like every day, there's a new service out there giving you a new way to collaborate, create, tag or remix.

Keeping track of it all – or even knowing where to start looking for a particular kind of service – has been a daunting challenge... until now.

But that started to change late last month, when search engine optimizer SEOmoz announced the Web 2.0 Awards: their picks for the very best in the field. And while it's nice for the contenders to know who won and who placed, that's not the real value here.

The award site lists more than 300 Web 2.0 sites: applications that are helping the online world to bring people and information together in ways we couldn't have imagined just a few years ago. And site author Kat Orland conducts interviews with leading figures from each of the winning sites (21 in all).

Whether you're look for the latest in the social web, or just trying to figure out what it's all about, their site is a great place to start.

Blogging and the 2006 Canadian election

by Rob Cottingham – March 27, 2006 - 6:10pm

Here's a quick link for political bloggers and their followers: the CBC's blog columnist in the last election, John Bowman, recaps blogging's impact on the campaign in a Policy Options magazine article (PDF).

John pours some welcome cold water on a few hotheaded conspiracy theories, but gives blogging its due in breaking several stories and playing a key role in defeating at least one MP. Definitely worth a read.

Accidental dossiers: privacy and security in the new web

by Rob Cottingham – March 27, 2006 - 12:58pm

At last week's 2006 Nonprofit Technology Conference in Seattle, I sat on a terrific panel led by Matt Blair, with Marnie Webb and Marshall Kirkpatrick, on the security implications of the new web. It was one of those amazing sessions where the audience was so engaged from the start that we had no need for the usual opening-presentations-plus-Q&A structure; we got right into a very cool 90-minute conversation.

read more »

I don't think anyone was recording the session, but I thought I'd share the notes I'd prepared for my presentation.

RSS, tags & social bookmarking: building blocks for nonprofit collaboration

by Alexandra Samuel – March 24, 2006 - 11:26am

I'm currently at NTen's Nonprofit Technology Conference in Seattle, where I was part of a panel yesterday on "Blogging, Tagging, Flickring for the cause: New tools and new strategies." Along with Victor d'Allant of Social Edge and Ruby Sinreich, I gave a kind of crash course/overview of how nonprofits can use the latest generation of Internet tools to work more effectively.

I've tidied up my presentation notes and I'm posting them here in the hope that they could be a useful reference for the folks in the room -- who asked some great questions! -- or for those who couldn't make it.

RSS, tags & social bookmarking: building blocks for nonprofit collaboration


I want to introduce you to three tools that are basic building blocks for a lot of the most exciting nonprofit technology projects -- as well as for a lot of commercial web sites. These are all covered in the Web 2.0 glossary handout.

These are:

RSS (really simple syndication):
A format for storing online information in a way that makes that information readable by lots of different kinds of software. Many blogs and web sites feature RSS feeds: a constantly updated version of the site's latest content, in a form that can be read by a newsreader or aggregator (a program for reading lots of blogs in one place). (For more information see

tags
: Keywords that describe the content of a web site, bookmark, photo or blog post. You can assign multiple tags to the same online resource,  and different people can assign different tags to the same resource. Tag-enabled web services include social bookmarking sites (like del.icio.us), photo sharing sites (like Flickr) and blog tracking sites (like technorati). Tags provide a useful way of organizing, retrieving and discovering information.

social bookmarking
: The collaborative equivalent of storing favorites or bookmarks within a web browser, social bookmarking services (like del.icio.us or Furl) let people store their favourite web sites online. Social bookmarking services also let people share their favourite web sites with other people, making them a great way to discover new sites or colleagues who share your interests.

Why should you care about these building blocks?

We'll talk about a few different reasons, but I'm going to focus on one: all three of these tools unlock momentous possibilities for collaboration, both within your organization AND across different organizations. I want to show you a couple of quick examples of how these technologies can combine to help different nonprofits work together effectively.

Example 1: nptech tag

Question: Who here is responsible for solving tech problems, finding new tech tools, or planning tech strategy in your organization? And who here, when you're working on a tech problem, sometimes has the sneaking feeling that somewhere out there is another person just like you, in another nonprofit not too different from yours, who has already been down this road and figured out this problem for you?

NPTech is a very simple way of finding that solution -- that solution somebody else has already discovered. NPtech is a tag that a bunch of people who work in nonprofit technology decided that they'd start using for any web resource, blog post or photo that had to do with nonprofit technology.

Some of those people use del.icio.us -- a social bookmarking service -- to save their web page favourites. If they're saving a web link that's related to nonprofit tech, they use the nptech tag as one of the tags for that link. As a result, there's a del.icio.us nptech page that is a great collection of resources anyone can access.

Some of those people blog, so when they write a blog post related to nonprofit tech, they tag their post "nptech", or pop that blog post into an "nptech" category they've created on their blog. As a result, there's a technorati page that includes all kinds of blog posts about nonprofit technolgy -- as well as weblinks from del.icio.us and photos from flickr.

And thanks to RSS, you don't have to visit technorati or del.icio.us everyday in order to stay on top of all these great resources. If you subscribe to the RSS feed for the nptech page on technorati or del.icio.us, these resources will show up in whatever you use to read RSS feeds -- it could be a simple as your google homepage.

The great lessons of the nptech project are:

1) these tools can make online collaboration CHEAP and EASY

2) you don't need to get everyone to agree on how to play nicely together -- if you have some people who you want to share resources with, just pick a tag and start using it. Others will join in if it's useful.

Now let me give you a more ambitious example:

Example 2: telecentre.org

(full disclosure: I worked on this project)

Telecentre.org is a venture of Canada's International Development Agency that is also receiving support from Microsoft and the Swiss government. Telecentres are community technology centres -- in many developing nations or in rural areas, this is often the only way people have Internet access, and may also be how they get access to phone service, too -- and training in how to use all these technologies. Local telecentres are supported by various regional networks around the world -- like CTCNet in the USA. But until now there's been no formal way for a network of telecentres in Africa to share resources with a network of telecentres in Latin America. Telecentre.org aims to change that by providing lots of training and networking opportunities -- and an online network to support learning and exchange among telecentre networks.

Any telecentre network in the world can create its own web site as part of the telecentre network.

And any telecentre training event can create a web site, too. All these individual web
sites are tied together via RSS and tags.

So for example, when telecentre.org conducted a major gathering of telecentre people at the World Summit on the Information Society, they set up a separate site at wsis.telecentre.org.

The main telecentre site then subscribed to the RSS feed from the WSIS site, and republished selected content onto the main site. This site was tagged "WSIS" so it would be easy to organize and find on the main site, too.

The great lessons of this project are:

1) RSS can provide an easy, low-effort way to tie diverse organizations' web sites into a loose network, in which each site selects the highlights from other organizations' sites that are most relevant to their own members, and remixes them into a fresh take.

2) As RSS makes it easy to add more and more content to your web site, you have to think about how to organize all this shared content so it's useful and accessible. Tagging can provide an easy, low-effort way to organize content on your own site, into loose categories.

I hope BOTH these examples will inspire you to take a fresh look at opportunities for informal or formal collaboration with other nonprofit organizations. It's just become a whole lot easier.

Choosing your e-mail tool

by Alexandra Samuel – March 8, 2006 - 11:37pm

As we gear up to send out our very first Social Signal e-newsletter, I'm investigating some of the e-mail newsletter tools out there. There's a lot to be said for using a tool that's integrated with the rest of your web site -- like the NetSquared Newsletter, which is powered by Drupal -- but there are some additional bells and whistles that come with a dedicated e-mail tool. There's a really fabulous round-up of the options over at Idealware.

If you want to see which tool we choose, then sign up for our newsletter

Know about a great Web 2.0 app? Speed Geek it at NTen!

by Rob Cottingham – March 1, 2006 - 4:33pm

If you know about a great new blogging tool, social networking service, online community mashup or any of the other widgets in the emerging Web 2.0 toolbox... something that non-profit organizations ought to know about too... then why not present it at the NTen Web 2.0 Speed Geek Session on March 24 in Seattle?

It's a whirlwind tour of the latest generation of online tools and services offering organizations the chance to expand membership, intensify member relationships, and engage the public in a whole range of on- and offline activities. Up to 230 participants will work their way around the room in smaller groups for a range of high-speed (five-minute) software and tool demos.

You can be the person behind those services, or just an avid user with a compelling story to tell about them. Either way, if you're going to be at NTen, we want to hear from you. The session is limited to the first 12 presenters accepted, so please get in touch today.

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