
Thursday, October 16, 2008
That didn't take long...

Social Biography Experiment

Tuesday, October 14, 2008
New Obsession: Google Earth
Fast forward a couple years... Roy has since mapped out his famous run in a Google Earth .kmz file. People who have GE installed (free here) can run his file and see a map pinpointing where they were at what time, where they stopped for gas and tolls, and how fast they were going at various checkpoints, using data from either of the GPS receivers in the M5. They kept the GPS data to verify that their super secret cross-country dash actually happened in the time they claimed (along with gas receipts, toll receipts, and time-coded video), however, that file and my ensuing fiddling with GE have turned me in to a GPS-obsessed, .kmz-generating nerd. What's more exciting these days, is that it's possible to generate and update these files real-time. Recently, Roy was approached with a business opportunity and turned his experience and passion into a company dealing with real-time GPS tracking. He speaks about the technology, his car, his run, etc. in the Authors @ Google series here...
Pocket-PCs, iPhones, and Blackberries all have the capability to capture GPS coordinates in Google Earth formats, upload them to live servers, and broadcast current locations across the internets in near real-life times. Within seconds, my whereabouts can be uploaded and downloaded, and the pushpin that indicates my location on the Google map, will move to indicate my progress.
While I'm still in the "holy crap, that's awesome" phase, there are countless opportunities to turn this technology into useful and profitable ventures. Already companies can run tours, advertise their services, and build their store (or a 3D model of the building at least) in Google Earth, but with real-time tracking, options become more and more exciting.
The kind of surveillance usually reserved for secret government operations suddenly becomes a reality if you can get your hands on the right cell phone... Scary, but also pretty friggin cool.
Monday, May 26, 2008
SI Wrap Up
So... to wrap up this learning journal, I'm going to review and comment on each of the 5 groups and their presentations to see what nuggets of wisdom I can pull from my memories of each presentation.
Group 1 - Facebook for non-profits - There were two very different sides to this issue. One I agree with, and one I do not. Facebook is a great way to promote events, using the social networks of people who are connected to your cause. A "cause" page is a good thing to have, as is a business/organization profile page. All good things, considering how many people use Facebook these days, especially when you take into account that there is no cost for these things. However, the idea of using facebook as a corporate directory to build social capital within the company is a bad one. If people want to do that, they can. But don't encourage people to do it when some people have social lives that they don't want to mix up with their business lives...
Group 2 - Social Bookmarking - I admit to not knowing much about the whole digg/technorati/etc. bookmarking craze, and I think this group's presentation did a good job of showing how it could be used in a real-life situation. I was more intrigued, however, by things like Google Notebook that allow you to flag specific sentences, pictures, etc. on a site and have them displayed when you return to that site.
Group 3 - We were awesome. Enough said.
Group 4 - Jeet Kune Do - I found this presentation to be a little confusing. While the design and delivery was very well done, I was left wondering what the proposed technology actually was. I reread the briefing document, and it confirmed that most of their effort was about addressing social capital problems without much use of technology, let alone a specific one. I heard some talk of the group lamenting that they didn't really have a technical person among them to take charge of technical aspects (this is grapevine chit-chat, so it may not be entirely true) but I feel that we've been in enough of these courses that somebody could have figured out a way to pick something a little more specific. Group 2, for example, deliberately chose something they knew nothing about.
Group 5 - Model UN video game - I found it unfortunate that I was supposed to respond to this presentation because I honestly thought it was the most innovative and well done. Of course, my role was to challenge them, ask tough questions, and pick their brains for possible explanations to issues they may have overlooked. Like most groups, they tap danced around the bits they didn't expect, and threw statistics and studies at the ones they did. Overall, I thought that it was a brilliant idea... I also thought it was brilliant to include a massive grant from Bill Gates to address any potential funding problems.
Overall, I found the 506 experience to be very thought provoking. As stated in previous entries, I'm a very social person, and perhaps that influences my thoughts on social interaction. It's a fascinating area of study and I could see myself spending more time in the study of such a field. Not now though... I'll be worrying about technology acceptance for the next year or so. Perhaps the PhD project will be more relevant to these topics. ;)
Thursday, May 15, 2008
Bongwarrior: Wiki Jedi
As the discussion leader for the day, I was clicking around on Wikipedia and we decided to check out the Pop-tarts page that was mentioned in the article we were reading. The page has over 1000 edits, the most recent change taking place just two days ago. We checked out recent change by a user who calls himself "Bongwarrior." He decided to include the fact that microwaving a pop-tart can actually turn the middle into an amorphous solid. While we had a good laugh about his screenname, I wondered what motivated him to write such a thing. I figured he was just high and he thought it would be funny.
A bit of resarch (Wikipedia makes this very easy) showed me that Bongwarrior is not a a stoner bonehead vandalizing posts under the influence of medicinal canabis, but actually quite the opposite. In the last week alone, he's made more than 500 edits, mostly patrolling recent posts for vandalism and reverting to the most recent acceptable versions.
According to his user profile page, he enjoys heavy metal music, supports the legalization of canabis, likes Stephen King, plays acoustic guitar, and claims to know pi to two decimal places. Sounds like quite a scholar!
Not surprisingly, however, the only posts he's actually made recent text edits to (as opposed to reverting to non-vandalized versions), are about Stephen King and Megadeth. By recently, of course, I mean in the last two days. On May 14th alone, he made a total of nearly 50 adjustments.
What does he get out of this? What does anybody get out of this? Sure, a sense of sharing knowledge, a chance to be "right," and the feeling of some sort of community, I guess. There must be more to it though, because people obviously get hooked and go at this thing with great fervour. And what does it say that of the 500 edits he's made in the last week, 3 of them were actually his contributions to a post. The rest were fighting vandalism. Has Wikipedia jumped the shark? Or will this army of moderators keep up with vandals?
At some point, something's gotta give. And when it does, Bongwarrior will either be a hero in the annals of Wikihistory, or he'll be forgotten like that guy who did that thing...
Monday, May 12, 2008
Using OS to fight PSSORPGA
ps - i'm sorry for the nickelback... truly
Given my current addiction to the regular text and photo internet, my vivid imagination, and my love for fantasy, it's a miracle that I was never swept up in this craze. Frankly, I'm not sure how it avoided me, given the thousands of hours logged at my computer, cruising aimlessly around the Internets. My best guess is something called "Organized Sports."
As far as I can tell OS is just like WOW... We meet in these strange grassy places called "parks" and form different guilds and clans called "teams." Depending on which park you're at and when you've decided to show up, an opposing clan will offer you a challenge in the form of a physical contest. These contests all have different rules, which are agreed upon ahead of time, and overseen by an aged sage known as an "umpire." In the interests of keeping things interesting, many of the oldest and wisest sages are also blind, which makes their ability to oversee any contest simply mindboggling.
Each team has a variety of players, who frequently choose to dress their real-life avatars in matching tunics for the physical challenge. The players are all different sizes and shapes, and depending on how many of these challenges (sometimes called "games" or "matches") they've competed in, skill levels can vary from the very high to the not so high. Those with the highest skill levels or the wisest mind to orchestrate the strategy for that challenge are given titles like "Captain," "All-Star," and "Player of the Game." After the challenge is won or lost, the avatars will sit down in part of this physical world and partake of ale often provided by the guild member whose turn it is that week. They will frequently nurse wounds from battle, and tale great tales from past challenges, when a guild member performed a feat so miraculous that a challenge was won by his skill alone...
After a series of these challenges is complete, the winner of the most challenges is crowned champion and players are awarded points in the areas of pride, skill, and luck. Often awards also come in the form of physical additions a player's avatar, such as a new hat or tunic.
... but then again, I've never actually played WOW, so I can't say for sure if this is anything like it.
Saturday, May 10, 2008
A Connector? Me?
So I decided to find out if this is actually true. Am I a connector? Gladwell tests this by giving subjects a list of 250 surnames. Counting how many people you know with those surnames gives you an indication of how "connected" you are. The average for college students was 21. The average for professionals in their 20s and 30s was 39. My number was...
27.
Frankly, I was a little disappointed. I was hoping for a huge number, but alas, it was not to be. The list of names came from a Manhattan phone book. I genuinely believe that if the list had come from a Canadian phonebook the results would have been different. I'm just making excuses. I'd be interested in trying it with a few lists and comparing. Maybe there's a research project there... for another time.
The other thing that it could indicate is that being a social butterfly doesn't make you a connector. That could very well be the case here. There are a lot of things that could change the results, but for now, I'll just have to be content with being well below average.
Wednesday, May 7, 2008
The Economics of Social Capital - Volume 2
Yesterday, I said that all personal relationships are worth the same in terms of social capital. It's hard to wrap your head around of course, because personal relationships can come in different styles and intensities. My relationship with my brother is not the same as my relationship with the doorman in my apartment building. However, yesterday I argued that they possess the same social capital. How can that be?
The thing I realized is that it doesn't matter how much money you have, the thing that matters is how you spend it. Sometimes you get a good deal and are able to use a weak connection and turn it into something great. Wayne's example was about a guy he met at a conference who in turn invited him to another function in Chicago. That was a dollar well spent. Meanwhile, your mom's dollar buys a lifetime of love, support, and nagging about eating vegetables. Another dollar well spent, but in a completely different store. You can't possibly shop in every store, and you certainly don't buy every item in the stores you do enter. Sometimes you shop for specific things and you know which store to go to. Other times, you wander around the mall until something grabs your attention and intices make a transaction. No matter how you break it down, it only matters how and where you choose to invest your social capital.
Of course, you can't put price tags on things like a personal support network or good conversation, but you can safely say that those with a lot of social capital probably afford these things a lot easier.
Next time: Professional Capital (aka - competence)
Tuesday, May 6, 2008
The Economics of Social Capital
It's a great system, quite similar to the "emotional bank account" described in 7 Habits of Highly Effective people. What makes this more interesting, if you make the direct comparison to money, a lot of other metaphors come into play. You can invest capital, expecting a return. You can have debts, you can forclose or go bankrupt, you can be rich or poor.
One concept we discussed in our group was inflation. My original thought was that "dollars" of social capital must be worth less than they used to be, because many years ago, it was much harder to keep in touch, and therefore the circle of friends and acquaintances would have been smaller. Then the telephone showed up, and the circle grew. Then email showed up, and suddenly long distance charges were overcome. Then chat became popular and you could have 50 people from all over the world on your desktop available to message at any point. Then social media started telling us that we now can contact hundreds of "friends" at the touch of a button.
So if someone with 20 friends used to be rich in social capital, am I absolutely dirty rotten filthy stinkin' rich because I have 375 friends on Facebook? Or has the value of social capital just depreciated?
Wayne was wise enough to point out that some great things come from continued contacts with these obscure acquaintances, so the value can't be that low. Experiences that would not otherwise be possible, can now be arranged because somebody had email, a cellphone, Facebook, etc. I completely agreed with him, but was certain that our relationships aren't as... potent... as they once were.
Perhaps what we lack in potency, we now make up in volume. While that seems like a prime definition for inflation, I finally figured out that the difference is this. Human relationships are unique. What you feel about your mother is nowhere near what you feel for a classmate, for example (unless you've got some mommy issues that need some attention). On the other hand, what you feel for one dollar is exactly what you feel for the next dollar and the next. No single Loonie gets priority treatment. It doesn't matter if it's been in your pocket for a year, or five minutes, a dollar is a dollar.
Social capital is NOT subject to inflation because in this system, a person is a person. Your mom, your classmate, your spouse, your boss, that friend of a friend, that girl from the bar who took your phone and put her number in under "Ashley maddy," and that guy you met at the conference last year all have the same value: one personal relationship. They're all just loonies in your pocket... and now, because of continuously improving technology, we're all much richer.
Monday, May 5, 2008
LVS - YYZ - CBC - YYZ - YEG
That being said, today was the first day of school. Our first in person session of 501 with Yuping "Ruby" Mao was more of a getting to know you session, and an airing of everyone's research projects. Suggestions were thrown around, and quite honestly, the topics are far more diverse than I had originally anticipated based on the online discussion. Hearing the class discuss both my project and their own gave me some ideas on how to frame my study, people to talk to, and what kinds of issues to address. Wayne also suggested a book that I plan on picking up(Out of Control by Kevin Kelly)... if only I could read without falling asleep.
The afternoon session of 506, hosted by Stan Ruecker, was equally eye-opening. Stan has a lot of research experience, and specifically U of A experience, and seems like he might be a very useful resource in the completion of the final project. The course is about social networks, but most of the time was spent discussing research projects, ethics, assignments, and later on... blogs.
Blogging is a weird thing for me. Perhaps it's that I like imagining I have an audience, even if nobody reads this. With my personal blog, people tell me from time to time that they visited it, and comment on something in it... and it usually surprises me, entrigues me, and motivates me to keep writing. It happens infrequently, but it's usually enough to keep me going. And now that this has been hyped in class, I feel obligated to deliver raw, unedited, free flowing, typo-filled, braindumps. And I look forward to reading yours too, class. Hmm?
Friday, April 25, 2008
Vegas, Baby
So I'll talk to you all in a week or so!!
Tuesday, April 22, 2008
Draft Day: Abstract Beta 0.1
Technology vs. The Bureaucratic Machine: Will the Net-Generation Bring Change to Canada's Broadcaster?"The presence of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation is felt everywhere in Canada. From the largest cities to the smallest towns, CBC television and radio reaches millions of homes across the country. Once thought of as a bureaucratic machine, slow to embrace change, attitudes are shifting, as the workforce becomes younger and more tech-savvy. While CBC still struggles to keep up with changing times, in other areas they are leading the way with emerging technologies like streaming video and podcasts. In the coming years, as the net-generation (or millenials) take over CBC, will the pace of change increase or will the bureaucracy of a massive organization hold it back like it has in the past? What will be the impact of these wired new wonderkids? Drawing from the author's own experience working in CBC Technology, this study will combine qualitative methods like interviews with key members in the CBC community and quantitative measures like employee surveys to assess opinions across the rest of the corporation."
Just to show you how cutting edge the CBC can be, check out this little gem from a 1993 edition of The National.
Monday, April 21, 2008
Why work when you can delegate?
Then this conversation happened:
Mr. Chick says: well, cbc is notoriously slow to adapt to newer technology...
Jennifer Flynn says: And your question is "why"?
Mr. Chick says: or will that change with a more tech-savvy generation taking things over?
Jennifer Flynn says: So what is the predicted impact of the advancing millenial generation on the pace of technological adoption?
Mr. Chick says: pretty much exactly that...
Suddenly, I had a succicnt research question! So if you're struggling, talk to Jen and she'll write a good one for you.
Now, to wrap it up in a few more sentences and call it an abstract... then go to Vegas and back before Spring Institute.
Saturday, April 19, 2008
The boy has issues
While I have an area I'd like to address, I don't know the specifics. While talking to a friend of mine who recently completed his masters in a similar discipline, he suggested limiting the scope to something manageable instead of attacking the topic as a whole. This, of course, makes great sense, but I seem to want to deal with the whole thing, and not a specific aspect of it. So if I'm dealing with a shift in the workforce and in lifestyles, how do I limit it to something I can measure?
My friend suggested limiting it to a specific company or a particular group. But who? Frankly, I'm sick of using my company (CBC) as a case study for every assignment. I don't have the same kind of access to other companies, but perhaps I should work something out. I've posed the question to a classmate working on a very similar topic, so I'm curious how she plans to attack it.
In the meantime, the countdown is on... I'll have to hand this in just before I go to Vegas!
Monday, April 14, 2008
I love the phone. That's where I get my email.
In the past week, I've...
- Written entries in my 3 different blogs (this one, brianchick.com, and sportsguys.ca)
- Uploaded 4 videos to youtube and linked to them on blogs and facebook.
- Administered blogs for 2 other projects, and designed or maintained 8 other websites.
- Edited entries in the 2 wikis I administer.
- Bought something on ebay
- Updated my facebook profile via my phone
- Collaborated cross country on 2 different writing projects
- looked at photos on Flickr, but haven't actually posted any because it was a boring week
- spent whole days on MSN, talking to people in other provinces, countries, and continents
- took a picture and emailed it via my phone (twice)
Do I love this stuff? Yes. Do I find it interesting? Absolutely.
More importantly though, I think it will cause a major change in the way work gets done. Anticipating that shift now will make for easier adjustments in the future.
Friday, April 11, 2008
Alternative Titles
So then I started thinking about "My Generation" by The Who. Once I gave it a listen and examined the lyrics, I was really struck by the line "don't try to dig what we all say." I was almost going to try donttrytodig.blogspot, but my inner grammar nerd doesn't like URLs that should have an apostrophe in them. Then I started looking at some of the history behind the song and was going to go with "Shout and Shimmy" which was the B-Side of "My Generation" for its original UK Release, but shoutandshimmy was already a registered blog. The B-Side for the US Release was "Out in the Street" but it didn't have the same ring.
So I went back to the lyrics, and the sensation line jumped out at me. It really sums things up nicely for me though because I honestly believe that the song parallels today's technology environment pretty acurately. We're not trying to cause a big sensation, but the older crowd doesn't quite understand how we do things, and does not know how to grasp the shift in mentality that is taking place.
"I'm just talking about my generation..."
A Big Sensation
In many of our class discussions, I've felt like one of a few "young ones" who see things a little bit differently than some of our older classmates. We are part of that generation who grew up with computers, were among the first generation to adopt things like chat, instant messaging, and email for social purposes, and have gotten used to adapting year after year to constantly changing technology.
Why "A Big Sensation," you might ask? In the song "My Generation" by The Who, there is a lyric "I'm not trying to cause a big sensation." As this project is really about My Generation, and I honestly believe it IS a rather big deal (or sensation even), I felt the title was appropriate.