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Subscribing to the podcast will keep you up to date with all of the new Flicker material as it gets released. The blog itself will contain all manner of things about music and user-experience design.

Archive for the 'Web' Category

Kids: The Converged Consumers?

Wednesday, March 1st, 2006

I attended an interesting event last night at 01 Zero One in Soho.

Paul Tyler talked about his production for the BBC, Bamzooki.
Frank Alsema talked about The Blackbeard Connection.
Gary Pope of Kids Industries gave a very entertaining talk entitled ‘Are children over-indulgent technology eating monsters, or are they still kids?’ Ashley Cooksley, Manager, Kids, Teens and Learning, AOL UK presented the results of research conducted recently with 10 year olds across the UK and Richard Deverell, Controller, BBC Children’s talked about the future for broadcast media in the on-demand age, and the shift in power between channel and programme brands.

Paul Tyler – Bamzooki

I knew nothing about this show (if that’s an appropriate manner in which to refer to a cross-media broadcast) prior to attending, but was rather impressed with the concept – offering kids tools that they can download, from which they can build their very own ‘Zooks’ and upload them for possible inclusion in the TV broadcast. The Zooks are effectively virtual robots, designed by the kids, and suitable for certain tasks or environments. Kids are encouraged to share experience and learning, collaborating to for me teams for the tv programme, where the ‘Zooks’ are pitted against one another in competitions. An understanding of mechanics, physics and an observation of what works in nature yields better results. So, the interactions encourage learning on several levels.

Paul was one of two speakers talking of the ‘Interaction Pyramid’ – the easily grasped concept of a diminishing number of participants as more interaction or engagement is required. He admitted that the bar was set quite high for this show and that a very small percentage of the kits downloaded actually resulted in uploaded ‘Zooks.’ He was relatively unconcerned about this but I feel that the comments by another speaker, Gary Pope of Kids Industries about ‘Proximal Development (that we learn most and are most attentive when we’re just between the ‘can do’ and ‘can’t do’ spaces in any task were particularly relevant here. It appears to me, that too many of the kids are firmly in the ‘can’t do’ camp and as a result, get less from the experience. I’m also slightly cynical about the attitude that passive consumer (or lurkers) forming the majority of the audience is both acceptable, and even desirable. My suspicion is that this is driven by the needs of the dominant medium (TV in this case) and not by any higher ideology. If all the million kids who downloaded the kit uploaded ‘Zooks’ how would they be judged fairly, and how would you make a compelling TV show using the existing format (several teams competing against one another)?

Frank Alsema – The Blackbeard Connection

Hmmm. Not entirely convinced about this one. A ‘true cross media’ game. Again, the ‘interactive pyramid’ was mentioned; and again, this seemed to be the limitations of the games engine or medium driving the need for a high rate of player attrition. Not that I’m saying games shouldn’t be competitive, but I wonder how engaging the format is for the non-participant? A feature length movie, broken up into 3 minute chunks, broadcast daily with clues for players wouldn’t, I suspect, hold much interest for a non-player or one who has dropped the ball and is out of play. Then again, the idea of watching a bunch of wannabees do mind-numbing and demeaning activities whilst captive in a house on live on TV seems utterly ridiculous to me too.

Ultimately, I felt that pursuit of the ‘Convergence’ holy grail drove the game model. Rather than the value of each device/platform being used for it’s unique merits, I felt that they had a shopping list of devices and platforms they wished to include, then dreamt up rather clunky means by which to link them in a game. Still, it’s early days and there was a lot to admire in the aspirations of the project, if not in the execution and design.

DropSend

Saturday, November 19th, 2005

After a fantastic day of training in CSS yesterday by Molly E Holzschlag and Andy Clarke, I was talking to one of the organisers, Ryan Carson, about a new web application that his company (Carson Systems) has built.
It’s one of those ‘it’s so obvious’ applications, that I really did struggle to believe that hadn’t been done before.
DropSend effectively lets you send files of up to 1 gigabyte to anyone using email as the communication (but not transfer) technology. The interface and simplicity of use is very impressive, and if it appears to work very, very well.

Based on personal experience, it seemed to me that the typical user would be anyone involved in the Media Production Industry, flying large, often incomplete files between collaborators. Remixers, Film Makers and Editors would, I suspect have great use for such a tool. This led me to press Ryan on a point raised by Byju Sukerman of the BBC about security. I’d imagine that the producer of the new U2 album wouldn’t be happy sending a completed set of tracks to a mastering house without being certain that the transitory files couldn’t be intercepted.

Despite these concerns – this seems like a great tool ( it has yet to be officially launched). I’m sure that the security aspects could be improved in future versions. The tool is great, and I suspect that as more people aquire 8+ Megapixel Cameras and DV Camcorders, that the applications for such a tool wil appeal to an increasing proportion of the public. I can see how for professional applications, that security would be paramount – but for the majority of us, this wouldn’t be the main concern.

Del.icio.us Linkrolls

Friday, August 5th, 2005

Going to look into these as my baby steps towards redesigning my site begin to gain pace. At the moment, I’m totally into my site being updated by RSS feeds that document my every move (with minimal effort on my part). Kind of a self built robotic big brother who I build to watch me and publish to the build.

The Importance of RSS

Monday, June 20th, 2005

Kevin Hale on the importance of RSS.

There’s also a very interesting observation on the power of social bookmarking or ranking:
‘Every time something went up on the site that I felt would be good enough for a wider audience, I added it to my Del.icio.us account with the appropriate tags and descriptions. Our goal was to try and get a feature on del.icio.us/popular by the end of July and to our surprise, we accomplished it in less than a week. After two weeks of diligent posting and tagging, Google gave us a little over 50 referrals while Del.icio.us gave us over 700.’

The Long Tail

Thursday, May 26th, 2005

Great I Cringely article on the notion of ‘the long tail’:
“There is an audience, however small, for just about every show ever made. What we need to do is to find a way to make the cost of keeping those shows available less than the benefit derived from people seeing them.”

First mindump of the year

Tuesday, January 4th, 2005

Seems like this is the most appropriate place to note a recently completed Pew Internet report on the proliferation of blogging.

Dan Gillmor leaves San Jose Mercury News

Tuesday, December 14th, 2004

In the spirit of ‘proper journalism’ here’s the news from a reputable source.
Having just finished We The Media, I’ll be interested to see what he has planned regarding citizen journalism.

The increasing importance of meta data

Thursday, December 2nd, 2004

Ian sent me an interesting article in Wired today about the importance of meta data in a world where we are all creating an increasing amount of difficult to categorise data.

This came about after I started discussing an idea I’d had about the problem of meta data creation yesterday. For a large organsiation, putting great swathes of content online is one thing – allocating resource to tag it all is another!

I’d been thinking about the Wikipedia approach after a presentation from Jimmy Wales earlier this week and figured ‘why not let the users do it?’ After all – not only are you granting access to your content, you’re allowing communities to build around it and develop a sense of ownership as a consequence. I’ve no idea if this would work, but then again, neither did Jimmy when he launched Wikipedia – and look at what’s happened there!

Citizen Journalism in South Korea

Monday, June 21st, 2004

Just discovered a very interesting South Korean news site that allows the audience to publish articles of their own by agreeing to a code of ethics. Looks like participatory journalism is coming of age.

Now with news feeds

Sunday, June 20th, 2004

Many thanks are owed to Ian Forrester and in particular Neil Charlton for their help in setting up PHP based RSS parsing on the site for me. I’ve quickly built a page (mainly for personal use) where I’ll add new and interesting feeds to as I discover them.