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January 2008

January 08, 2008

Read and comment on this post
at the new Pair-a-Dimes location here:
http://pairadimes.davidtruss.com/what-did-i-do-b-g-before-google/

The first time I saw the term 'B.G.' referring to 'Before Google' was in Karl Fisch's 'Did You Know' presentation. Tonight that term came to life for me.

Here is an eye-opening statistic I discovered about myself today: 

Total Google searches: 3633 (Since April 30th, 2006, and only counting when I have been signed into Google.)

I did some quick number crunching: On average, I use Google about 450 times a month, which also averages to about 15 times a day. I really do have to ask, what did I do B.G. - Before Google?  

If you have a Google account you can check out your own history here http://www.google.com/history/

Have a look at my Googling trends: (The secret is out... I am a night owl!)

My Google Trends

Above and beyond this chart, there is actually quite a lot here that Google knows about me. Add to this the things I choose to RSS into Google Reader, the things I choose to Star and Share there, the sites I sign up with on Gmail, the people (and information) I e-mail, and basically Google could start to make decisions for me.

- - - - -

A.G. - After Google 

How far away are we from having Google prioritizing items in our e-mail and RSS feeds for us? Or providing us with personalized search results? I wonder how far this could go?

Will there be a truly semantic web? Although Stephen Downes says 'no', and makes a very knowledgeable and compelling argument, I wonder if he isn't looking at it from a paradigm that will change?

Stephen states:

But the big problem is they believed everyone would work together:
- would agree on web standards (hah!)
- would adopt a common vocabulary (you don't say)
- would reliably expose their APIs so anyone could use them (as if)

But I think of the sophistication of Language Translators today and wonder if standards and vocabulary will have to be stringent? Perhaps there will come a time when it will be enough to have a somewhat common vocabulary (congruent semantics within different languages)... and so 'loose' standards become beneficial since if you choose to follow along, you reap greater benefits. Or perhaps the same way Mashups scrape information from multiple sites a semantic web could be built by information scraping?

How many billions of dollars were spent on laying down fiber cables in the few years before wireless access mushroomed?

How many experts thought blogs would fail? Without RSS blogs would never have become so prolific. Blogs came first, but they might have drifted to the fringe without the ability to have feeds go to the reader.

Is a semantic web really doomed to fail or is it inevitable? Web4.0 - your webmodality.

- - - - - -

C.E. -Communal Era 

I'm not changing my behavior because I have become aware that 'Google is watching' and tracking what I do.

And yet I'm not fully trusting either. How accurately can they pinpoint my interests and focus Google ads towards me?  (With a last name of Truss this would be refreshing... Yahoo always shows me Roofing and Bra Support ads.) Furthermore, who else can see my information? Who decides this? How secure is my information? All these things concern me, yet I'm still using Google. 

There is an option to 'pause' the history tracking and also to 'remove' an item in Google History, but do these things actually happen or just disappear from my view? (I recall some issues with Gmail not 'deleting forever' after such a request was made.) Yet I'm still using Google.

With OpenID and Corporate ID (Youtube is Google, Flickr is Yahoo) I am going to be sharing my information regardless of how much I chose to 'pause' or 'block' or 'remove' information from the web. My information is communal/shared to a very large extent!

What really concerns me is how this information about me will be used to "help" me? Will "smarter" searches force like-minded ideas on me? Will they stifle my creativity? Will I suffer the 'Dumbness of Crowds'?

Will a semantic web shield me from an onslaught of unnecessary information or will it insulate me from possibilities and learning opportunities?

 

Posted by David Truss | 1 comment(s)

January 16, 2008

Kim Cofino writes on Twitter:

Join us in our uStream session: http://ustream.tv/channel/isb-edu-stream Conversations about the Future of Learning in a Networked World.

 

twitter

 

I click the link to uStream and find that 12 others have also joined her meeting, later there were 17 of us.

 

 

Vance Stevens is talking and a participant in the meeting links to the slide show he is showing.  

Vance keeps us up to speed with respect to when to advance the slides. 

I bookmark one of the links in the slides to my del.icio.us, a great link for new bloggers to check out. 

 

Blogging for Educators 2008 - Link above.

 

I chat with some 'familiar' people, Alec Couros and Kelly Christopherson, and ask them to help me out with a Pro-D session I'll be running with student teachers on the 25th. Chrissy says to 'Twitter' her and she will help out. (She actually says, "Twitter us and we will help"). I don't follow Chrissy on Twitter so I go to my open Twitter window and request to follow her. 

I see that I have a new Gmail message in my inbox so I open another window to find out that it is Kris. She is asking if I had seen her new post, which is titled Web2.0 Compatible.

I'm listening to the meeting, I postpone popping open windows to the links Vance is referring to, or checking the live chat on uStream so that I can read Kris' post. I notice a small typo in Kris's second paragraph. I also notice a green dot by her name in Google Chat indicating that she is online. I open a chat box and quote her typo back to her.

Kris replies back minutes later that the typo is fixed, (I hit refresh and it is). Kris' post is about how 'her generation' is totally web2.0 compatible. 

I continue following the meeting where a participant is talking about how these new applications are now 'net' applications and not 'pay-for' software. I realize that other than my computer and Internet connection, all this linking and watching and listening and engaging is free.

The most amazing part to all this: It was almost midnight here and I was 'chatting' with a student, reading her writing, and offering (minor) feedback... while 'sitting in' on a staff meeting at the International School Bangkok, Thailand... 'talking' to Kelly in Saskatchewan and Alec in Regina, as well as others in Australia and The UK... and 'meeting' Chrissy, a new connection from New Zealand, who has offered to Twitter-in and help demonstrate networking/connectivity at my Pro-D session next week in the suburbs of Vancouver.

All this happened in a shorter time than it took me to write this post! 

 - - - -

Postscript:

While getting links for this post, I discovered that Chrissy also wrote about this experience. Here is a great image she uploaded. Click on it to get to her post. 

...and back again moments later. Apparently this was not a staff meeting, but a session in an un-conference. Kim just linked to the conference wiki page via Twitter.

 


 

Keywords: Alec Couros, Blog4Ed, datruss, David Truss, delicious, Food for Thought, future, GMail, Google Chat, International School of Bangkok, Kelly Christopherson, Kim Cofino, learning, learning conversations, My Web2.0, networking, Pair-a-Dimes, Pro-D, social networks, staff meeting, students, Teaching Sagittarian, Twitter, uStream, Vance Stevens, Wandering Ink

Posted by David Truss | 3 comment(s)

January 24, 2008

This is the end of my last post on our class Ning network for Planning 10 this term. The first link isn't really appropriate but my students get my sense of humour by now, and we just finished talking about sex-ed, so I put it in anyway. For reasons I cannot express in this venue at this time, I will really miss these two classes!

 - - - - -

And finally, I will leave you with this:

1. Make smart, realistic goals for yourself... it takes effort to follow through with your goals, so make them SMART and easier to find success with!

2. Figure out who you are and what is important to you. Don't let media perceptions change you. Be safe, and if you are going to be a role model for others, be a positive one.

3. Remember that the world is getting smaller, and that we are now global citizens... in a new global market... connected in new ways... take care of your neighbours!

Peace.

 - - - - -

Posted by David Truss | 1 comment(s)

January 28, 2008

I spent Friday morning with 22 student teachers and a couple teachers from my school. My goal was to introduce them to the world of web2.0, wikis, and del.icio.us. Well 2 out of 3 ain't bad- I didn't really get into delicious beyond an introduction. That aside, I think this group of future teachers really understood my point that education is changing and our teaching needs to change too!


The slideshare was my main introduction, and here is the wiki we used. I gave them each a page to play with and used video's to convey many of the ideas I wanted to get across. I'd like to thank SFU Faculty Advisor and friend John Stockdale for the opportunity.

I'd love to be able to give this message to every student teacher! 

Posted by David Truss | 4 comment(s)