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Join us on our Voyages

13th November, 2008 by Tim

We’re Insiteability - intrepid web explorers from Oxfordshire, Surrey and London, brought together by our passion for doing things on and with the web. It’s what we “do”.

This blog is where we’ll be sharing our thoughts on what’s going on and what really matters - talking about anything that we think is interesting for smart organisations, and documenting our journeys and discoveries.

The Fascinating World under the Surf

It’s a complicated but wonderful world - web-side. So complicated it can be difficult to work out how best to exploit the web for your own organisation. It’s even more difficult to predict the future, let alone guess what the next “big web thing” will be. But we’ll be keeping our eyes and ears peeled so that we can let you know what’s going on, helping you think about how to exploit the opportunities of the web for your organisation.

We’ve got big plans for the blog and for Insiteability as a whole, so stay in touch with us here! We’ll be bringing you:

  • Our personal views - Keeping up-to-date with things going on in business and on the web
  • Things we like - Sharing our top choices of web resources
  • 3rd Sector - A focussed view of what’s happening web-wise in the 3rd Sector and what innovations charities and not-for-profits can use to improve
  • How to’s - Our tips and tricks for anyone managing websites and services

We’d love to hear what you think, so please do get involved and suggest new areas for us to cover.

In the meantime

Here’s a video from Candid Camera that Joshua Porter played during his dconstruct talk “Leveraging Cognitive Bias in Social Design“, last September - it’s a classic!


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Previous posts

Going beyond conventional commentary

27th October, 2008 by Tim

Jeff Jarvis, journalism professor at the City University of New York writes a very interesting article in today’s Media Guardian - The end of the story as we know it - in which he muses about conventional newspaper articles - print and digital - proving inadequate in covering the complex news happening today. This is especially true now when the story’s as big as the current financial crisis and the not-somuch-looming-as-already-here recession. This got me thinking that what he has to say is relevant beyond the sphere of conventional journalism, and touches on the what all organisations - whatever their sector - need to think about as part of their communications mix.

He refers to an essay by Meg Hourihan (of Pyra Labs that became Blogger) that argued the atomic unit of digital media is no longer the publication, section, page or article, but the blog post of which there may be millions. He explains that having to sift these isn’t enough to work as an organising principle for informing, and that we need “order atop” these countless atoms. The most important tool for creating this order atop is the link. “The link becomes as important as the brand in news”.

However, links by themselves are not enough, and we need a structure, a landscape - or as he puts it “magnetic poles” - to gather news around and to organise it. Newspapers traditionally use topics, but these are usually just lists of their own content and designed for Google’s SEO, not specifically to help or attract the audience. What’s needed is more than these topic pages that essentially act as an archive.

What would be attractive is a resource that is created, curated, edited and discussed. It will be a new form of aggregator mash-up - bringing together articles, blogs, wiki’s in a way that treats topics as ongoing, cumulative processes of learning. These ideas remind me of some work we did a few years ago for the National Enterprise Workflow Project for the UK government, where we created “learning logs” (this was before Blogs became mainstream) that encouraged recording of learning, structured that information and provided tools to dig and search it, and ultimately lead to the creation of the Workflow Toolkit. Extending those ideas by mashing-up social web services such as blogs, twitter feeds, wiki’s and newsfeeds, but with a “human” topic curator could be a good start.

Jeff Jarvis suggests a few improbable names for such an interactive aggregating mash-up - Topic Table, Beat Bliki, or News Brain. I think I prefer our original name - Learning Logs, or maybe Learning Blogs - but I’m open to suggestions!

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