Posts Tagged ‘Socialmedia’

Posterous

Wednesday, September 24th, 2008

Thanks to Guy Kawasaki I just signed up to Posterous.  It’s a pretty good idea, the site allows you to email in text, documents, music, images or video which it then posts up onto a blog.  What’s more it can then cross post the new blog onto twitter, flickr, wordpress etc.

It seems to work really well.  You can mail from a number of different email accounts or phones and setup personalised domains or sub-domains. 

The one little niggle I noticed - well its really something to add to a wish list - is that there’s no way of automatically filtering out email signatures.  All my mail accounts have them, and my work account also adds the usual company disclaimer after it leaves my computer or iPhone.  It’d be really great if Posterous was able to filter these out so that every post didn’t have my phone number and company address appended to it.

Still, a great idea I reckon!

Blippr - a great idea.

Wednesday, July 30th, 2008

Yesterday a friend pointed me at blippr.com, a new (I assume!) site that seems to merge twitter like short comments with reviews of books, music, movies and games.

As a format it works really well, you just search for whatever movie you want to see reviews for and browse through the results.  Overall ratings are also aggregated  to provide an overall score. 

For things like movies and games I find a consensus of opinion much more useful than an in depth review followed by one persons opinion.   As Blipper can also import contacts and friends from Twitter, Friendfeed and Facebook you should also be able to see what you buddies are think of the same movie, and what other things they are enjoying.

Reviews are short <160 character twitter style comments, and use a simple ‘love it’ to ‘hate it’ rating.  I’m not sure if there’s a mobile interface or iPhone app but it would seem like a great addition to catch people views right as they leave the cinema (for example).

The only slight flaw I found was that if you miss spell your email address when signing in the site creates a fresh account for you… so I now have a dummy account there!

Still, I like it :)

Twistori - I wish I was a Ninja…

Tuesday, April 29th, 2008

twistori.com

A few people have been tweeting about twistory today and I really love it, what a great idea!  It pulls data from summize to scroll through tweets with the words Love, Hate, Think, Believe, Feel and Wish.  One of those things you have to see to appreciate, full fantastic none the less.

Web 2.0ing your CV

Tuesday, April 22nd, 2008

Yesterday I had an interesting training session on the British Computer Societies Skills Framework for the Information Age.  For those not aware of it, SFIA (pronounced Sophia) is a standardised framework for identifying IT relates skills and expertise. 

The idea is that once you have standardised way if identifying skills and then measuring levels of competence in those skills (with evidence), it’s far easier to target career development, identify skills gaps and benchmark what skill you might have, or need in the future.  There’s plenty of info online, so I won’t go into the details here, but overall I think it’s a great idea - despite the slightly awkward web interface.

As an individual your record within the system would hold a complete history of you’re skills and competencies as measured and agreed by yourself and your managers, the objectives you’ve been set over the years, and all kinds of other useful info.  Assuming you’re good at whatever it is you do, this stuff could be gold dust.  I can think of tonnes of uses…

- Imagine if you could walk into an interview, not just with your CV but with a record of all your skills and performance measured by your previous employers.  Ok, that could be a slightly scary prospect… but conceptually it works for me.

- As an individual, it would be great to be able to search for jobs that matched my current skills and aspirations.

- As an employer I’d love to target opportunities at people who can demonstrate their ability to deliver the skills I’m looking for.

- I’d like to be able to network with other people who either have the same skills as me or who are working in an area I’d like to do in future.

Although the SFIA foundation and BCS are selling a toolset, surely it’s the data that has value.  Maybe the course didn’t cover everything, but certainly this sort of thing seemed to be missing.  I did ask a few questions about this, but it seems like the information doesn’t follow individual identities within the system, so if I moved jobs my history would not follow.  Of course there are all kinds of Data Protection issues here, but these could be worked out. 

If nothing else it would seem like a great way of driving BCS memberships - signup and receive an identity that’s yours and not just a table in a corporate system.  Provide an API for people to access these subsets of this information and all of a sudden you’ve got what imagine would be a hugely valuable tool.  Maybe this isn’t something that interests the BCS, I don’t know.  Seems like a good idea to me though.