I just realized that I’m halfway through the sixth week of the spring Semester at Cornell! And over at RIT, they are in winter finals — which means that spring quarter is around the corner. And with spring comes the countdown to the Imagine RIT innovation festival. The next few months of my life will be beyond busy. Which really isn’t any sort of shift.

As to what I’ve been spending my time on (beyond school work) — the answer is video editing. I brought a Kodak Zi6 HD Digital Video Camera with me to the O’Reilly Tools of Change conference to experiment with its capabilities (aside: I’m planning to use it (or something like it) for my own research. And, for a ~$150 investment, I’ve been really impressed. I plan on reviewing it as a tool for qualitative research sometime in the near future.). So while at TOC I shot video of various demo products and also got a few interviews with people there. So I’ve also I had to dust off my (limited) Adobe Premiere skills to get them ready for sharing on the web. All of this has been a great, if slightly time consuming, experience. It’s solidified the fact that I will definitely have a media component to my PhD research.

You can check out the videos on the OPL’s news page and on our Vimeo page. The one that will most likely cause the most stir will be Tim O’Reilly talking about Open Publishing:

Tim O’Reilly makes the argument for Open Publishing @ TOC 2009 from Open Publishing Lab @ RIT on Vimeo.

Presenters and attendees at this year’s O’Reilly Tools of Change for Publishing conference spent a  discussing the topics of social reading and community. One constant question was are these spaces that Amazon or Google will own? A week after the fact, and drawing on my experiences with online community at kodak.com, I’ve come up with the following assessment:

In this area, Amazon’s further ahead than Google, but I’m not sure that either is really in the right place (or could be the right service) for this to work. The reasons for this is that they’re fundamentally in the same business:

Connecting people with content

The sustainable community model is:

Connecting people through content

Amazon is arguably further along because they’ve fore fronted the approach of “Connecting people with content through other people.” Amazon makes you aware of other people asynchronously browsing the
content (with things like reviews and other people like you have bought). But there’s no concerted effort to connect you with those people. For example, you can submit reviews, but you’re not necessarily encouraged to engage in a discussion of reviews (though a threaded system of some sort). Likewise you can create lists, but not comment on lists. And while Amazon has discussion boards, they’re buried well below the fold line of the page (and beneath all the relevant content).

In Google’s case, those other people and what they do are a hidden aspect of the algorithm. Using Google is currently (gmail, gtalk, and latitude excluded) a solitary experience. While everyone is using it, you are not made aware of them (this concelment of the everpresent other is perhaps why Google can get away with more privacy things than Facebook).

Now all that said, as we learned at Kodak.com, its far easier to get people to discuss a given topic a a site organized around that topic than it is to get them to talk about a topic at a site organized around the medium that enables that topic. In plain language, people are far more likely to talk about photos of their baby at babies.com rather than in a “babies” forum/community at kodak.com.

Just as the photo was just a medium for the content (the baby) that connected, so to is the book another medium for the content that connects people. This is definitely an area where publisher and genre sites have an immediate advantage (provided they have to tools to do it).

None of this is to suggest that google or Amazon couldn’t overcome this. But it would take a lot more work than is immediately apparent (and take them outside of their current business models).

OPL_Library_Presentation4

Tools of Change has been amazing for both my RIT side and my Cornell side. Our presentation went really well. And our students have made a great impression on the folks — and for a teacher, there’s nothing better than that. I’ve also made a number of excellent contacts for my Journalism research.

I also got a draft copy of Cory Doctorow’s new book! Woot!

I’m blogging details of the conference at the OPL site. Lots of stuff will go up tonight, but if you’re interested, check out: <a href=”http://opl.rit.edu” />http://opl.rit.edu</a>

While the site may not seem like it changed (other than the loss of a few posts), you hopefully noticed that it’s loading a lot faster. That’s because I switched to a new hosting company. I’ve also made a number of changes on the backend. Lots more is finally to come. Just give me a few more days…

update 1: I hope that it will be ready soon. Then again, looking at the site it might be a while….

update 2: OK, I think its working it!

update 3: be careful when deleting plug-ins. Unfortunately my RSS isn’t working now :(

I’m at cornell for a workshop. Classes for me ended last Friday, though a great deal of writing remains. And I haven’t been able to get into that groove yet. In part, it’s been that a number of things popped up at the OPL that I felt I needed to give my attention to. But it’s also that I feel like I need to revisit a lot of texts before I can really start. That said, I really don’t have enough time to do that. So, in the Nike sense, I just have to do it… or rather write it.