Now Joining in the Blog Hullabaloo

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Thanks to quick commenting and some sleep, I woke up with a fresh appreciation for the Open Content -> Blog publishing idea I was skeptical about just six hours ago. I do like the impetus this provides for actually making use of some of the open content that is out there and I suspect it will stimulate some discussion about both the lack of progress in a workable rich standard for feeding more complex objects– or at least for making content truly portable rather than having all multimedia inclusions pointing back to a potentially unreliable (from the adopter’s point of view) source and server– and different options for more sophisticated and/or more granular reuse. And I think there is merit in both the ultra-light approach of bringing content into something like WordPress and also experimentation in the hazy middle area of management that Drupal could represent.

When ranting and raving I sometimes forget that part of my evaluation is different from many others because I have a particular interest in open materials that are suitable for a) distance education and b) independent learners… that tends to color what I see, since most of the open content being created is clearly intended as supplemental materials for someone who is enjoying the privilege and ability of teaching or learning at an institution. For those who don’t have that privilege, sucking materials into another, more local, system is largely irrelevant given the lack of attention to their needs in creating the content in the first place.

As Alan said, I’m probably a bit optimistic in thinking that those who will be reading about this will already be comfortably familiar with this medium. I suppose I was thinking too much about the audience of ed tech bloggers. Blogging isn’t even a minor practice in my neck of the woods, much less feed reading and certainly not importing RSS feeds of content.

And you know what? I don’t want to be seen as trying to squelch any excitement that can be generated about open content or blogs as LMS or creative re-uses of feeds. There are plenty of people out their ready to pee on your Cheerios if you dare lift your head and get excited about something that isn’t new or shiny (or deep rooted or respectful) enough.

Confused About the Blog Uproar

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I’m confused by all the sudden excitement about importing syndicated feeds and blogs as course sites. Don’t get me wrong, I’m 100% behind the use of blogs in this way, but it seems to me that this has been happening for a long time. Blogs as course sites have been around for a long time and the whole point of having feeds of course materials is to, well, provide feeds to be imported (such web feeds certainly aren’t designed to be subscribed to in one’s common aggregator)… it doesn’t seem too surprising that the feeds work and the links and images and linked multimedia are intact, since that’s the medium in which most people are probably reading these announcements in the first place.

It’s very late, so I’m probably missing something obvious. Please fill me in! On the other hand, the new EduGlu is exciting even in my current condition.

Treading Water in Info Ocean

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One of my students who is just learning about web feeds and feed reading commented to me that she liked the “fluidity” of the medium, then noted:

I found that several of the
converted” track 80-some feeds a day. The thought made my head hurt, but the reality is that I will probably be just as “engaged” as soon as I get my favorites linked.

This triggered the firing of many synapses, connecting together a variety of dots from my own social network: Brian Lamb’s recent post about a conference that completely escaped his radar (at the time), Bryan Alexander’s Twit about social networks as triads that lead me to his post on the subject referencing Stephen Downes’ catch of Ton Zylstra’s visualization and Jyrie Engesrom’s writing on social objects. This dark path lit up when I came across Gardner Campbell’s post on Distributed Cognition that illustrates the power of the social network and ends with sound advice:

Oh yes, and the moral of the story: link out to other bloggers early and often. Something about casting your bread upon the waters…

It’s taken me longer to copy and paste links than it did to follow that path. It will take me far longer to write this entry than it did to read all of the entries. But it has already been immensely valuable to my thinking and will influence some projects I am working on.

The thing is– and this is what is so hard to convey to others– this kind of eye-opening experience happens nearly every day. If it didn’t, I couldn’t keep working in this field, where the difficulties and apathy and institutional lethargy vastly outnumber the tangible moments of success. And it has nothing to do with being a super voracious informavore, with working extra hard to keep up, or with spending all of my free time working. While occasionally guilty of the first, my information consumption habits encompass many other areas outside of work. Moreover, I don’t even try to keep up, and when I work from home it’s on other work that isn’t reflected here.

There’s too much information and always has been… it was just that in the past it was easier to ignore the deep waters of the unknown because they were harder to access, often locked away behind gatekeepers of various kinds, and generally were static resources that we fetched at certain times for certain purposes. Very little information came to us except that which we directly asked for. But the environment has changed dramatically.

In addition to the kinds of resources we’ve always had, we have the powerful ability to tap into the vital knowledge in the heads of our colleagues, idols, and students. Our “collection” is no longer just, or mostly, pointers to reservoirs but an infosphere in constant flux, fed by flows from sources into and around our immediate locus of need and desire. I constantly refer to Downes’ metaphor of resources, information, and learning as water flowing through the network, not something we think about capturing constantly and storing in our cupboards, but something we turn on and use when we need it.

As I told my student, learning to stimulate and manage this flow is the information literacy skill of the age. The secrets to doing so aren’t secrets at all:

First, and perhaps hardest, we have to learn to be OK with not “keeping up” in the traditional sense. People worry about 20, or 50, or 100 web feeds because they are considering them in the old frame of scarcity and control– as resources to consume all at once lest they be lost. If they have unread feeds, unseen sites, unheard podcasts, unabsorbed articles in their environment they feel uneasy, even agitated. It isn’t that there weren’t all these undigested items before, they just didn’t know about them. This agitation can be paralyzing. I liken it to my own fear of swimming in deep water, which is an extension of my fear of heights. Though I know how to swim and I never need to go more than a few feet deep to do so, I have a hard time with water more than five feet deep. I’d rather stay in the boat and ignore those depths despite there being no rational or logical basis to my fear: swimming in 4 feet of water is no different than swimming in 250 feet. Too many feel this way in the sea of information– better to turn away from the depths than jump in. For some reason we expect to be complete Olympic swimmers when treading water and occasionally dog-paddling are perfectly OK.

Keeping up in the information age doesn’t mean absorbing everything in your immediate vicinity, it means keeping your network tuned and fresh so that the information is there when you need it. The important things find their way to you because they carry some of the energy of other participants.

The second key “secret” is an echo of Gardner’s refrain, and what makes the network effects carrying the important information to us work: you have to be an active participant in that network. What you put into the network– directly and indirectly– shapes the network to your needs and makes possible the reflection and amplification that brings the important stuff to you. Blog posts, twitters, information linked in socially enabled applications like flickr, del.icio.us and stumbleupon, facebook updates, comments, wiki edits… whatever methods make sense in your environment will work, but only if you are engaged. Trying to be an old-school passive consumer in a participation based network is like traveling to a new place and then holing up in your hotel watching the same programs and eating food from the same restaurant chains… you’re a consumer rather than a resident and you’re not only going to miss out on the most important happenings, but you’ll never even know about them.

There’s a lot of talk about Personal Learning Environments right now, and rightly so. But PLEs are not just for students any more than learning is just for students. Educators are faced with extra demands: not only do they need to learn to create and participate in their own social network– essentially a PLE– for professional advantages, but they will face daunting hurdles when helping their students in this critical area if they have no experience with it themselves.

Swarm of the Feed Readers

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News of the Bloglines Beta prompts me to note that a few months ago I finally gave in to the good reports from D’Arcy and Christen and gave Google Reader another try. I’d checked it out early on– I’m a firm fan of many of Google’s tools, appreciating their minimalist approach– but was unimpressed. This time around I’ve stuck with it and remain basically satisfied.

If that sounds like a lukewarm endorsement it is. In development cycle years, feed readers have been around for a while… it’s frustrating that each of them still has what I consider to be great flaws:

Google Reader finally got search (!?) but it still has very poor OPML handling– want to export a folder or group as OPML? I don’t think so. Want to subscribe to– or even directly bring in using the web link– an OPML reading list? Can’t do that either. Nor can you provide a public link to view your subs.

The new Bloglines Beta looks good but still has no offline reading capability and I’ll wait until they are further along before I comment on the available views.

FeedDemon is one of the best desktop readers, but when I need web-based access to feeds I can’t deal with all the quirks (slow performance, missing articles, flawed caching) of NewsGator.

BlogBridge is, for my virtual money, the best reader of them all. With it I can make short work of a lot of feeds– and I have a good reason to monitor more feeds than your average bear. It has exquisite OPML capabilities, tagging, views… and the responsiveness by Pito and Aleksey is nothing short of phenomenal. But it has no offline capability nor does it synchronize with a web-based service.

However, the fundamental problem with desktop readers is not lack of web-based access to my feeds (though that is a wonderful thing) but the inability to easily share items. Until there is a mechanism in desktop readers for sharing items that is as simple as clicking “share this” I won’t likely be going back to one. The nature of the social web is such that I can work around almost any flaw in any halfway decent product as long as there is an easy opportunity to share what I am reading.

Grazr Adds OPML Hosting and Scripting

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Grazr is growing by leaps and bounds, having recently added both OPML (reading list) hosting and a scripting language based on Javascript.

And the mashup hits keep coming with cool items like feed filtering and a photo browser.

Custom Site Search with Google

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These instructions for using Google Co-Op to create a search facility in Google Reader are interesting not just for Google Reader users, but for anyone who is interested in customizing searches to take advantage of their social network. For instance, here is a search engine that searches my Education, EdTech, and Cool People blog subscriptions (I imported the list of subscriptions from my RSS reader). The beautiful part is I can invite you (or others can ask) to participate and a collaborative, targeted search facility can be easily created and maintained.

Bloglines RSS Auto-Discovery Frustration

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If you have a Bloglines account and you attempt to add my site feed (try this link), it will show you 11 different feed links, almost all of which aren’t my actual feedburner feeds actually redirect to the same if you try them! Why are these there?

And don’t even get me started about the odd specific category subscription links, which don’t even exist!

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