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Week 7 Summary – Lost in #Torchwood

This will be a super brief summary of the week as I have spent the week quite massively absorbed in my mini ethnography. However I have also been looking at a few different things that are of interest:

  • Video Search – I’ve been looking at different video search engines for work but something I find really interesting is how much I immediately warm/shy away from sites based on how they present results. The profusion of inappropriate video on the net can make those that autoplay results (like Bing and Blinkx) really quite alarming. It is also interesting what version of the world you get when the audio of a video clip is also indexed. Although it helps find useful content there is such a gap in what is possible in visual interpretation that what you might really want to search by – ambiance, creative quality is just not an option in any automated system (yet?). The level of repetition across video sites is also interesting as a reflection on the culture of copying and or modifying even copyrighted content. Which leads neatly on to a Boing Boing story I caught via Twitter…
  • Heavy illegal downloaders buy more music – This is not a huge surprise in some ways but goes against the music industry publicity machines branding of piracy as socially unacceptable and driven by organised crime rather than a culture of bootleggers who love music of all varieties. It’s potentially a really challenging piece of research for those trying to maintain some of the pre-net and control-based financial model for copyrighted works.
  • Geo data, location based services, mobile apps - I’ve been poking around this area recently as the more I delve into mobile devices and mashups, the more fascinated I become by the usefulness of geo-enabling all sorts of data and the ethical/privacy issues that challenge the benefits of this.
  • Web 2.0 for eScience – I was lucky enough to attend a two day workshop at the National eScience Centre this week and two of the most fascinating presentations were by Austin Tate (talking about smart virtual rooms) and Sara de Freitas (talking about serious games and showing a demonstrator of serious games to teach young people and trainee medics about diseases and emergencies respectively). I was also interested that the group of 30 or so attendees were, as part of their networking, promising to see each other on Facebook. This stood out as recently all the social media and tech events I’ve been to involve exchanging Twitter details. I wondered if this was culturally driven (this was a very academic researcher group rather than the more start up focused groups I normally meet) or just coincidence…
  • Alyssa Milano is #5 most influential twitterer - At first I thought this was a joke. Alyssa was a child star of Who’s the Boss (now mostly forgotten save for the lead actress who can currently be seen playing Claire Meade in Ugly Betty) and then became a somewhat cult internet phenomenon thanks to some scantily clad photo shoots (she still has a cult fanbase if comments on her TwitPics are anything to go by). She’s moved on now to a role of sort of playing herself from what I can see but part of that persona involves being an absolutely addicted Twitter fan – her stream is full of replies to followers and fans and the link that flagged up this news item was from one of Twitter’s founders with a note saying how well deserved the ranking was. Quite interesting.
  • Perhaps the news story with the least fanfare but most interesting digital culture vibe this week was the announcement that the Guardian is changing it’s commenting system on the website. I think that if I had been doing my ethnography a few weeks later this would be a fascinating field site. The regular commentators seemed increadibly strongly invested in the commenting system. Objections seem to be strong even though the changes are relatively minor and intended primarily (according to the journalist who alerted me to the story via Twitter) aimed at ensuring all content on the site is picked up by search engines (which has it’s own interesting implications for the impact of the community on the stories they contribute opinions on). Watch this space re: the backlash I think…

Since most of the week was spent immersed in #Torchwood (and an attendant hike in music/podcast listens as I worked into the night) I think that is about all of relevance this week. Over the coming days I will be looking at and commenting on others’ ethnographies (those I’ve seen so far have been really interesting and the range of subjects is great). I also may look at my inital evaluation criteria for my ethnography and may see how the finished work compares to the criteria I was aiming at.

My ethnography is live!

And can be found here: http://sites.google.com/site/digitalethnography/ (I can’t see a way to add this to the ethnographies page myself so am hoping a trackback here will do the trick).

I will post a little more about it in my weekly summary later today/tomorrow.

Please leave comments either on the site or on this blog post – whatever you are most comfortable with.

Week 6 Summary – Brevity is the Soul of Wit

As I have been concentrating on untangling my thoughts on ethnography and how I will turn a list of tweets and twitterers, and various observations of their interactions into an ethnography my lifestreaming has been more random and peripheral this week so I shall keep this summary brief.

A fair amount of my lifestream this week is around the idea of building blogging communities and making community rules for blogging spaces – this is something that links both to my work and this courses community I think. Codes of conduct fit with some of themes in Bell (2001) around definitions of community based on symbolism, tradition and behaviours. And codes of conduct, terms of service, etc. are commonplace on the internet as just all sites that require registration, payment or any formal relationship require you agree to terms that may or may not be properly read by most users/participants. I’m not looking to build anything as formal as that but, as with creating many things for the internet, it is often best to start by looking at what else is already being used to get a sense of what does and does not work – hence a lot of links from delicious on this topic this week. I was also referred to an article that looks at some of the contentious consequences of online communities explored in Bell: New Statesman – Trial by fury.

In real life I attended a really interesting in person event this week:

delicious (feed #3) Shared Workshop in Internet Marketing for Scottish Internet Start-ups – The Edinburgh Internet Marketing Meetup Group (Edinburgh, Scotland) – Meetup.com. — 5:51pm via Delicious

This event was a talk presented by Sean Ellis (of 12in6 Projects), who has worked on marketing start ups for over a decade, and so a whole cluster of links this week were sparked from this session on start ups, finding ways to iterate your site design to get the most out of visitors and, crucially, ways to make use of Sean’s key question to assess users interest/commitment to start up sites: “Would you be disappointed if <this site/service> was no longer available?”. It’s a simple question but gives a lot of scope for users to talk about what does and does not make the site/service work so well – Sean emphasized one of the key things was creating a sense of community around your start up as a competitor may be able to replicate your service/site/idea but they cannot replicate the people and interested community that you have set up. An interesting note to bear in mind given the growth of social sites in recent years.

Sometimes it can be tricky working out what should be public and what should be private. Twitter lists came out this week – a few of my links refer to this but I’ve already blogged them so I won’t dwell on it here.  I’ve tweeted a few times this week about feeling fluey and then felt quite odd about it. I’ve really been feeling unwell – in a very vague sense – for the last few weeks but my online life and studying is so public and visible that I can feel quite self-concious when I do feel ill. I haven’t been off work this week but there have been all sorts of stories in the press (mostly a couple of years ago) over people on sick leave appearing online in ways that suggest they are fine (most notoriously when appearing drunken in pictures taken during a sick day) and whilst I would never be off work unless ill I think it’s interesting that we haven’t yet worked out the acceptable code of conduct over what is/is not OK to do online when sick. Presumably emailing in to say you are ill is ok, keeping an eye on email is ok, but replying or social networking maybe not? I would answer the phone (if I heard it) when off ill but I would think twice about an email. There is definitely an interesting observer/paranoia effect on the social web…

Finally on the topic of public/private I spotted a bizarre and interesting blog posting on the Official Facebook Blog:

delicious (feed #3) Shared Facebook | Memories of Friends Departed Endure on Facebook. — 5:58pm via Delicious

This story refers to a problem with the new Facebook referrer system – as part of various site changes recently Facebook has starting suggestion not only “People you might know” but also pulling people from your friend lists and suggesting “Write on his wall” or “Poke her” or, most offensively to some “X doesn’t have many friends – suggest some!”. The problem is that trawling through friends people may have stopped actively chatting too unleashes some problems… people have been asked to get back in touch with the partner they’ve just divorced and a whole series of people have been irate to find their deceased friends are being flagged up as being inactive or friendless. So the Official folks at Facebook have found a workaround of sorts – you can now flag your deceased friend(s) status and Facebook will leave the page up but turn it into a “memorial” page, which seems a little odd but at least gives them a criteria to filter suggestions on – deceased folks will not be appearing with a “Poke him!” label again if all goes to plan…

On a similar foot-in-mouth note I was pointed at this wonderfully odd marketing story this week:

delicious (feed #3) Shared When Microsoft pulls out of Family Guy, who loses? | Blog | Econsultancy. — 6:11pm via Delicious

It seems that Microsoft were happy to endorse an episode of Family Guy until they, erm, watched it. On discovering that themes in the episode included such crowd-pleasers as incest Microsoft swiftly removed funding. There has been a little speculation that this might have been a bit of a pragmatic ploy in itself – the brand get all the credibility of sponsoring something edgy without either paying the cash OR being seen to endorse it and they certainly got as much publicity from the decision to withdraw as the original sponsorship likely would. However the main reason I was interested was the fact that this story seemed to symbolize one of the persistent problems mainstream brands encounter when they try to hop onboard a pre-existing niche community or subculture without any knowledge of how that group operates. The Windows 7 ads a few weeks back were another example but the problem isn’t confined to Microsoft. Marketing departments used to purchasing a form of credibility seem to find communities and behaviours online rather baffling to deal with – the banner ad continues to persist for instance despite being a very inefficient advertising mechanism compared to it’s successor, the likes of AdWords which are lower tech but more effective as they respond to desires of browsing individuals rather than the aesthetic needs and imaginations of large corporates.

Torchwood Activity on the Sly

Of course much of this week I’ve been moving along with my Torchwood digital ethnography but much of my watching and participation around the Torchwood Tweeters has been very subtle lifestream-wise. There will be some more links appearing in the next few days as I collate materials onto my site for the work. One thing that did appear in my stream this week though was a request to see if anyone would recommend a good Torchwood tweeter or two to follow. #followfriday is a Twitter tradition for referring Tweeters to the community. So I asked for recommendations (hoping to flag up some of the links between Torchwood tweeters):

twitter (feed #2) Ahead of #followfriday I’m wondering which are the best #Torchwood tweeters to follow? [suchprettyeyes] — 3:01pm via Twitter

Unfortunately I’ve so far had no recommendations but the hashtags have been busy this weekend so it seems like the right time to take what I’ve collected and observed so far and get it all down. One of my most recent activities this week in fact was commenting on Damian’s post about evaluating an ethnography – I found the criteria he shared (from Richardson 2000) super useful so will be thinking about those as I put together my own ethnography.


Mutilated Cookies and Other Social Adventures…

Finally a little light relief. I made gruesome Halloween cookies and since one picture clearly shows a horrified bloodied community I thought it would be a nice thing to include here:

Its murder on the (cookie) dance floor...

Panic on the sheets of Edinburgh...

I also wanted to add that in real life this weekend I attended a film night of scary Halloween movies which was entirely about having a communal experience: viewed on your own such films are either scary or bad but rarely hilarious. But Trick ‘r’ Treat, Chopper Chicks in Zombie Town and The Lost Boys all gain immensely from community backchat. Indeed Chopper Chicks would never have been discovered without a local niche film community around the Cult Fiction DVD shop where new titles can be discovered and shared by interested community members – interestingly this is a shop that has set up only recently despite the availability of the same titles online partly because the experience of browsing can be wonderful when physical but also because of that importance of community.

Poison, Drowning, Claw, Or Knife. So Many Ways To Take A Life.  - Trick r Treat (2008) Theyre Looking for a Few Good Men.  - Chopper Chicks in Zombie Town (1989) Sleep all day. Party all night. Never grow old. Never die. Its fun to be a vampire. - The Lost Boys (1987)

Poison, Drowning, Claw, Or Knife. So Many Ways To Take A Life.

Trick ‘r’ Treat (2008)

They’re Looking for a Few Good Men.

Chopper Chicks in Zombie Town (1989)

Sleep all day. Party all night. Never grow old. Never die. It’s fun to be a vampire.

The Lost Boys (1987)

Like many obscure cult films – especially those featuring leather chaps, Billy Bob Thornton, midget revenge and zombies – Chopper Chicks, whilst very silly and fun, is arguably an experience infinitely improved by a full and irreverent community commentary! Meanwhile the whole group bonded, during the screening of The Lost Boys, through discussions of previous experiences of viewing the same film – we brought our individual experiences into the community space and shared both those past experiences and a communal new experience of viewing some very silly movies. Basically in much the same way as most online film communities thrive on the sharing of, often cinematic, viewing stories and the exchange of knowledge and obscure film tip-offs.

Bell & Communities (or how I stopped worrying and pretty much worked out what a community might be…)

What is a Community?

Bell talks about the issues surrounding the intersections of “real-life” (RL) and online life, and the problem of defining a community in the broader context. Bell also refers to Tönnies’  notion of “Gemeinschaft” (Tönnies 1955 in (2)) – a definition of community which seems, to me, to be out of date even in real life where multiple changes to society including separation of living, working and social spaces, migration, etc. – mean that communities are no longer where “everyone knows everyone, everyone helps everyone, and the bonds between people are tight and multiple (someone’s neighbour is also their workmate and the person they go drinking with and their relative, etc.)” (2) . Pitched against this is Tönnies’ contrasting notion of an urban “Gesellschaft”, where relationships are shallow and instrumental. Bell indicates the nostalgia inherent in drawing such a comparison and, indeed, the role that such nostalgia around idealized views of what constitutes a community plays.

Bell connects these views of what may constitute a community to Benedict Anderson’s notion of “imagined communities” (1983, quoted in (2)) that are maintained by constructed symbols and traditions. I think this is a very useful definition which helps when considering Bell’s questioning of whether groups with shared interests or in specific online spaces constitute real communities. Bell also refers to Rheingold’s views on the value of online communities for the individual, that there is human hunger for community and this is also translated to the online space. However his view that online communities fill the space left by the demise of real life communities is less convincing to me. Finding like-minded people online may be easy – as Rheingold suggests – but by being able to pick selectively on the basis of a single shared interest you still only share one perspective with these “like-minded” types and it can take a long time to find out that you may be part of a community where others may, say, share your love of certain film or fandom for a football team or cooking interest but may also be someone who may have, say, wildly differing political or religious or simply hold radically oppositional views on other topics. The good and bad thing is that connecting to new people via the internet often gives you exactly what you expect at first but that doesn’t mean you ONLY get what you expect. As in real life a shared interest can open the door to sharing other interests or views or subjecting you to new understandings of the world, or it might mean that some friendships are untenable when shared interests are not enough to overcome a serious difference of opinion that you do not discover at first. I would argue that in real life you are far more likely to seek out communities who look, sound and live near you – so share class, income, possibly political and religious views – than online where a single interest is often enough to start a relationship that takes you past what might be a initial barrier on the basis of presentation, accent, or other contexts in real life. But I think the simplicity of people is the same online as offline – no-one is the same and if you only want to hear viewpoints that match your own that is often easy to do in either space.

And following on from this I really like Rheingold’s definition of cyberspace community:

In cyberspace, we chat and argue, engage in intellectual intercourse, perform acts of commerce, exchange knowledge, share emotional support, make plans, brainstorm, gossip, feud, fall in love, find friends and lose them, play games and metagames, flirt, create a little high art and a lot of idle talk. We do everything people do when they get together, but we do it with words on computer screens, leaving our bodies behind. Millions of us have already built communities where our identities commingle and interact electronically, independent of local time or location.

(Rheingold 1999: 414, quoted in (2))

Community vs Subculture

The type of arguments Bell explores around what defines a community, and how a sub culture may differ from there, are crucial to my own choice of community or the digital ethnography. Torchwood Tweeters are perhaps both a subculture and a community – as I explore further I feel that some members participate in each context, some overlap both definitions – but it is a tricky boundary to consider. Sardar (CR: 743 quoted in (2)) seems to take too hard a line on communities by suggesting that it is simplistic to suggest that a shared interest makes a community using the example of the world’s accountants. Actually I think the worldwide population of accountants is, in some respects, a valid community as they shared experiences of specific types of work, they have interests in similar areas of legislation and working practice, they are likely to share business-specific suppliers and contacts – software vendors, payroll companies etc., they will share terminologies, jargon and communications. Crucially that means they will be able to understand and bond with each other in a way that outsiders may not. That does not ensure that every accountant could, would or should richly interact with every other accountant on the planet but the sense of a community of interest is at the very heart of making communications and sharing tools like international journals, shared products and product user groups, conferences, standards etc. work. However this is an opt in/out sort of community (as opposed to, say, a village where location of premises may be the entry rather than participation in that community) and thus fits into Baym’s characterization of communities being real only when participants “imagine themselves as a community” (1998, quoted in (2)).

Bell talks not only of these ideas of conceptual or imagined communities but also of the role of “social codes” in making communities. I think to this I would add that shared opinions is important and that these can often be conflated with social codes in online spaces. I think it is interesting that the Torchwood Tweeters recent activity has been around sharing dominant views that the death of the Ianto Jones character was wrong – either because it is unfair on the actor, because it upsets the balance of the show, because he is a popular character who they will miss… the reason is not important but the sharing of the view that this plot development was not correct is a key part of the shared #Torchwood experience. Also crucial to the current discussions in this space are some assumptions around who will be interested in communicating over the series: fellow tweeters on the #Torchwood hashtag will have watched (and hold opinions) on the existing series’ and will not object to multiple stories of viewings at different timelines – for instance looking just now I can see people talking about series 1, series 3 and a  possible series 4 all in parallel. The viewing and enjoying of the series is shared but, whilst no live broadcasts are scheduled, there is an accepted  practice of reruns and resharings.

Voices of dissent or acts or invasion in online communities are complex. Bell (2) says that:

“Elizabeth Reid’s (1999) work on adventure MUDs refers to the prominence of public displays of punishment there as a return to ‘Medieval’ forms of social control, reversing Foucault’s (1986) famous discussion of the historical move from punishment to discipline – an analysis at odds with the supposed ‘freedom’ on offer in cyberspace.”

And certainly I see some relationship with this symbolic and accelerated level of anger and, say, the number of complaints registered about Jan Moir’s Stephen Gately article last month. Indeed the MUD experience discussed by Julian Dibbell (1999, quoted in (2), and which I commented on elsewhere) puts in mind my own experience of being part of a “kd lang Mailing List” which experienced several crucial community-gelling experiences when it was decided to take collective flaming action upon people posting offensive homophobic and/or sexist comments to the list. In retrospect the group action was disproportionate to the offence but the impact of receiving offensive comments and feeling subject to voyeuristic impostors exposed the fragility of the community (effectively just a set of email addresses) and thus provoked a strong protective reaction.

Bell’s discussion of transgressions in Habitat also recalls more recent press coverage of Second Life gangs and crimes and World of Warcraft gold farming. What distinguishes the virtual crimes in Habitat from those in SL or WoW is that the latter spaces are commercialized and therefore real money is bound to the virtual world transforming crime from a virtual issue to one potentially requiring RL resolution through the legal system. This perhaps helps explains the various shifts online from imaginative play spaces to more RL type social spaces – when virtual interactions are commoditised it becomes more important to be able to confidently trust the identity of those you may be exchaning real money or goods with (indeed eBay is one of the most intriguingly complex spaces for social interaction, trust and etiquette). Which is not to say that anonimity is not possible or desirable in current cyber communities but more to indicate that I feel that the acceptability of anonymity is currently in a state of flux. The internet has also become a business space and networking in this context is usually most effective when under a professional name or consistent pseudonym (in a way Second Life is smart to allow only certain names – they encourage users to adopt wholly new unique pseudonyms for the space thus protecting their RL identities). That might mean that one may eventually want 2 or 3 names for different online communities or that people eventually treat online spaces like RL – you are usually yourself but you might play a part for a night or act differently in a more permissive space.

Arguments against Online Communities

Bell draws on Robins’ (in (Bell and Kennedy 2000), quoted in (2)) concept that thinking about cyber communities must be contextualised by the real world . This is one of the reasons that as part of my own digital ethnography of the Torchwood tweeting community I will be trying to give a visual idea of the geographic context of tweeters  – I think there may be relationships between locations and the type of participation they play in the community, not least because this particular community is gathered around a cultural experience that comes with specific set broadcast/release dates and interactions in the community are mediated by participants real life access to materials, experiences and awareness of Torchwood activity/news some of which is released globally, some of which is released in different localities at different times (leading to tensions over, e.g. plot spoilers).

More alarmingly Bell also talks about Kroker’s idea of Bunkering which, to me, seems to be overly simplistic in it’s criticism of the possibility of online communities. I do accept that you can exist on the internet without ever dealing with other people – you can shop, game, and enjoy interacting with information-rich spaces and you can even publish your own unidirectional website espousing your own ideas (whether to a mass audience or just yourself) if you so wish. But to engage with others online is not to crave distance from people since people do not suddenly behave like machines just because they are using a keyboard or digitally encoded audio or video to mediate their thoughts and feelings. Those with physical intimacy fears or phobias may certainly gain freedoms by being able to speak to someone at a distance but I think there are many more people who benefit from being to make contact with a sort of community peer who can provide support of some kind despite living in quite separate geographical or class or cultural areas from physically local RL peers.

To suggest online communities replace RL interaction is to suppose that there is always going to be a suitable peer group available in RL. I think the popularity of the internet and community driven sites among those living in quite remote rural locations, and the importance of the internet to, for instance, the lesbian, gay and (the much more niche and still fairly misunderstood) trans communities indicates that not only is the internet a less risky way of approaching and discovering possible RL peers but also a way of letting super-niche groups (for instance teen trans people) locate information and contact peers on a global scale. The odds of being the only one or anything in a village is high, less in a town, less in a city, and so when magnified to a global (english speaking?) community you are, no matter how niche your interest, feelings, sexuality or health condition, likely to find peers and support. I think the increased visibility of niche groups in society at large is, in part, due to the raising of confidence that ensues when one is able to see one is not alone but is in fact represented online by other people like you and that there is an acceptance beyond what can be closed minded, small or simply homogeous communities. Indeed small mindedness or a sense of being under perpetual surveillance is the flipside – as Bell notes – of the nostalgia inherant in  Tönnies’ “Gemeinschaft”.

Indeed it is a fairly odd example but cinematically I think the film “Pleasantville” offers a fantastically interesting sense of dischordant nostalgia: for all the safety and cosiness of a world where everyone knows each other there is a dark side to a community that does not recognise change or difference and conceptualises itself under traditionalist terms that opress, whether explicitly or tacitly, minority visibility, viewpoints or merely freedom of expression. Whilst Pleasantville is intentionally very stylized and grounded in fantasy and does not portray behaviour or personal types that would remain controversial today (there are not gay characters, the film does not touch on issues such as abortion, and race is tackled mainly through metaphor) it does show the sense of fright and persecution that follows a minority of characters becoming self-aware about their place in the world and the difference between their own feelings and those of their peers. They break the social norms and expectations and they break the imagined idea of what their community looks like leading to a sense of fragility, backlash and a troubling need to re-negotiate and conceptualize what the imagined state of community might be in the Pleasantville community.

Such a portrayal of 1950s America, drawn very much from televisual ideas of normality (which are often bizarre when shown in abstraction), contrast starkly with a film like “Back to the Future” which, despite attempting to draw on some of the same themes, has it’s roots more clearly in nostalgia and the virtues of Gemeinschaft. Difference is not really engaged with and the lack of divorce, disruption of family life, and romanticised views of pre-feminist womanhood are all seen as virtues rather than potentially stifling limitations. Where change is presented it is in the sense of discovery and niave exploration. The exploration of the fear and isolation possible in a close knit community is overlooked in favour of portraying a warm sense of nostalgic community where every key person in a life are, rather improbably even in a small community, educated at the same high school at the same time.

I think Pleasantville offers a compelling rebuttal to Kroker since one does not automatically retreat to a “perfect” unreal world online; instead one often retreats to a world which is recognisable and tangible to the self. That world may be have overlap with RL, or simply be an extension to it (e.g. online communities like Gaydar, which significantly focus on seeking RL sexual experiences) but the online world is often of greatest value when the connections made online differ substantially from one’s nearest RL experience of community where flexibility or access, choice or negotiations of entry to specialist groups may all be harder to realise. So for a gay teenager a supportive online community may be an escape from their peer group at school – with whom they may have little in common – but it is not a matter of fleeing people or reality, more a matter of making contact with others who will understand their place in the world and who they can disclose their real identity to in relatively low risk.

Having been at the closing night of a long running LGBT social group this week I can confirm that there are still people in their late teens or early 20s who badly need to connect to a community before they feel able to come out to friends and family – so they need to have some addition or alternative to RL in order to reflect on their sense of self long enough to feel able to go back and confidently re-engage with their RL community and, perhaps, find new RL communities of support. The internet can either be a direct bridging mechanism to find the locations and meeting times of a RL community or it can merely be a way to confirm that, to someone in the world, your status is normative enough to feel confident about. There are of course other groups to which this applies, I am just fixed (as Bell seems to be) on the LGBT community as I have had most personal experience of these communities. I also have RL friends in the local LGBT community where I live now but as a 17 year old living in a rural village there was no RL way to test my sense of self at low risk whilst the online LGBT community allowed me to meet long term friends and confidantes at a time when that was extremely valuable.

I feel strongly that arguments suggesting that participation in online communities simply embodies a means of hiding from differing views also undermines the complexity of human opinion – sharing one type of view does not mean that individuals will share all views (as I’ve already mentioned above). I do like Hetherington’s ideas of neo-tribes and the concept of Bund but I am not sure it is necessary to be as careful of the use of the word community as some of those quoted by Bell suggest. I think there is more weight to Wellman and Gulia’s (1999, quoted in (2)) suggestion that one sees “online life as city life; or, more accurately, as living ‘in the heart of densely populated, heterogeneous, physically safe, big cities’” – there may be areas of like minded people but you are moving in many communities and individuals are, well, individuals as well as participants in their communities. I also fully agree that one cannot entirely talk about total heterogeneity since not all people will be present online – there are indeed inherent exclusions of access and understanding (Slevin 2000 quoted in (2)) and unintended inclusions/exclusions of audiences (Stone in (2)), but it is hard not to see this as an extension to the existing divisions in RL. There may not be explicit rules of conduct for many RL spaces but there are infinite implicit rules and expectations that those in socially excluded groups, those that do not meet aesthetic standards, or those without financial freedom are unlikely to meet. It would be nice if the online world was more accepting than this but it is perhaps not realistic to expect online communities to behave exactly unlike RL communities when the people who populate online spaces are also, inevitably, the same people who participate in the physical world.

References

N.B. These reference are for this block of work – the vast majority of references are to article (2) by David Bell.

  1. Hine, C (2000) The virtual objects of ethnography, chapter 3 of Virtual ethnography. London: Sage. pp41-66
  2. Bell, David (2001) Community and cyberculture, chapter 5 of An introduction to cybercultures. Abingdon: Routledge. pp92-112 [e-book] [PDF]
  3. Rheingold, H (2000) Introduction to The Virtual Community: Homesteading on the Electronic Frontier. London: MIT Press. [web site]
  4. Gatson, S and Zweerink, A (2004) Ethnography online: ‘natives’ practising and inscribing community. Qualitative Research, 4(2), 179-200.
  5. Clari, M (unpublished, 2009) A Flickr ethnography.
  6. Michael Wesch’s Digital Ethnography blog [web site]
  7. Gillen, G (2009) Literacy practices in Schome Park: a virtual literacy ethnography, Journal of Research in Reading, 32(1), 57-74.
  8. Chan, A (2008) The Dynamics of Motherhood Performance: Hong Kong’s Middle Class Working Mothers On- and Off-Line. Sociological Research Online. 13(4). [web site]
  9. Bardzell, S and Odom, W (2008) The Experience of Embodied Space in Virtual Worlds: An Ethnography of a Second Life Community. Space and Culture 11(3), 239-259.

Twitter Lists: Categorize your friends and contacts in public…!

When I logged into Twitter today to follow up on a bit of monitoring of mentions on the projects and services I work on I spotted something new and exciting:

Day one of Lists for me and I find myself already on 4!

Behold! I had finally been allowed access to the much discussed* Twitter Lists. I won’t lie, I felt a bit insulted not be included in the first wave of List-enabled accounts (thinking myself a pivotal member of the Twitterati) but it’s fun to have them and, since I am a bit slow to get them. there are some tools already available including Listorious (http://listorious.com/).

Anyway, the reason I’m mentioning them on this blog is because the Lists radically alter the way you behave with the people you engage with on Twitter. You can no categorise and thread and theme and label them. That may prove useful to dealing with a torrent of information BUT it may also mean less wacky cross-pollination. Importantly I think it will also mean people looking at what they’ve been listed as and either boasting or being horrified about how they have been perceived by those following them – it’s one thing to know someone follows you but very different to know why they are interested in you. I foresee a world of unintended fallout…

For my own part I did, of course, look at where I had been listed and it turned out that I had already been added to 4 lists:


lists2

Poking around those lists I was relieved to understand all of them – I am a uni colleage of Marie, I attended the webcast (and almost the live event) of #gov2010 a few weeks ago, I’m on the e-learning MSc with Richard, which is how I know him, and I attend events arranged by informaticsventures (although I haven’t previously followed Andrew Mitchell on Twitter). But what if I start appearing on someone’s outspokenbutok list or gayfriends list or irritatingw*nkers list or… some other list I don’t want to be on? Well at the moment I’ll be able to view that list, see how many people it follows and how many people follow the list back… and that’s it.

I’ve been followed by spammers in the past on Twitter and I always feel that, fine, that doesn’t reflect on me. But my followers will be able to add metadata about me – maybe in private, maybe in public – and, aside from wondering what the spammers will do with lists, it does make me intrigued/excited/mildly horrified to see where I’m being filed.

Stanley Kubricks Archive in shipping boxes

It also brings to mind the Stanley Kubrick Archive – Kubricks gigantic personal collections and the fact that he used to file every single letter he received which were organised in laborious detail. I remember watching a documentary by Jon Ronson on these and wondering if the people firing off a short irate note to a production company thought they would be categorised and filed away somewhere. The new Twitter lists also ask some weird questions of how your own voice can be interpreted and thus shared/referred/controlled by others in ways that you may or may agree with. I think this ties back significantly the notions of voyeurism and authenticity inherent in any sort of ethnographic work. Which does make me pause somewhat on how validly I will be presenting and describing the activity amongst my Torchwood Tweeters.

*Related links:

Lost in the Twitterverse…

Just a quick update to say I’ve been exploring my chosen area of Torchwood on Twitter over the last few days (since my last post) and am finding it interesting/tricky to work out the best way to conceptually map the conversations/locations etc. of the people Tweeting. I’m thinking I might take a snapshot day or conversation and manually pull some of that information together so I have a manageable number of interactions and community characteristics to map.

I’ve made a wee xtranormal video of some typical postings to give a little visual/audio fun in my account and found that useful for eeking out a sense of themes/key users and who and why I was filtering some postings to make that little vid make sense – more on that when I post up the ethnography and/or making of blog post.

So far it’s proving very interesting trying to understand a community based on such a small specific snapshot of active online space. But again, more on that later…

Week 5 Summary – Mobile, Distracted, Down with the Meme

One of the weird interesting things about reviewing your online activity every week is that you really start to see what you do all day, all evening, through the week. You think you know and then you look back and find new things out. This week I see that I have been really quite distracted from my studies, on one night that was because I was caught up in the Twiiter phenomen du jour, but other less digital distractions are discernable too. The other area I’ve been super active this week was in looking at the mobile web and that has some really interesting contextual issues around it so I’ll come back to that later in this post.

The one piece of activity you won’t see anywhere in last week’s streaming is the main bit of module participation for this week as we’ve gone to the dark enclosed web of the discussion boards which has made me, for the first time this module, have to remember to log in to see class content. If I’m honest I’m happiest with the open material but I can see others are happier taking part in some discussions in private so it’s interesting to be in the part of the course where a major proportion of chat is ring-fenced and only a minority of additional chatter is taking place on Twitter or via blog comments.

Distractions

Whilst I don’t have a Google Latitude-enabled phone it wouldn’t take a genius to stalk me based on my lifestream. This week I was at a Bat for Lashes gig one evening, at an Open Source Geo Scotland meeting another. If anyone was in any doubt what homework I was/was not doing then my Tweets and bookmarking gave me away. And the tricky thing is that I’m very aware that these things are visible to friends, course-mates and colleagues and do wonder what impact that has. If I’m behind on homework I’m old enough and mature enough to say so but not arrogant enough not to feel guilty and a bit embarrassed about getting behind. Ethically though I wonder how students younger and significantly more vulnerable/concerned about monitoring than me (especially school or undergraduate level) feel about being findable and traceable online.

I certainly feel weird posting my latest thoughts on a bad TV show or film when I feel I should be back at my laptop summarizing my week or catching up on readings (I tend to find I get enormously absorbed in the occasional tasks so they prove easy to get lost in for hours and hours of guilt free studying fun). As every post is timestamped, searchable for and publicly made my lifestream is a really big commitment to behave appropriately and acceptably for every corner of my life since all elements are bound up together. I start to see why “the kids” don’t do email and don’t seem to do blogging in nearly the same way as stats suggest they use much more private and ephemeral instant messaging systems and texting…

Mobile Web

One area I’ve been working on in my day job this week is the mobile web. It’s been an exploratory week but thinking about where and when you access the internet is a real game changer in a lot of ways. Right now search is the lynch-pin of the web with real-time status updates (Facebook and Twitter largely) emerging as an important referral system but not really challenging how central Google is to most people’s navigation and literacy of the web. But if you look at any TV ad at the moment you will find a raft of smart phone adverts and all you can eat data packages and multiple platforms of mobile apps and that means one thing: it is becoming normal to access the internet on your phone, anywhere, any time. That change has to be making a difference to how the internet is used, experienced and integrated into daily life. For a start search looks clunky on a small screen – hence the types of codification I talked about in week 2 becomes really useful but so do “Location Based Services” that use GPS, gyrometers and compasses built into phones to enable real time interactions with the local context of the phone user.

So that means you don’t tell a restaurant site/app your address or country, it detects your location and brings back only the relevant results and can give you directions to your chosen venue (e.g. UrbanSpoon); or it means you can have an alarm clock for commuting that wakes you when you arrive (e.g. inap); or an augmented reality apps that overlay something useful – tweet locations, mapping, cross sections of buildings etc – on a live camera feed from your phone’s camera. This is clever stuff that makes the old static PC or (relatively static) laptop relationship to the user and to the web seem outdated. Phones are personal, discreet and portable, and they can transmit data to ensure you only receive contextual information. The problem is that cuts off everything that isn’t enabled for this sort of use. And there are some cross-platform compatibility issues. And you place a lot of trust in how your location information is used, and how things you are looking for are filtered for you. Nonetheless I think this method of access is increasingly impacting on what works on the web and how our relationship to the internet will develop in the next five years.

Facebacuook hooks up to phones, as does Twitter and a number of web services are providing ways to share images, sound, video files via direct upload from mobiles. A few weeks ago I went to a talk on a college that had provided every first year student with an iPhone or iPod Touch allowing, effectively, the basic informational part of teaching to be shared via virtual file distribution and podcast, so that class time could be about discussion and work around that teaching and with the phones allowing searching in class, allowing work with real existent data sets online and enabling real time polling and feedback connections between teacher and students. Some of these would already be possible with laptops but other aspects – particularly the fact that academic materials/connections co-existed alongside regular day to day address book information, silly pictures at parties, music etc. – really encouraged students to think of studying as part of their day, something that continually buzzed in the background even when they weren’t in class.

I think this experiment hints at the kind of outsourcing to the cloud/web/technology that a mobile and more contextual web may allow. You trust your data to be on the web and accessible, you trust your technology’s ability to access your own and related data, and you let your phone or portable computing device to be your memory so you can focus on being the complex analytical, more holistic and human perspective on top of the information you want to use. It’s perhaps the realistic short term version of the sort of man/machine hybrid we considered in the #mschuman work earlier in this module. In any case it’s fascinating to look at what the mobile web does and does not work for, who uses it and where it’s potential and limitations lie. Which is why I’ve been poking around looking at apps, ideas, etc. all week.

Down with the Meme…

Talking of the mobile web brings me to the busiest part of my week on Twiter. This was the much covered appearance of Nick Griffin, leader of the British National Party, on BBC One’s Question Time on Thursday 22nd October. I was vaguely following the news but not taking a great deal of interest on Twitter until an enthusiastic friend asked me for help starting a Twitter sensation to boycott the beeb and deny Griffin publicity.

Since the BBC got the show’s highest ratings in years on Thursday I think it’s safe to say that we failed spectacularly but it was interesting to try approaching Twitter from an overtly short term goal orientated perspective rather than for subtler long term networking. Viral Marketing 101 was what I warned my friend he was embarking on. I pointed out that a hashtag was essential, following and engaging others was essential, targeting key networked Tweeters would also be essential. And if he could piggy back on a relevant trending tag/meme so much the better. It was only a half-baked last minute plan but it sucked me into Twitter for several hours as I noticed that tags like #stopthebnp and #bbcquestiontime were trending and were full of good quality real time reporting with various journalists flagging up on the scene protesters and uploading instant pictures. Despite loads of security and a very early filming slot (even the panelists were not, apparently, told what time they would appear) Twitter allowed the real filming time to be revealed, reported on, and spread. A teenager on the scene instantly saw a spike in followers after a journalist flagged up his real time coverage (probably to the teen’s mild horror as it was retweeted with comments about how “cute” the enthusiastic posts were) and it kicked off quick a nuanced Twitter debate about whether it was better to engage or ignore the BNP.

When the TV show started it all really kicked off on Twitter with real time microblogging, comments, opinions, cheers, boos, and debate rolling in parallel to the show. Question Time tweets were about 95% of my incoming messages whilst the show was running and, because the show had attracted lots of new/infrequent viewers, the comments also covered the following show, This Week, as many viewers discovered it’s surrealist charms as a collective experience because, just as they were about to switch off, a Tweeter would point out the ludicrousness on screen.

And, in case you were wondering where I am going with all this, this brings me to my last major element of lifestreaming this week: thinking about a community to study online. Well actually I’m not sure how much this is reflected in the lifestream as, as I mentioned above, much of this was on the discussion board but it did pop into #ededc tweets so it is present.

Looking Ahead to my Digital Ethnography

I had various thoughts about communities to look at but, after some very useful feedback on the discussion boards and some quick sanity checking from my partner (another crucial element in my life and study who barely features in my traceable online activity but has huge importance to decisions made) I’ve decided that I want to look at the Torchwood Twitter community. I was particularly thinking that, if available, the Tweets that took place in real time during/after the screenings of Series 3: Children of  Earth in July would be really interesting to look at as this was an intense week long 5 part series leading to intense involved Tweeting. Although most science fiction has a pretty good Twitter backchannel of one sort or another (for instance last week I received a random Twitter telling off after expressing dismay at the quality of episode one of Defying Gravity) the Doctor Who and Torchwood communities are particularly active and the time lag between UK and International showings of the shows causes particular tensions around cliffhangers and spoilers.

If I can find a tweet archive for July this is what I was hoping to focus on but in looking at current activity I found a movement to bring back a character  had so far raised £10,000 (for charity) in a Twitter protest campaign and I’m now thinking this may be an interesting alternative (contained) view on part of the Torchwood Twitter community. I’m going to have a final further trawl tomorrow and then focus in for some proper examination of what it is to be part of this community and how the regular members and transient members coexist at the occasional flarepoints (usually key events including DVD releases, screening dates, etc.) that bring them together.

What kind of blogger am I?

Photo 50Photo 33

Photo 42Photo 56

Today I’ve been reading Walker 2005 (Weblogs: Learning in Public) and, having gotten feedback on my blog and lifestream this week too, I was wondering what type of blogger I am. Walker’s comments about one student writing a FuryBlog with an “angry” writing style made me wonder how, as a reader, my own blog for this course was looking. And, because I tend to write 4000 word posts (a long standing blogging bad habit that predates this module if I’m honest) I think my verdict is that I’m a bit of an (inadvertantly) hostile blogger.

Unlike some of those Walker talks about teaching (and some of the bloggers her students reviewed) I am well aware that this blog is real, public and might be read by other people – indeed I hope it is read by others – but I am writing with my exploration of course themes, etc. in mind rather than seriously thinking through how enjoyable or useful the format is for others. It’s ironic because I argued strongly during our visual artifact experiences about the power of the visual but haven’t really been applying that to my  formatting the text posts on my own blog properly. I also recognize some of my conversational tactics in the long blog posts – I can be a bit of a steam-roller talker and miss things here and there that I should be listening to.

So my goal is to remain honest and open on this blog but add a new level of readability over the next few weeks. Wish me luck, I have a decade of weird web writing baggage to overcome!

Week 4 Summary – Super Visual!

I think Lifestream wise there are a few things I want to talk about this week: Podcasts; Twitter; and the perils of automation.

Super Visuals!

First of all though I wanted to talk about the Visual Objects. Although it took me hours and hours and hours to get mind more or less how I wanted it I had great fun building my visual object this week. OK, I had great fun until I realised I hadn’t ever explained a batch of images I’d meant to include in the trail:

dotty

The point of this image was to talk about how the visual language we already has dictates or influences the visuality of the digital domain. So I had a still from the Polka Dot polka in the Busby Berkeley film The Gang’s All Here (the robust looking gentleman in a blue polka dot); I had a complex visualisation of journal citations from the MESUR project; I had one of Damian Hirst’s dot pictures (which references his earlier turntable paintings); I had an impressionist classic composed entirely of tiny pixel-like dots; a screen capture from the 1980’s Space Invaders computer game; a modern graphic artists’ city scape influenced by the ’80s pixelated platform gaming world and, at the centre, a model of a chemical molecule. I wanted to look at how all of these images related to each other and to the modern idea that everything is made of pixels but, as screen technology evolves, we are less and less aware of this as images appear more organic and real.

But I forgot to include it properly in my Prezi path leaving it a little blind alley for the adventurous to find. I think I sort of like the mystery of that.

Overall I was really pleased with what I was able to do. And I was only a little disappointed to find so many additional good ideas pop into my head over the weekend after I’d circulated the link to my Prezi.

visobject

Anyway the real highlight of the week was to see how everyone else had interpreted the brief. This was a rare and wonderful opportunity since we could all comment and compare and experience each other’s view of one broad but not too wide ranging brief. Everyone did great things and I was really inspired to try out some new things having seen their work. Those that tackled video particularly impressed me as I always find video a small technical nightmare: I can wrangle it but it seemingly eats time. This is perhaps because I am a picky viewer and very inexperienced film maker. The more collage like Prezi suited what I am quite good at – playing with visual materials in a fairly physical-feeling way and in not too linear structures. My own art skills tend to be in craft and hand making things so the equivalent digital spaces work best for me I think.

Over the weekend I had enormous fun experiencing all the objects and commenting on them and, to make these thinsg easier to tie up, I have create a specific Delicious tag for my comments (the not terribly imaginative “Week4Visuals”) so all the links and my comments should be locatable here: http://delicious.com/nkl.osborne/Week4Visuals

Lifestream

Lifestream wise this has been a quieter week for me as much of what I was looking through was potential material for my visual object. However there was a theme, a problem and an aspect I’ve not talked about before:

Twitter

Twitter is always a big part of any week for me as I use it at work and at home for all sorts of communication and networking functions but this week it had an additional quality… as a tool I found myself both cheer-leading for and warning against a little.

This week saw two major Twitter excitements. Last Tuesday the Guardian ran a front page piece saying that something had been discussed in the House of Commons, that they could not report what had happened, that they could not report why they could not report what had happened, and they could not say who had asked them not to report what was said. They could only say that the law firm Carter-Ruck were involved. Such an enigmatic and high profile newspaper piece sparked an instant social media response with Twitter a-buzz not least because Alan Rusbridger (Guardian editor) kept the Twitterverse updated on legal issues during the day around the super injunction. Bloggers instantly dug around to find that the suppressed item (which was nonetheless a matter of public record in Hansard) was a question tabled about Trafigura. The question asked had just been about the injunction on the Guardian of reporting on Trafigura in some respect. The bloggers actually broke the news: reported chemical spills which offered the potential to cause major commercial reputation damage. Once the power-Tweeters (including, yes, @stephenfry) got hold of the news of the superinjunction and what it was about #Trafigura soon started trending, Channel4 news ran a major item the same evening and other mainstream news started picking up the story. By then the embarrassment was complete leading to, first, a dropping of the Super Injunction and then a dropping of the original junction (moments after which the Guardian posted a full report to it’s front page online detailing the chemical polluting of an area of the Ivory Coast).

Now Twitter did play a major role (as many posts from my lifestream this week and Alan Rusbridger’s editorial piece on Guardian Unlimited will attest) but I did find myself having to point out that the power of social power on Twitter was only part of the story. The media is still about the mainstream and without that editorial decision to run that weird front page of the paper it is hard to see this story breaking in quite the same way. However in the UK Twitter does seem to be a tool that has been adopted by a fairly exclusive portion of the public: the media grabbed it first and enthusiastically; academia and library and information professionals have joined in especially as a way to remotely access conferences and events; marketeers are using the space but rarely with the panache of big US brands who are using it as consumer outreach; and some key politicians have gotten onboard. And that’s about it. The media are by far the most active group on Twitter and they are hyperconnected to professionals and keen amateurs alike. This makes it super powerful for setting the news agenda even though only a tiny percentage of the country use it as a tool. It raises interesting challenges for McLuhan’s much quoted comment that:

the Medium is the Message

As I think, for this sort of  Twitter reaction that may, correctly, mean that the Message is the urge to distribute a link or support a cause rather than the issue at heart itself. I think that’s one of the reason that the age profile of Twitter skews towards those of working age where networking and information sharing is of value. Twitter is, in fact, made up of various digital cultures and has a vibrant subculture. What is unusual is that the mainstream is flippant and silly whereas the subculture is about work and professional sharing – pretty much the opposite of many traditional fashion or media culture/subculture relationships.

The other Twitter story this week was curiously odd. Jan Moir of The Daily Mail wrote a column originally entitled “There’s nothing natural about Stephen Gately’s death” (The Daily Mail, unlike Guardian Unlimited does not practice a transparent versioning system so only the most recent version is available to read) which included a number of homophobic comments and insensitive and bizarre comments about the Boyzone star which came out a day or so before his funeral. I found out about the article when Charlie Brooker’s response article was being Tweeted around along with a suggestion that readers send their feelings about Moir’s piece to the Press Complaints Commission (at current count over over 20,000 now have over the weekend). It was a curious story as Moir has characterised her treatment as a liberal witch hunt but, in fact, the transparency of the internet allowed Guardian reading lefties to see that the earliest comments on the site from Daily Mail readers were, largely, as outraged about the piece as Brooker. Again the power tweeters took effect but this time it was a very different subculture of Tweeters – all my gay and lesbian friends relayed the news along with all my media contacts but, unlike the Trafigura story, the retweeting was not more widespread. That is understandable – Gately’s death was sad and Moir’s column offensive but, unlike Trafigura, there was no sense of rights being deprived or horrors being covered up – but also suggests there is a fascinating map to me made of the community effects of retweeting, sharing and community activation on Twitter.

Podcasts

Something I haven’t really reflected on particularly so far about my LifeStream are the many podcasts I listen to and, after discussions of transliteracies in the last fortnight this seems like a good time to do so.  Over the last week I seem to have consumed the following podcasts so I thought I’d talk a little about them and how they work with my day and understanding of my work and of digital culture:

  • Material World
  • Guardian Media Talk
  • The Media Show
  • Guardian Tech Weekly
  • Mark Kermode Film Reviews
  • This American Life
  • Radio4 Friday Night Comedy

Material World is a Radio 4 science magazine show and it is very much my connection back to my first academic love of science. Not only is it an interesting listen but it often flags up current or emerging processes that will feed into novel interfaces, the relationship between people and machines etc. It is also one of those shows with an unapologetically geeky tone and a fairly unparochial view of the world – this can be one of the benefits of shows with strong podcasts as they try to appeal to a wider range of listeners and can be quite expansive to listen to.

Guardian Media Talk and The Media Show are two shows that are very complimentary in tone. I listen to both every week and whilst the Media Show tends to reflect on what is happening or has happened in the media – matters of ownership, technologies, dispute etc.  Media Talk tends to look ahead to developments and likely strategic changes. Although neither advertises itself as being primarily about digital media the relationship of traditional to digital media is now very close and most of the most interesting media stories – the decline of the newspaper, competition law around cross-platform catch-up streaming etc. – are influenced by the way the mainstream media audience is swiftly adopting the internet (often through their TV) as the hub of home entertainment.

The last three podcasts are much more directly about entertainment. Mark Kermode Film Reviews is a podcast of the Radio5 slot Mark fills on Simon Mayo’s show. I would have no objection to listening to the live show were it not for the fact that Mayo’s show is 3 hours of sport – not at all my thing – with a burst of great cinema content. This is one of the joys of the podcast – I cave have an experience entirely separate from the broadcast product. In fact I saw a live recording of Mayo’s show during the Edinburgh Film Festival this year and was astonished by the rest of what fills his show – and I wasn’t alone, most of the audience seemed equally befuddled in the face of life interruptions from horse racing, football chat etc. We were a niche audience with no ideas of the rest of the show we normally listen to. It was like discovering that Marilyn Manson hosted a cross-stitch programme  – we couldn’t have been more astonished that anyone would combine a cult film reviewer with a boys own sports fest. Quite surreal and quite an interesting insight into what selective digital distribution means about measuring and addressing your audience.

This American Life is a weekly programme of stories, usually documentary pieces, on a particular theme. It is produced by NPR and, as well as often being both fascinating and fun, is also a connection between my partner, myself and our friends in the US. My partner is from California and she listens to a lot of podcasts of shows she used to regularly listen to as a connection to home – we can ring up family and friends and chat about them sometimes. But various podcasts (from the UK and US) are common to both myself and my partner’s iPods and this lets us have a new and wonderful communal listening experience – we listen in moments of time convenient to us but can then discuss the shows as if we’ve heard them together. It’s a connection I have with other friends over specific podcasts and, because many allow their entire archive to be downloaded, the conversation might be about the latest episode or one from many years ago. It’s a lovely, curious and confusing way to listen since your latest episode is always the most recent to you – even if it’s actually 10 years old!

My Radio4 Friday Night Comedy podcast is a matter of sheer indulgence – I often hear the show played live but listen again to the podcast as a gentle soothing background track as sometimes familiar talking is far easier or more fun to work or sit on the bus with than either music or silence. I listen to several silly shows in the same way but the Radio4 one tends to be listened to a bit more often as it’s often news-related so has a shorter shelf-life and, in an odd sort of way, keeps me in touch with the silly stories that I otherwise miss. I consume news in very eccentric ways these days – recommended links to articles, specific sections of the newspapers (usually the cultural sections at the weekends, the media section on a Monday), I listen to Today every morning on Radio4 but I don’t catch TV news most of the time – usually just the end of Channel4 news – and don’t commute on the bus so don’t see Metro. When I’m looking for a random set of things to read I will go over my RSS feeds so don’t look at the BBC News website much either (unusual if studies of oft-used websites in the UK are to be believed) so listening to the Now Show or the News Quiz keeps me up on the less world-changing but socially useful matters like manscara, celebrity outrages, unlikely science of biscuits etc!

Broken Lifestream

Finally this week I wanted to talk about automation and it’s perils. I set up an automated summary option for my lifestream last week and it caused a gigantic headache – firstly it alerted me to the sheer volume of material in the stream, an alarming thing indeed as it forced me to wade through it, but secondly it publicly posted that summary before I’d remembered I’d set it up. Once I’d dealt with that I suddenly noticed another automation woe: my comments on others’ blogs are not feeding correctly and I seem, instead, to be feeding in Silvana’s comments. I have still yet to fix that one but it did make me wonder what else I am missing/adding to my lifestream without knowing it. I haven’t really begun the filtering process (and am not sure how I feel about filtering posts – I’m not sure how I want to frame my lifestream to fit the requirements yet so will need to think some more on that) so I’m hoping the comments referred to in the course blog earlier today may help a bit with that.

I think that covers most of my thoughts this week. There is some thought on mobile phones, the internet, and how I am now an old fogey in terms of accessing and using the web that I think I will save for next week as I will be thinking about them over the course of this week as well.

Dystopia vs Utopia: My visual object for Week 4

Finally, it is done!

Until I can work out how to make WordPress appreciate a little embedding code you can find it over at Prezi: http://prezi.com/akxtn7-ncoww/