Posts tagged ‘nptech’

April 15, 2010

How is TweetNotes different from a Twitter Archive Service?

by Ben Rigby

Just got a question from the Progressive Exchange email list asking about the difference between our TweetNotes product and a Twitter archiving tool like Twapperkeeper. Here's the response: 

1. TweetNotes is free. 30 seconds setup time and you'll be on your way. Setup page here: http://bxt.me/a5q3hf [this isn't a point of differentiation - just an answer to part of the question on PX]

2. The difference between TweetNotes and a Twitter archive service is severalfold: 

a) Frame the conversation

As an event organizer, you probably want to frame the conversation… to provide some curation and guidance. TweetNotes gives you a space to do this by adding a presentation (Slideshare, etc). It's like giving an opening introduction to your topic at a conference.

b) Dashboard for conferences/events

If you've got multiple hashtags for multiple events, such as for sessions at a conference, TweetNotes allows you to organize them all in one neat branded place. See the example dashboard for NTC: http://bxt.me/9py0L1. As a result, you can see which sessions are the most Tweeted… which is a neat proxy for determining popularity/interest in various topics.

c) See people! 

Tweetnotes shows you who is tweeting and who's tweeting the most. It visualizes the "people in the room"…

d) Embeddable.

You can embed TweetNotes in your blog or website. Check out how Amy Sample Ward embedded her NTC session's TweetNotes into her blog at http://bxt.me/cEKALu

d) Make Tweets Better

The Extraordinaries is a platform for microvolunteering… and TweetNotes is no exception. The big vision here is to take the flurry of tweets that start at an event and ask volunteers to turn them into a more refined / filtered / and curated set of notes. Rating tweets is the first step in this direction. We'll be rolling out additional features in the very near future that allow us all to collaborate on these topics to create valuable public outputs.

What do you think? 

Love to get some feedback/ideas/criticism/whatever! 

April 19 – Adding a Followup about Real Time Uses:
The product is not intended to function as a Twitter client replacement. There's no way it's going to be as good for that as TweetDeck or the like. It does have 2 good real time uses though: 

1) if you have multiple/simultaneous events at a conference, it can show you which sessions are the most popular (by number of tweets). At SXSW, this was a neat way to see what the most talked about sessions were and to get caught up on what happened at the event… or to change sessions mid stream to head to the more exciting one.

2) if you have a Q&A component of a session, you can use the voting mechanism as a realtime way to see the top questions. It's so hard as a panelist to scan Tweets while talking… TweetNotes offers an easy way to allow the crowd to filter up the best questions. 

Other than these two real time uses – its value is in the post-event scenario – where people can go back through the tweets – to remember a point – or to lookup a URL that was mentioned, to help refine the tweets into a summary from which people who were not at the event can benefit. And to read specific tweet threads by specific people about that topic. 

March 31, 2009

How nonprofits are using the iPhone: Seafood Watch

by Ben Rigby

This is the first in a series of posts about how nonprofits are using the iPhone. First to be featured: Seafood Watch

Who?
Monterey Bay Aquarium. 

"Our new iPhone application brings the latest Seafood Watch recommendations directly to your iPhone or iPod touch. Now you can make sustainable seafood choices quickly and easily—whether you’re eating at your favorite restaurant or shopping for dinner. And at a time when the world’s oceans are severely overfished, your seafood choices make a big difference.

Features?
Free, up-to-date recommendations at your fingertips
Sushi guide lists fish by Japanese name as well as common market name
Regional guides highlight the seafood that’s best in each area of the country
New! Search to find seafood quickly and easily within regions."

Get it on the App Store Here:

Itunes_app_store

Screenshots:

Seafood watch 001
Seafood watch 002
Seafood watch 003  Seafood watch 004  Seafood watch 005
March 1, 2009

Volunteer Mapping

by Ben Rigby

Map
Thanks to Christine Egger for pointing the way to this video from the CloudMade guys describing openmapping volutneering. This really cool part at left shows a time lapse of volunteer mapping parties with mobile phones and GPS transmitters spreading out across the city, generating valuabe data the whole way. 

A couple of weekends ago, we tasked the Stanford Hackathon guys with building out a GPS ping function for The Extraordinaries app – and now it's in there… and we're very excited about using The Extras for open source mapping. See this post about Route Tracking. Here's how I described the potential of open mapping to a friend the other day:

The most committed of urban-geeks can tag and rate their city as they move through it. Come to a dangerous intersection? Tag it with "danger" and take a photo. Or record yourself talking about why the intersection is dangerous. Create a living narrative of the city. This approach is reminiscent of Christian Nold's work - but requires no special gear. 

Go further and cover the buildings, sites, and sounds of your city. Tag, rate, photograph, record audio. Create urban folksonomy. Turn it into the best damn tour guide system in the world… heads and shoulders above the likes of Frommers:

* Give me a walking tour of 3 miles or less that focuses on architecture.
* Give me an architecture tour narrated by architects only
* Give me an architecture tour narrated by by artists
* What is this building? 
* Show me the 10 happiest places in the city
* What does this street look like at night? 
* Am I safe here? 
* Show me the best taquerias

So, clearly, we're outside the domain of The Extraordinaries, which would serve only as a data gathering mechanism… but the potential for an iPhone app in this domain is extraordinary. Does anyone know of any existing apps? What's out there and what's in development? 

Here's the cloudmade video: 

and a hot visualization of one year of open mapupdates:

http://vimeo.com/moogaloop.swf?clip_id=2598878&server=vimeo.com&show_title=1&show_byline=1&show_portrait=0&color=&fullscreen=1
OSM 2008: A Year of Edits from ItoWorld on Vimeo.

thanks to Michel Bauwens for the post.
February 27, 2009

Journalism Losing its Geographic Roots? Mobiles to the rescue?

by Ben Rigby

Just reading this report back from the WeMedia conference about the future of journalism, which I've been thinking a lot about since a "salon" the other week at my friend Tony Deifell's houseboat in Sausalito. The sentiment seems to be similar to those discussed at the salon:  

[Knight Foundation's President] began with a discussion of what's being lost, and pegged it to geography: "For the first time in the history of the republic, the delivery of news and information is not happening in the same space as democracy."

Unless somebody can devise a sustainable geographic model for journalism, he argued, the United States needs to figure out "how to structure democracy in a different way not rooted in geography."

How that might happen, he acknowledged, he has no idea.  Source.

If the problem really is geography, then I've got an idea! Mobile phones are delivering micro-specific location information. It's specific geography which makes most great mobile apps work!

Let's take the "Around Me" iPhone application, for example. Did you think the Yellow Pages were dead?? I did. But they are not. This app is just the Yellow Pages, but organized according to your current geographic location. Want to find a gas station nearby? Click "Gas Stations" and it will tell you which ones are closest. Want to find a hospital? Same deal. The thing is… this application rocks! It's SO useful. Why? Because it's got geographic relevance. 

Is journalism so different? I don't think so. Do you want to know about local news surrounding you? Do you want to know about stories related to the park where you walk your dog? Or about that mugging that took place on the corner where you're standing. Want to tie that to local politics – and then call your city councilperson to discuss on-the-spot? Yes, yes, yes.

And the business model? Local advertising, of course. A $2 off coupon for the Thai restaurant that's 2 blocks away…. if it's close to lunch or dinner time. Or a buy one get one free deal at a local bar if it's past dinner time. Or an ad for the local kids clothes store if you've just read an article about local education issues and it's before closing time. 

You can get hyper-local, time-specific, and content customized. You can deliver video and audio instead of just text. And, you can connect the reader (cum: doer) to local actions – or to other neighbors who are interested in the same issues. This is the future of local journalism. And it's the heart of building strong communities and engaged democracies.

What do you think? Is this not practical in some way? What am I missing? 
February 20, 2009

TED Talks Need Action

by Ben Rigby

I just watched this incredibly moving and somber TED talk by Sylvia Earle. And I’m looking at the rest of this TED page (see screenshot). What’s missing to me is *ACTION* – I see this talk and I want to do something in response. But look at my options:

Sign in to add to favorites
Watch this talk as high-res video (MP4)
Watch related
Comment
Email to friend

Untitled-1

There’s such a prime opportunity here to connect the enthusiasm of the moment – the inspiration to act – with real action. I know that Social Actions is playing in this space – providing a system to embed actions on relevant content pages – and I think that’s smart. When our system is up and running, you’ll be able to perform a task, right there, on the spot via a widget – or mobile phone. Something – TED needs something to inspire and then enable us to action. Otherwise, it seems like something of a wasted opportunity. Building awareness is great, but I’m left wanting more.

Here’s the talk:

Tags: , , ,
February 16, 2009

Route Tracking

by Ben Rigby

We're working on enabling GPS route tracking in our app… a superb way to donate your spare time to generate valuable data sets. Imagine this:

Crowdsource Your Ped/Bike Route
As you begin your commute to work (via ped or bike), you launch The Extraordinaries on your phone and press "Track Route." Every 20 seconds, your GPS coordinates are sent to the server. At the end of your commute, you press Stop. You then tag & rate your route for a variety of factors: safety, scenic-ness, physical difficultly, your mood on this route. 

So, now we've got the holy grail for GIS-geeks: data. We can see route heatmaps, average commute time, safe routes, dangerous routes, hilly routes, fun routes, miserable routes, desire lines. You can put this data in the hands of the geeks and see what they come up with.

We can imagine a whole array of (non-Extraordinary) uses for this data either online or on another iphone app:
* Show me a scenic route that is safe
* Show me a physically challenging route that makes people happy
* Show me how to get downtown via a highly rated walking route
* Give me a hilly 60 mile cycling loop from the Golden Gate Bridge.
* Give me a flat 40 mile route from from my house that passes the beach
* Show me how to commute to work in the fewest minutes by ped or bike
* Shake the phone and show me a random new fun route

To close the feedback loop with the Extraordinary user, maybe we can display a bumper page that shows how many routes have been submitted along with a summary of the user's commute data – such as average time, time leave every morning, etc – interesting data to make the user feel like they're doing good for their city – and also getting some valuable personal information. Maybe we can list all of the other apps that have been created with the data that they've contributed to. Or we can suggest alternate routes submitted by other users who live nearby.

—-
Since coming up with this idea, we've found a couple of orgs creating similar apps. I'll use this post to list those I find. If you know of any, please post a comment.

—-
Traffic-cars
UC Berkeley & Nokia
"Cars at the Mobile Century command center in Union City head out on their 10-mile driving route on I-880. The drivers, all UC Berkeley students, carried GPS-enabled cell phones that transmitted speed and position information to researchers at the command center, creating a nearly real-time picture of traffic flow. 

There is currently no projected date for commercial launch of such a system, but when it does become available, its benefits could be huge. In the United States alone, traffic congestion leads to 4.2 billion hours in extra travel time and an extra 2.9 billion gallons of fuel burned, for a total cost of $78 billion, according to a 2007 report from the Texas Transportation Institute. With the number of vehicles on the road increasing rapidly around the world, a cost-effective method of travel planning could help drivers make smarter decisions about which routes to take, the researchers say.

Today's experiment was supported by a $186,000 grant from Caltrans. Additional support came from the National Science Foundation, Nokia, Tekes, the University of California Transportation Center and the Volvo Center of Excellence for Future Urban Transport at UC Berkeley's Institute of Transportation Studies, which is also home to CCIT."

February 12, 2009

Semantic Crowdsourcing

by Ben Rigby

I met with the Jewish Film Festival today. They've got one of the best problems that an organization can have: a massive archive of assets that are inaccessible to the public. Why is this a great problem? 

  1. Because they're rich with interestingness 
  2. It's easy to fix.
  3. And once it's fixed, they'll have tremendous value to offer the public
What kind of assets? Films, articles, photos, interviews, audio recordings, ratings, datasets. You name it, they've got it stored away in a number of fairly archaic systems. Plus, they've got a yearly festival when they bring people together face to face and a dynamic community that cares a lot about the subject matter. 

Of course, like any nonprofit, cash is in short supply – so they're looking for an inexpensive way to make it available… 

Naturally, I told them about The Extraordinaries – and I'm hoping to include them as an "Adventure" (ie: volunteer opportunity) for our launch in June. Assuming they can get their assets into a database (maybe even use something like google base, although their policies are a little restrictive), we could then create a simple tagging app on The Extras that would allow volunteers to go through the archive and make some sense out of it. Of course, they'd need a great visualization of the data to make the thing sing on the front-end, but the otherwise monotonous work of cataloging could be taken care of by the crowd – made un-monotonous to each crowd-member by fitting it into few-minute chunks). 

Well, that got me thinking. The tagging system described above is good for making assets accessible to (~)exact search and 'browse for similar.' What it doesn't give us is the relationships between bits of information. So, we might have a description of a film such as Schindler's List that reads: 

"The relocation of Polish Jews from surrounding areas to Krakow in late 1939, shortly after the beginning of World War II." (source: IMDB)

The information contained in this sentence is only valuable to a human reader – or when searched for the exact text contained in the phrase. So, if you were searching for "Krakow and World War II," great, you've got a hit. But, if you were searching for "Skala" (23km north of Krakow) and "World War II," you'd miss out.

Enter, the Semantic Web, the intention of which is to make information (such as the phrase above) make sense to computers by defining a set of relationships – and then connecting objects according to those relationships. 

The phrase could be semantically encoded as such:
Polish is the same as Poland
Poland is a country
Krakow is a city in Poland
World War II is a war
Schindler's List is a movie
Schlindler's List takes place in Poland

With this data (and more like it), the festival can start to ask some *really* interesting questions of their database. Such as:
Show me films made by men about the Nazi War that take place in Poland
Show me articles related to Jews in Krakow written between 1985 to 1987
Show me photos shot between 1930 and 1932 within a 100 mile radius of Krakow

So, what would you do with this newfound ability? For one, the festival would be able to answer all kinds of historical questions that were previously dis-connected. Doing a research project about Polish Jews from Krakow? You could run a series of queries to give you a whole mess of data to inform your project. Check out DBPedia and the amazing queries of this sort that you can run using Wikipedia as your datasource – such as "German musicians who were born in Berlin." 

Not a researcher or a history hound?The festival could build a "Semantic Explorer" the likes of which no-one has ever seen. I mean that literally, because I have yet to see a compelling user interface that allows people to explore semantic relationships. Here's the UI from one of the DBPedia offshoots:

Dbpedia

Not very exciting… or sensical to the human. Computers can dig it, but no go for the average rest of us. I've looked at a lot of these and haven't really come across anything that's blown me away. I've certainly seen visualizations that are blow away beautiful, or useful for one-off purposes, but not for generic navigation of any topic. 

This one, by MusicMap is one of the most useful I've come across. As in, you can actually navigate it and get to some useful information. And it's structure would seem to work for a variety of topics, not just music. 
246_big01
I have no idea if they're using a Semantic Web architecture… they could just be using track lists and album names… but, the point is that the UI could work for semantic exploration. This Flash app called Asterisq, Constellation Framework also looks interesting, but not very pretty. This paper spells out some of the issues surrounding semantic visualization.

This all sounds pretty great. But the big problem here is: who the heck is going to do all of this sematic encoding. It's the job of a lifetime…. or maybe not. 

Maybe semantic encoding can be done by the crowd. And maybe it can be fun! Maybe it can be a game-like challenge on The Extraordinaries. Each phrase could go through a few different passes (done by the same user or different ones). Take the same phrase as above:

"The relocation of Polish Jews from surrounding areas to Krakow in late 1939, shortly after the beginning of World War II."

Task 1: identify the nouns in this phrase by tapping them. Tap twice to de-select.

"The relocation of Polish Jews from surrounding areas to Krakow in late 1939, shortly after the beginning of World War II."

(i know "Polish" is an adjective here, but it could also be a noun. Maybe scrambling the ordering of the words would obviate this problem). 

Task 2: Complete this sentence: "Krakow is a ______." [When you start to fill in the blank, you get suggestions... so you start to type "Ci..." and it fills in "City" for you.] Tap the verb in this sentence to get a different verb. So if you tap "is a" you get other options like "is in," "belongs to," "takes place in," … There's some UI to figure out here (and a smart ontology to write), but I think it's doable. 

Maybe, like GWAP, you can play against someone else who needs to agree with what you've created. Or  the results of tasks 1 & 2 can go through a rating process.

This system could get even more interesting by incorporating the captioning and subtitle tracks from films. I'm really jazzed on dotSub right now – they've got a crowdsourced system for captioning and then translating films into a gazillion languages. Every phrase from every film has timecode associated with it. So you can click on a phrase from a film and skip right to it in that film. Way cool. 

Imagine combining this system with the one I describe above… so you can jump from film to film by way of relationships. If you're watching Schindler's List and someone mentions Moravia, you can pause the film and explore photos, films, articles, etc, about Moravia. You could get a list of films in which they've discussed car factories during World War II in Moravia. And then you could jump to the exact spot in the film where this topic is discussed. And you could do it in any language! You could be watching an English movie subtitled in Basque and jump to a related scene in a French movie, also subtitled in Basque.

This vision is pretty compelling. It doesn't seem incredibly complicated. Complicated, yes. But not incredibly. What am I missing? Could 90% of this be done just by tags? Have I overcomplicated something that can be simpler? Love some feedback.

February 8, 2009

The proposed impact of The Extraordinaries

by Jacob Colker

Photo

The Millenials are coming…

The Internet as we know it, is only 5,000 days old. Until now, all the amazing advances in society have been done on the Internet with a traditional computer and a hard wire cable plugged into the wall.

This is a Kitty Hawk moment in history, and the world is about to change.

With mobile Internet, smartphones are finally powerful enough to do amazing things remotely from anywhere on Earth within cell reception. No more walls or wires, the Internet is now fully woven into every moment of our lives. NOW is the moment to embrace the Information Era and step into the future of volunteering.

iPhone and iPod Touch users love mobile Internet, and they love the applications they can load onto their devices even more. Since July 11, 2008 (the date the App Store launched), more than 500 million applications have been downloaded in six months (Apple.com). Facebook for iPhone has already achieved 4.5 million users, and the recently launched UStream Video Service had 118,000 downloads in the first 24 hours. The iPhone isn’t just a phone, it’s a revolution in technology, and companies like Microsoft, Google, and RIM are rushing to catch up.

To-date, Apple has sold more than 13 million iPhones, and 8.5 million iPod Touches. Even more impressive, the iPhone alone represents 48% of mobile Internet usage in the U.S. (Admob, Dec 2008).

By Q3 of 2011, we plan to engage 785,000 mobile volunteers in small windows of time on a monthly basis. Over the next few years, as we develop our software for more smartphone platforms, build Facebook integration, earn media coverage and word of mouth, build partnerships and a record of success, and expand into other countries, we expect the number of users to skyrocket.

With our system, large social projects finally have critical mass, and the new technology will create thousands of possibilities we never imagined.

For example, the Library of Congress has tens of thousands of historical photos sitting on dusty servers with no way to search these archives. You can't type in "birds" or "1927” you must literally look through each photo one by one. Not very efficient! For a few people to catalog these photos, it would take years. With The Extraordinaries, thousands of volunteers could digitally label a few photos at a time. Just pick up your smartphone, look at a photo, tag it, and repeat. With a few weeks of effort from the crowd, entire photographic eras in history could be accessible to the public.

Our dream is to answer this: “What social problems can we solve with a million people working on them in brief moments of spare time?

(Photo Credit Unknown — contact Jacob@TheExtraordinaries.org if you are the photographer)

February 6, 2009

Information Age Volunteerism – Open Sourced! Crowdsourced!

by Ben Rigby

A piece I wrote just went up at TechPresident. Check it out! Here's the opening servo:

My mom friended me on Facebook last week – we've formally entered the
Information Age. The transformation touches so many aspects of our
lives, from family relationships to the seeds of our economy. But
despite my mom's online habits (and the empirical evidence it may
provide about living in the Information Age) and in the midst of great
national excitement about community service, the field of volunteerism
remains stolidly in the Industrial Era. It retains structured
hierarchies, formal vetting phases, and long-term relationships. But
the moment is ripe. We can look to Wikipedia, iStockPhoto, and other
Information Age examples to inform, enliven and inspire volunteerism.

http://www.techpresident.com/blog/entry/33677/information_age_volunteerism_open_sourced_crowdsourced

Ps. Get the the "servo" now? It's not a typo. It's a "salvo" for the Information Age. Ha ha… (well, I suppose it's also mechanical, but controlled by bits&bytes in most cases…. Okay, this is a lame joke overall.)

February 3, 2009

Future of independent media & long live Story

by Ben Rigby

10WestPierSmall
I just returned from a "salon" at my friends Tony & Mardie's houseboat in Sausalito. These guys always
bring together the smartest most interesting people. The topic was the future of independent media… which, to be honest, I haven't thought a whole lot about, but in prepping for the event, I came across a whole bunch of thoughts/ideas that were straight in line with the work we've been doing with The Extras.

In fact, I've had two extremely related conversations recently with some advisors who have said this:
1. You've got to make an emotional connection with people who use your service
and
2. You should list your tasks by outcomes instead of by action

I've intrepreted both (1) and (2) to mean that we need better Story. We need to enrapture the user in a narrative and then enable them to take action while the inspiration runs high. And, in fact, we've got the perfect application for this process to unfold. Watch a short film, listen to a short audio clip, or read a brief article, and then dive into the action… that results in real social value.

SO, hearing all these media folks speak gelled the idea for me… our lead-in is Story. We need what journalists, filmmakers, and storytellers have. We need to engage the user in Story and then deliver on action. The Extraordinaries, in one light, could even become some sort of delivery platform for independent media… and perhaps a route towards monetization.

And where it gets really exiciting is in location-based media. Imagine waiting for your bus at 6th & Market in the heart of the Tenderloin in San Francisco and getting a list of stories/actions that are related to your current locale. Eg: you watch a short film about single-room-occupancy (SROs) dwellings that are prevelant in the area and can then critique a resume for a SRO occupant who is applying for a job. Wow, that's cool. Again, really only possible at scale, but a potential of how this thing could play out.

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