Blog, June 19, 2013, Scoop.it, on how Most Popular leads into reading more in a webiste can be quite distorted to direct reads. Advocates for human curation.
"The solution: Human curation. We need to provide readers with lists and collections of content that are popular within a certain field because they are genuinely popular to those who know about or are interested in that field. Most Popular lists on websites are generated by algorithms, making them extremely easy to game (by clicking the same content repeatedly, for instance) which in turn leads readers to believe they've found good content when they oftentimes haven't. It's the job of the curator, as a human, to let other humans know what they (the curator) are finding to be the best pieces of content on a topic - as someone who knows about a specific subject or interest."
Blog by Lindsay Brunner, June 19, 2013, Scoop.it curated, that identifies less known tools for sharing--Scribd, Reddit, Yarny, Scoop.it, and Google Drive and their advantages.
Great blog by Svetlana Saitsky, June 17, 2013 on how aquiring knowledge is just part of the quest; taking what you know and doing something with it is the more important part. It's what the dashboard taught me.
Might have some good quotes in it for us to use in e-vents or series.
excellent article by Terry Anderson, Athabasca University--Canada's Open University, October 2003, IRRODL, on creating optimum learning conditions online. Makes me want to see an update.
Interesting blog post by Jennifer Dunn on Scoop.it, June 25, 2013.
It suggests using LinkedIn, conferences, and current contacts as starting points for building your business network. Not so unusual but the point about how you don't have to go a conference to benefit from the circle of like-minded peers it attracts but go to the website or Facebook page or Twitter to circulate and get acquainted with the people who might be valuable for you to know is a good one. Makes me think, also, about how wikis or any record building device given to participants one year at a conference or workshop might be left open for one to go back and view current participants. (ex. BEtreat wiki is still open to me; WLstudio?)
Core process for individual growth, a blog by Nick Heap.
How to find the unique talent that each of us has to "make a valuable contribution in the world and to lead more fulfilling lives."
Excellent series of very short (1.5 minutes or less) how-to videos on using PowerPoint presentations by Dave Yewman, published in July 2008 but still relevant today.
A Slideshare by Etienne Garbugli on using time effectively that went viral to get 1 million views since being uploaded in March 2013.
Very effective ideas; maybe we could use it as an experimental exercise--"find three ideas to test doing in the next week; come back and tell us how it went"
Video on YouTube, posted May 9, 2013.
"Style and aesthetics cannot rescue failed content."
"Google Maps are visualization" helping people do something.
"History of visualizing data is history of science"
Not an aerie-faerie
"Three things to inform your design--what you have to say and communicate, reader is not you and they will come with their own bias and assumptions, and data itself and what it has to say."
Can communicate a lot of information very quickly--emotional impact, react to aesthetics of piece, presenting information in visual format is fastest way for them to engage with information."
"Successful infographic tells a story.
"Hero is one key element of piece." "Take complicated data and convert to something simple. Hours to seconds..."
"Data are measurements of something"
"Revelation--show us something we haven't seen before"
Video by Off Book/PBS on how YouTube has broadened what we think of as entertaining, valuable, educational, etc. Fast Feedback loop on content. June 6, 2013
Unlike TV, can comment on it and affect directly what is being made, importance of subscription for those who want to watch it. "Just so cool that people all over the world can build a community and drive development."
Very intimate and close up framing of videos on YouTube. That comes across, makes it feel personal.
"Has to feel like one person is in charge of everything, otherwise it doesn't feel like YouTube."
Using feedback mechanisms and viewer interactivity to make new stuff
Even TimeWarners of world are reallocating resources to YouTube production
"Will be as comfortable going to YouTube as turning on TV"