Tuesday, 27 November 2007

BlogTalk 2008


BlogTalk 2008, the fifth international conference on Social Software, is to be held in Cork on 3-4 March 2008. The closing date for proposals is Friday 7th December, 2007. There are three submission categories: Academic, Developer and Practitioner.

John Breslin, from DERI in Galway, is one of the conference chairs and he talks about the conference on his blog.

From the conference website:

The international conference BlogTalk 2008 will bring together different groups of people using and advancing the Internet and its usage: technical and conceptual developers, researchers with interdisciplinary backgrounds, and practitioners alike. It is designed to initiate a dialog between users, developers, researchers and others who share, analyse and enjoy the benefits of social software. The focus is on social software as an expression of a culture that is based on the exchange of information, ideas and knowledge, and moreover we understand social software as a new way of relating people to people and to machines and vice versa. In the spirit of the free exchange of opinions, links and thoughts, we wish to engage a wide range of participants in this discourse.

Co-located with BlogTalk is the Social Network Portability Webcamp, which takes place on the day before the main event.

Monday, 26 November 2007

Willkommen in Berlin! Just arrived

Over here in Berlin for Kaliedoscope-Sputnic-OnlineEduca plus other meetings. A whirlwind of a week in the dark depths of winter. As Christmas markets fill the square, e-learning geeks from across the world swarm towards the Hotel Intercontinental. I'm here myself with a room that overlooks the zoo giving a slightly surreal flavour to the whole experience. Anyway, the minidisc recorder is charging up and the microphone is ready and hopefully I'll manage to grab a couple of interviews for our podcasts. Links will be posted here when available. In the meantime it's Gute Nacht from me!

Thursday, 22 November 2007

Echo360 UK and Ireland User Conference

On Monday I attended the first Echo360 (formerly Apreso) user conference at Coventry University. It was a very successful event, with about 40 people who are either using or thinking about using the Echo360 lecture capture system. We have just begun testing our system at NUI Galway and intend to begin a pilot evaluation project in the next few weeks.

For some insight into how the system works, take a look at this short video produced by the Multimedia Team at the Centre for Excellence in Interdisciplinary Mental Health at the University of Birmingham.

I haven't got round to writing up my notes of the event, but in the meantime I came across this blog entry from the London School of Economics, who have been using Apreso for 3 or so years and are currently evaluating a beta version of the much anticipated course caster.

Sunday, 18 November 2007

Participants of the Installfest, Galway, 17th Nov 2007

Much is spoken about communities of practice and their importance in enabling us to develop and learn. However, frequently the term is misused and abused to describe groups of individuals who have no real community basis or desire to share knowledge. On the other end of the spectrum, there are genuine communities, such as the Galway Linux User Group (GLUG). Formed after the recent BarCamp meeting earlier this month, the group met again this Saturday morning, patiently showing newbies how to get to grips with various flavours of linux distributions. Armed with their laptops and desktop computers, more than 20 people gathered to test out various installations. I didn't get to meet everyone there, but a huge thanks goes to- Andrew, James, and Ina from Deri and Stephen from Applepie- for their help and organisation, and to the GLUG group as a whole. I'm particularly indebted to Toms who persevered against the odds in configuring my laptop to dual boot, with Ubuntu and Vista! It is mindblowing to see people give so freely of their time and expertise!

Wednesday, 14 November 2007

Galway Linux Installfest, Sat 17th Nov

Are you interested in all things possible with Linux? If so, there is an installfest coming up this Saturday, in DERI from 10am until lunchtime, where there'll be plenty of opportunity to find out all about what Open Source Software can do for you!

For more info, check out Andrew's blog ... or join the Google Galway Linux Users' Group

Thursday, 8 November 2007

New Web address

Note that we have now changed the URL for this blog to http://learntechgalway.blogspot.com so please change any links or RSS feeds that you may have set up. Sorry for any inconvenience, but this is in preparation for a slight redesign. The blog has proven popular and rather than continuing to be associated with the Galway Conference we are aiming to give it wider scope and a longer life.

Wednesday, 7 November 2007

How creativity is being strangled by the law

Larry Lessig, founder of Creative Commons, has an excellent presentation on TED talks this week. Watch it here.

Tuesday, 6 November 2007

VizThink - Are you a Visual Thinker

The website for the VizThink Conference '08 asks Who are Visual Thinkers anyway? The answer is

Visual thinkers are people who use any form of the visual arts such as graphic design, illustration, photos, video, animations, sketches, 3D, etc. for communications and learning.

The conference topics sound very interesting, including:
  • Moving beyond bullet points...using storytelling for presentations
  • Aligning individuals using visualization
  • Visualization in 3D? When does it matter
  • Facilitation using photographs
  • Designing compelling and effective information graphics
  • Virtual worlds: future or fad
  • Creating a global visual language
  • Organizing your world with visuals
  • Using visuals for powerful presentations
  • Storytelling through comics and graphic novels
  • Visual techniques for analyzing data
  • Visualization principles for software design
  • Facilitation through live sketching
  • Can there be a true language with grammar and structure that uses visuals?
  • Visualization as a brainstorming tool
Unfortunately, for a conference site which states Who should not attend?
  • Those who think bullets are best
the site contains an awful lot of bullet-pointed lists!

The conference site links to a blog, where one of the challenges is to picture the visual thinkers community, resulting in some beautiful images and not a bullet point in sight! There is also a conference wiki which includes lots of pre-conference information.

Unfortunately, the conference is in San Francisco at the end of January! Might be worth keeping an eye on the wiki though!

separate lives

The Guardian today has an article which summarises some of the findings of a recent report from JISC in the UK on student attitudes to Web 2.0 technologies. Entitled "Get out of My Space" the story explains that whilst universities and academics are desperately keen to have a presence in social networking sites (such as MySpace and Facebook), students themselves like to keep their space on such sites for personal activity and not study. Pretty obvious if you've ever surfed such sites. The notion that your tutor is eavesdropping on your chat, your hobbies and worst of all your personal photos and videos is a bit disconcerting for many no doubt. Still, the report does make the point that the provision of such tools can be very useful for distance learning (and presumably also, part-time) students in terms of creating a social space to replace the 'student bar'.

Thursday, 1 November 2007

The World Digital Library

The Independent (UK), The Washington Post and The New York Times all report on the World Digital Library project, a prototype of which was unveiled in Paris on October 17th. The project involves the US Library of Congress, Unesco and libraries in Egypt, Brazil and Russia, as well as financial support from google and technical support from Apple.

The project is to digitise and make available, for free, in multiligual format, primary resources from around the globe, including maps, rare books, manuscripts, photographs, film and music. While the prototype is not currently available, there is a nice little video Experience the Vision.

Thursday, 18 October 2007

Inaugural Symposium on Communities & Shared Digital Resources for Teaching & Learning, (NDLR2007)

The inaugural NDLR (National Learning Digital Learning Repository) symposium has recently been announced. Further information is available on the NDLR website.

"The 2007 International Symposium on Communities and Shared Digital Resources for Teaching and Learning (NDLR2007) will take place on Tuesday 11th December in University of Dublin, Trinity College, Dublin, Ireland.

This symposium is aimed at members of NDLR Communities of Practice (CoP) and academic staff across many different subject disciplines across Irish Higher Education. Participation and attendance is also invited from International Subject Networks or Communities of Practice."

The man who invented Google Earth..

Berkeley's webcast service has provided a link to a recorded lecture by John Hanke, Product Director for Google Earth. John has had a fascinating and varied career in technology innovation as can be seen in his brief biography from the Berkeley site, reproduced below.

"Product Director for Google Maps, Local, and Earth, John Hanke has an accomplished career in the world of interactive software where he has pursued advances in technology to pioneer new kinds of products. In the early days of the web, Hanke was involved in the start up of one of the first massively multi-player online 3D games ("Meridian 59"), which was acquired by 3DO in 1996. He co-founded a second company, Big Network, to pursue "casual gaming" online. That company was acquired by eUniverse in 2000. He co-founded Keyhole in 2001 to create a new kind of global 3D map of the world. He forged partnerships with Sony, Nvidia, CNN and others as the company introduced its "earth browser" to the world. Keyhole was acquired by Google in October 2004. The Keyhole technology re-emerged as "Google Earth" in July 2005. After receiving his MBA from the Haas School of Business at UC Berkeley in 1996 and BA in Plan II from The University of Texas at Austin, Hanke worked in foreign affairs for the US Government in Washington, DC and Southeast Asia."