How can social networking help my site, part I

May 7, 2008 14:08 by Danimal
Social networking and Web 2.0 are popular buzzwords in the industry these days, but there are real, immediate benefits to implementing social networking on your website. In this series, I will explore what it can mean to some of our clients (and, hopefully, for my dear readers).

Company "X"  is one of the first Charter Schools of its kind in the country. Established in 2003, the school’s mission is to close the economic gap in inner cities by addressing the achievement gap in schools. Their  methods have proven astonishingly successful and they want to spread their methodologies to other cities and school systems nationwide. They came to Acsys with an idea for automating some of the time-consuming manual processes that weigh administrators and teachers down.

We helped our clients re-think their approach to create a robust, multi-faceted application that automates a wide array of tasks associated with tracking, testing and measuring the progress of their students—from creating tests to generating progress reports. An additional benefit of the initiative   was to reinforce the pride and commitment that the   organization shares with its teachers. The design includes photos of students in conjunction with inspiring messages that tangibly remind teachers and administrators of the ultimate goals of the organization.

So how can social networking improve their site?


One of our client's goals is to put instructional tools online as part of their web application. Basically, teachers would connect to the page to download sample problems, instructional videos, podcasts, and the like from within the browser. There's a strong concept of a subject-matter expert focused around various educational standards, so if someone had trouble teaching, say, fractions to her student, she could reach out to an expert on teaching that subject.

The inital goal was a simple file upload page -- administrators would identify and upload whatever resources they found appropriate for the given subject. First they would gather videos, podcasts, documents, and the like, then enter them in a WYSIWYG editor and link them to the chosen standard. That puts a lot of work on the administrators, and would add to a lot of overhead and inject a bit of bias into the selection.

A social networking site could add a much more rich and interactive pool of teaching tools, and allow users to contribute content on their own. This would free up the administration and allow the entire community to work together to bring education to the kids.

A description of the solution I envision:

Each user logs in and creates a profile , which gives them their own individual home page with a message board, blog, friends list, document workspace, and the like. They choose taxonomy keywords to describe their interests, and search for colleagues to network with. They start or join community groups to discuss various topics and collaborate on material. In short, Facebook for the enterprise.

How can this help our client?

Teachers tend to share information pretty readily. However, you can't share with people you don't know. Company X is a large organization, Even with annual conferences it's pretty hard to share information across 13 schools scattered over several hundred square miles. However, with an easily-searchable social networking site people could link up pretty easily.

Imagine Mrs. Linnetz, a fifth-grade math teacher who's having trouble getting her kids to understand dividing fractions. She's a member of the "math teachers" group on the site, and posts a question about how to proceed. Mr. Mahler, a teacher at one of their NYC schools, posts a set of example problems on their shared workspace. The community has a lively discussion about the joys of reciprocals, and much education ensues.

Because all posts can be rated, and Mr. Mahler's content was excellent, he develops a bit of social equity in the site. This leads to him being recognized as a subject-matter expert on the topic, and he gets involved in curriculum development.

A social networking site wouldn't need to stop at the school system's borders, either. Why limit the site to just Company X personnel? Casting the net more widely, and allowing teachers and administrators across the country to join the site, could provide a lot of value to everyone. Not only would teachers be able to share knowlege more easily, but Company X would be able to expand their mindshare in the education community. It would make it easier to identify and recruit skilled teachers, as well as market their products and services much more easily.

That's just one example of how social networking can provide value to the client. I haven't even dipped in to the value of student-based networks, or linking teachers with the students' parents. The possibilities are endless!

The best thing? All of this would be pretty cheap. The basic solution I described is available out of the box with the Ektron CMS, and would need minimal customization and skinning to be immediately useful.
 
 
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Pet photo contest

May 6, 2008 09:12 by Danimal

Nearly-Dr. Ferox posted a call for cute pet photos. Since she's on my blogroll, I guess I should rise to the challenge.

I present you Kaja, destroyer of candy canes



And Mugzie, enjoying her pool on a hot day

 

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Congratulations to my creative colleagues

May 6, 2008 08:56 by Danimal

One of the nice things about working at Acsys is that we're an interactive agency, not just a tech shop. We have some of the most skilled designers I've ever met on staff here, and they do some amazing work.  Because they're so good, they frequently win industry awards, and here's the latest batch that came in from the Horizon Interactive Awards:

Gold (Consumer goods):  Sikorsky.com

Gold (Flash category): Sikorsky aircraft tour

Bronze (Consumer goods): Timex.com -- Sleek, iControl, Diamonds, E-Instruments

Bronze (Flash category): Timex.com --iControl, E-Instruments, T-Series

The Sikorsky aircraft tour is particularly impressive -- check it out at http://www.sikorsky.com/sik/index.asp (it's the main flash section on the home page).

Way go go, guys! 

 

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Test-driven development and Linq to SQL

May 5, 2008 11:00 by Danimal

Did you ever wonder how you can do TDD with Linq to SQL, since there are no IOC interfaces to play with? Well, neither did I, quite honestly. However, Matt over at the Wayward Web Log did, and he puzzled out a way to do it. It's pretty zany stuff -- he plays with remoting and reflection to pull it off -- but it looks like it would work. Not an article for the faint of heart, but good to have in your toolbox if you need it.

 

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The Wounded Warrior Project

May 4, 2008 13:51 by Danimal

The Wounded Warrior Project is a non-profit organization that provides support to our wounded veterans. "The WWP seeks to assist those men and women of our armed forces who have been severely injured during the conflicts in Iraq, Afghanistan, and other locations around the world.Many of the injuries are traumatic amputations, gunshot wounds, burns and blast injuries that will retire these brave warriors from military service." It's a great group, and they deserve our support.

I first read about this project through Scuba Diving Magazine, of all things. 

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Training coming up

May 4, 2008 11:48 by Danimal

Turns out I'll be spending the second week in July going for Biztalk training. Though the subject matter may be a bit dry, I think it's going to be an excellent course.

Biztalk, for those of you not in the know, is a Microsoft server that's designed for application integration. It's used to transfer data between disparate systems, through XML-based messaging. The central Biztalk engine has a few major components:

  • a Messaging component, which allows communication across a wide range of software. It offers pluggable adapters for different types of communication, such as FTP, STMP/POP, web services, etc.
  • an Orchastration component, which allows the creation and execution of business processes in a graphical environment.
  • a business rules engine, so you can change business rules on the fly (as opposed to compiling and deploying a .net assembly)
  • an enterprise single-sign on (SSO) tool
We're going to be using Biztalk a lot in our upcoming SOA projects, so I'm thrilled to be able to get this training. Better yet, it's in Waltham, MA, so after class I can take a trip to Jacob Wirth's for a pint of Jake's Dark!
 
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Wow, the world just changed

May 1, 2008 09:33 by Danimal

I don't know much about electronics, but I can tell that this is huge. Scientists have created a fourth basic electronic circuit element (joining the capacitor,  the resistor, and the inductor). The new element is called the "memristor", and is able to remember the amount of charge that has passed through it.

The initial applications of this is pretty basic -- it can lead to instant-on PCs, for example, and non-volatile RAM. It also will have applications in machine learning, as it can function much like a synapse in the brain.

The big deal, though, is that it's a paradigm shift in electronics -- a whole new way of looking at the world. It's like suddenly adding a new physical law, or adding an extra state in a binary bit.

I can't wait to see how this shakes out.

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I'd post on this, but I'm afraid they'd kick down my door

April 24, 2008 10:47 by Danimal

FBI wants widespread monitoring of 'illegal' Internet activity

Robert Meuller, the FBI director, called for new legislation that would let the FBI monitor the internet for illegal activity. All internet traffic. 

Mueller said the proposal  "balances on one hand, the privacy rights of the individual who are receiving the information, but on the other hand, given the technology, the necessity of having some omnibus search capability utilizing filters that would identify the illegal activity as it comes through and give us the ability to preempt that illegal activity where it comes through a choke point."

How in any does letting the government sniff all Internet traffic even nod at an individual's privacy rights? That sounds more like China than the USA. 

I wish they'd quit kicking the corpse of the 4th amendment -- it's dead already, let it rest in peace.

 

 

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POKE 36878,225

April 22, 2008 10:12 by Danimal

Jeff Atwood has a post today talking about coding BASIC on old-school computers (specifically, the Atari 2600). It really made me nostalgic for when I got started programming on my Commodore Vic 20. Ahh, what a system that was.

It was a great machine. It had a whopping 5 K of memory (yes, Kilobytes, not megabytes), and the "operating system" was Basi, burned onto the ROM. About 1.2K of the system memory was taken up by basic, so you had 3.8 k left for programs. Once you typed in your code, you could save it to the external tape drive (a cassette recorder). 3.8 K took around a half hour to write to tape.

I spent hours and hours on that little machine, putting it through its paces. I played through the Scott Adams adventure games, and the family still chuckes at the magic words "Say Yoho" from Pirate Adventure.  I learned basic, and just about memorized memory locations for poke and peek. That little machine started me on my way to geekdom.

 

I was overjoyed to find  the Vic 20 programming manual online. Check it out, nostalgic geeks!

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StackOverflow.com

April 17, 2008 08:36 by Danimal

Joel Spolsky and Jeff Atwood are my favorite technical bloggers hands down. They write clear, cogent, and frequently amusing posts that really get me thinking. They're so good, and so prominent in the community, that if an interviewee can't talk about their stuff I tend to grade them down. Hell, Jeff and Joel are largely responsible for the existance of this blog.

That's why I'm so glad to hear that they're working together on a new project, called StackOverflow.com. In short, stackoverflow.com will be a free and open community for developers to ask and answer questions. Per Jeff it'll be "sort of like the anti-experts-exchange (minus the nausea-inducing sleaze and quasi-legal search engine gaming) meets wikipedia meets programming reddit." Sounds like a great project, and should be really useful to the developer community.

So far all they have on the site is a podcast talking about the vision. I look forward to seeing what comes down the road.

Hrmm, I wonder if the site will be built  "in a proprietary language they created themselves"?

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