I have a follow up presentation to do this Friday to see how the Training and Organization Development Network (Greater Toronto Area) is enjoying and utilizing the online community I set up for them. Long story short, in the spring the group met and was discussing that they were getting tired of keeping track of the billion emails flying around filled with questions, replies, and attachments. I suggested setting up an online community. Got it up and running in the summer and now that it is fall we are revisiting the idea to see if it has worked as we (I) had hoped.
What’s this got to do with my post heading….well….my first presentation I included a couple of those great Common Craft in plain English videos. A better way then I could ever attempt at explaining some of the web tools out there to use. I wanted to come back at this presentation time and show another cool video that explains and showcases more of what is happening in the digital world. So I remembered Prof. Micheal Wesch ‘s video “The Machine is Us/ing Us“. If you haven’t seen it yet, take a look it’s a wonderful piece. From an interview with the professor:
“As I tried to illustrate in the video, this means that a change in one area (such as the way we communicate) can have a profound effect on everything else, including family, love, and our sense of being itself. Second, everything is connected throughout all time, and so as anthropologists we take a very broad view of human history, looking thousands or even millions of years into the past and into the future as well. And finally, all people on the planet are connected. This has always been true environmentally because we share the same planet. Today it is even more true with increasing economic and media globalization.”
Through looking at his site I came across Creative Commons (which I have seen before but never really looked into).
Creative Commons provides free tools that let authors, scientists, artists, and educators easily mark their creative work with the freedoms they want it to carry. You can use CC to change your copyright terms from “All Rights Reserved” to “Some Rights Reserved.”
Watching Prof. Wesch’s video I saw him using/referencing an interesting site that I could see had lots of little window panes with rss feeds in, blogs, news items extra. Really liking the look of it I wanted to know what it was being used. Pause the video, rewind the video, step-by-step the video….I was just about to do a screen capture and send the image to a friend to ask if they knew what it was and….I see on the web address line…netvibes. Type that into my browser and there you go….that’s it. Another neat little tool to try out and see if I like using it as a reader.
I feel like Columbo (sorry for the 70’s reference, but I still like him) discovering, exploring, finding clues, solving puzzles. There’s something I always find really satisfying when I discover something new (at least new to me) on the web. I wonder how many more feel that way?