Health matters

During the period when I found I had CHD, underwent surgery and successfully recovered, I actively kept a blog record of what was going on – from my perspective. It was an interesting, and perhaps the first, piece of reflective thinking I’d ever done. It helped me through the shock, denial and acceptance stages of what I encountered.

The record is to be found on The #hospitweet Blog so named because a colleague encouraged me to use twitter to describe my experiences too – #hospitweet being the hashtag I used.

Twitter – the world is watching?

I begin by reminding my readers that I’m a simple IT Director; but perhaps not as simple as some, and perhaps more adventurous than most. That’s the disclaimer out of the way.

I started using brightkite last week, just as a mechanism for seeing whether adding location information to tweets would have any value. I tweeted that it was a shame that my BB with its inbuilt GPS didn’t provide a means of capturing location and feeding it direct to twitter (or whatever) but persisted in telling those that were interetsed that I was moving around Cardiff …. boring. However the idea of updating your profile (in twitter, and potentially in any other system or Web2 2.0 service) of where you are is a potentially very interesting and valuable idea. Indeed, if you take it to its logical conclusion you have links between presence awareness (through GPS and Instant Messaging, or Twitter) and the potential for real face-to-face meetings. That sounds really interesting on a campus as spread out as ours, which is on the edge of a city centre where so much social interaction takes place. So, it’s worthy of further investigation.

Then yesterday evening I discovered twittermap and twittervision which display in real-time the public twitter stream. It’s a neat mashup using the Google Maps and twitter APIs and you don’t need to do anything to get on it. Just take a look and you’ll see what I mean. You don’t need to do anything, you just start the thing! All of a sudden you see “twitterworld” passing your frontdoor. You see people close (spatially) to you, who you don’t know – tweeting away. You see, in real-time, the conversations on a global scale of all that is going on in twitterworld – some of which you’d not wish to be associated with. In other words – you see the public tweetstream. It’s really neat, and yet it’s really scarey too!

My first reaction was to come off the public twitter timeline … after all I don’t really want to share anything I’m tweeting with anyone who isn’t following me (as if I felt I had anything worth reading). That would take me off the public twitterstream and therefore (possibly) off any other less-obvious API that was catching my profound utterances through twitter.

But then I had a chat with my mate – breadedcod.

Once again the issue is one of education. It’s one of context … Maybe I’d been lulled into a foolish sense of community-security by seeming to be only tweeting to a community that I was controlling [I want to follow X; I don't want Y following me] I do have to say however that when I decided to follow 10 Downing Street, and the response came back that they were following me …. that really freaked me out!!!!!

Wake-up call.

Just reflect that if you’re on the public line and you do http://twitter.com/diharrison you see everything I’ve tweeted. That means (as in twittervision and twittermap) that someone (any supplier, any interest group, any …. whatever), somewhere, could be gathering information and making market intelligence interpretations of everything you tweet.

Now, I’m not that naive … I did know that twitter was open … honest.

But …. and this is the crux … I hadn’t done the risk analysis. That’s the one I’d already done when I decided that I needed at least 3 blogging platforms. I’d talked publicly about context, appropriate language, etc etc and although I’d subconsciously applied it to my posts on twitter (I hope there’s nothing that proves me wrong on that one); I hadn’t proactively, and consciously applied the same rules to twitter as I had to my blogging.

So … this blog is a personal reminder to mself and anyone else that reads it . When using any like-tool to twitter, to remember that the “world is watching”. After receiving the wise counsel of breadedcod, I’m not coming off the public timeline of twitter, pownce, brightkite, jaiku or anything else ….. but I am going to be more circumspect in my tweets – after all my boss might just type in http://twitter.com/diharrison.

Web2.0 serendipity

An earlier post reflected upon my impressions and experience of presenting at the Eduserv Symposium in London. Now I want to spend a few moments describing how the virtual and real worlds can collide and produce synergy and promote activity that would not have happened in any other circumstance, or at least not so forcefully.

I’ve explained how the event was being streamed on the web, and how CoverItLive was being used to provide a live micro-blogging channel so that participants and attendees could take part in a discourse with the presenters and conference organisers. What perhaps was not obvious was that some of us were also using Twitter as a separate back-channel (sometimes also using Direct Messaging) which allowed us to communicate together using the hashtag #efsym2008.

What I want to describe is how a communication on the back-channel at that event led to lunch today with a colleague from our School of Journalism, Media & Cultural Studies (JOMEC) – “@egrommet” – and then on to discussions on how we could use the Collaboration Tools within our Modern IT Working Environment (MWE) to affect change in the way we work and the way we deliver learning and teaching at the University as well as the possibilities for partnership between Information Services (INSRV) and JOMEC. On CoverItLive it looked like this …

12:19
Pete Johnston – OK, slight reorganisation, so next up is Geoffrey Bilder from CrossRef
12:20
[Comment From David Harrison]
Would be good to be able to identify actual from virtual attendees
12:25
[Comment From David Harrison]
Great start – hits at stuff we’ve been talking about in Cardiff in terms of trust/credibility
12:25
[Comment From egrommet]
@David Harrison I’m a virt
12:26
[Comment From egrommet]
@David Harrison – where do you work, I’m Cardiff Uni
12:29
[Comment From David Harrison]
@egronmet – real – INSRV in CU
12:29
[Comment From egrommet]
lol

… colleagues of mine who were also following the event on CoverItLive then advised me through Twitter who @egrommet was and by the end of the event we were “following” each other on Twitter, had effectively brought two parts of the University together and had agreed we needed to meet up to chat more about our respective areas of work and interests.

The upshot of all this is that today we discussed the use of socialmedia in Journalism, the structure of blogs/wikis and other collaboration tools that will very shortly be available in the MWE, some ideas of creating a team blog for those in the School interested in technology, and an exchange of contact details of others working in this area that I might be interested in following and most important to me the knowledge that we had the possibility of a partner who would work closely with us to achieve benefit and start to change the way we do things in the University. So really the subtitle of the talk, “making sense out of nonsense” couldn’t have been more apt. The real learning point is however that social software (whatever you call it), or Web 2.0 opens up whole rafts of possibilities that you cannot imagine. It breaks down silos, it creates new communication pathways that are very direct, it creates new alliances, it puts like people in touch with each other and most importantly it fosters co-operation and collaboration.

When’s my next lunch … ?