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Making the web work for you Collaboration & Sharing goHI Festival in Inverness 7th September 2006

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Making the web work for you. Collaboration & Sharing goHI Festival in Inverness 7th September 2006. David Bausola. Project Manager for Strategic New Media Projects Channel 4 New Media London. What I do. Develop software briefs with the producers Identify the technical pitfalls - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Making the web work for you

Making the web work for you

Collaboration & Sharing

goHI Festival in Inverness7th September 2006

Page 2: Making the web work for you

David Bausola

Project Manager for Strategic New Media Projects

Channel 4 New MediaLondon

Page 3: Making the web work for you

What I do

Develop software briefs with the producersIdentify the technical pitfalls

Design solutionsManage the development of softwareDeliever the software to the platformMake the Commissioners look good!

Page 4: Making the web work for you

What I don’t do..

Make the ‘content’Design the websiteManage the websiteMarket the website

Page 5: Making the web work for you

What I’ve seen

• Projects that try to control users do fail– Projects that help users grow

• The audience love to give their feedback– It makes better products

• People love to participate with brands– The sense of belonging

• Small mistakes make you learn..– Big mistakes cost you an audience

Page 6: Making the web work for you

Web Vs. Web

Web 1.0• Branding• Customers• Selling• dot.com madness

Web 2.0• Dialogue• Social Networks• Co-production• Web service freeness

Page 7: Making the web work for you

Web 1.0 was “Editorially Controlled Media”

Web 2.0 is “User Generated Media”

Page 8: Making the web work for you

No More “User Generated Content!”

Artists don’t make ‘Content’.

Please, lets call it “Authentic Media”

http://www.powazek.com/2006/04/000576.html

Page 9: Making the web work for you

Web Vs. Web

Web 1.0• Branding• Customers• Selling• dot.com madness

Web 2.0• Dialogue• Social Networks• Co-production• Web service freeness

Page 10: Making the web work for you

Freeness?

But not as in Free BeerFree as in free to participateNo restrictions to participate

It’s about sharing your ideasAnd ideas can be your creations.

Page 11: Making the web work for you

http://www.oreillynet.com/pub/a/oreilly/tim/news/2005/09/30/what-is-web-20.html

What is Web2.0?(No one is sure, but here’s a few clues..)

Page 12: Making the web work for you

There lots and lots and lotsof services that can help you

collaborate

Go and Experiment!

www.programmableweb.com/

Page 13: Making the web work for you

http://www.flickr.com/photo_zoom.gne?id=77494864&size=lhttp://webosphere.wordpress.com/

Software types do breed!

• Main software functions– Bookmarks– Mapping– Repositries

• And there are Mashups– Mixing different types of

functionality

Page 14: Making the web work for you

Why share your media?

• Sharing is like a conversations • Conversations are like markets• No one has all the skills • Share what you can do • You cant share what you dont own• Let people show your work to others.

Page 15: Making the web work for you

Sharing creates collaboration

Page 16: Making the web work for you

How to collaborate

• Offer what you enjoy doing– If it feels like work, it is work– Open projects are fun!

• Be open to suggestions– No one is as wise as a community

• Do reviews– Participate whenever you can – you’ll be

surprised how welcome you are

Page 17: Making the web work for you

How to give

• Understand what licences are for– Enables you to share– Makes it clear you want to be attributed

Page 18: Making the web work for you

How to give

• Understand what licences are not for– Collecting royalties

Page 19: Making the web work for you

How to give

• Creative Commons BY-SA– Ignore all other versions– Allow people to use your work commercially

www.creativecommons.org

Page 20: Making the web work for you

Being Open

• Does not mean giving all your rights away• Does not mean losing control of identity• It means, be willing:-

– To discuss– To exchange– To participate

Page 21: Making the web work for you

Substainable projects

• Look for scaffolding– What help do you really need?

• Read The Small Print– Billy Bragg & Myspace

• The result of the collaboration must feed back into the project

• The result of the collaboration must be free to move elsewhere too

Page 22: Making the web work for you

Substainable projects

Some examples..

Page 23: Making the web work for you

Blogging

• It’s easy• It’s free• It helps you develop your ideas

– Like a greenhouse

• Shows others what you are going through• Show others what you can do• Blogs are your ‘voice’ – if you dont resist

Page 24: Making the web work for you

Free Blog tools

• Blogger • Wordpress• Typepad

Page 25: Making the web work for you

How to write a good blog

• Of interest to you..– Then it will be constructed well– Be attentive to the subject matter

• If tended to, daily..– Then it will find popularity– You will find your like-minded audience

• You are not alone!– But you are unique

Page 26: Making the web work for you

Social Networking

• It’s a way to connect to people• You’re connections can be telling• Create a context for yourself• It’s marketing at a human level

Page 27: Making the web work for you

Where to Network

• MySpace – teens, music and comedy• Bebo – teens• Friendster – broad range• Linkedin.com – media/corporate• PeopleAggregator – is new..

Page 28: Making the web work for you

Social Networking

www.linked.com

Page 29: Making the web work for you

Peer 2 Peer

• Peer 2 Peer Networks is about:-– Sharing files– Sharing data– Reccommending something– Starting a conversation

• Peer 2 Peer Networks is not about:-– Piracy– Getting stuff for free

Page 30: Making the web work for you

Peer 2 Peer examples

Web 1.0• Napster• Limewire• SoulSeek

Desktop software

Web 2.0• YouTube• Bit Torrent• Flickr

Web services

Page 31: Making the web work for you

YouTube

• Is Great!• It’s Free!• It’s fun to use!

• Poor quality video

www.youtube.com

Page 32: Making the web work for you

Wiki

• Wikis are websites that anyone can read and write the pages

• Wikis are simple to use• All the presentation/design is done for you• You just add your ideas• Don’t be afraid that someone will edit your

text.– They will!

Page 33: Making the web work for you

So, how do these tools help artists?

• Use these systems to build your own projects from scratch– All the free tools work with each other

• Communicate through a blog– Get your views out there

• Share assets through peer 2 peer– Enrich your resources

• Collaborate on a Wiki

Page 34: Making the web work for you

Non Substainable Projects

• Purely Community content• No professional intervention• No ability to export your contribution

Page 35: Making the web work for you

Collaborative Movie

Page 36: Making the web work for you

Collaborative Movie

• Elephants Dream [Link][Video]– Community designed everything– Everything is available for reuse– 98% perfect (not enough professional help)

Page 37: Making the web work for you

Collaborative Thinking

Page 38: Making the web work for you

Collaborative Thinking

• Wikipedia [Link]– Core admin team and ‘cleaners’– Bulk of content comes from Community– Impossible to extract your contributions

Page 39: Making the web work for you

Collaborative Art

Page 40: Making the web work for you

Collaborative Art

• We Feel Like [Link]– Blogs act as the source to the project– You can use the system to build your own– Constantly evolving because of Open media

Page 41: Making the web work for you

Showing Docs

Page 42: Making the web work for you

Almost cool Docs

• FourDocs [Link]– Licencing is set for showing not sharing– Community left to it’s own support– You need professionals to assist on projects

• This is real value• More important than exposure• Artists need to develop• Quality will shine more than marketing

Page 43: Making the web work for you

Cool Scottish Stuff

Page 44: Making the web work for you

I needed an image for my blog...

• I went to Creative Commons• Search for Inverness Tags on Flickr

– That had Creative Commons licence

• Chose the nicest picture I could see• Edited it and uploaded to my Blog• Emailed the owner to say thanks

– ‘cos I’m a nice guy!

Page 45: Making the web work for you

The image belonged to Calum!

• He reblogged the fact that I used his image• He sent me traffic• His image is now seen by my audience • And my blog has been seen by his• No commercial arrangement• We both benefit through attention

It’s a small world......but I wouldn’t want to paint it (Steven Wright)

Page 46: Making the web work for you

The web lets you work together

• Software companies want you to collaborate• They not so interested in owning your work• They are interested in Metadata• Metadata is tags, reviews and traffic stats

Page 47: Making the web work for you

http://darmano.typepad.com/logic_emotion/2006/08/6_months_and_20.html

Diagram by David Armano

Page 48: Making the web work for you

Work together and been seen

• Build communities• Use the right licences• Make creative use of these tools• Learn to craft your online voice• Share your experiences• Learn from each other• More detail the better!

Page 49: Making the web work for you

Thank you, for sharing your time.

David [email protected]@gmail.com

Copy of this presentation is available from my blog:www.zeroinfluence.wordpress.com