
I’m sitting here talking to Zainab and Dalal from the Yemeni Women and Children’s Society at the Balsall Heath Social Media Surgery. I’m just showing them how quickly you can publish something to the web, including a link and a picture.

I’m sitting here talking to Zainab and Dalal from the Yemeni Women and Children’s Society at the Balsall Heath Social Media Surgery. I’m just showing them how quickly you can publish something to the web, including a link and a picture.
I really enjoyed this report from Chris Heath for Staffslive about the first social media surgery in Stoke on Trent. Chris, a journalism student at Staffs Uni, includes some cracking formal and traditional media techniques – like the walking piece to camera plus suit and tie – to explain a remorsely informal newish media process. His report though does show just the sort of people who benefit from the surgeries and why they find them valuable.
It includes contributions from surgeons Carl Plant and the great Mike Rawlins.
Stoke on Trent have also begun using www.socialmediasurgery.com our beta site for organising surgeries – which made me smile a great deal. The site is designed to make it very easy to organise surgeries – including automatically generate flyers, record outcome, keep track of who came and what they did.
Meanwhile Luke Beamont made this wonderful audio slideshow of what one person got out of attending the social media surgery in Leeds.
Given the choice I think I prefer the second treatment – although I’m also a big fan of using an audio interview with a simple still photo to cover events.
Luke is also a student – find all his stuff here: www.lukebeaumont.co.uk.
Chapter 15 of the US Govt’s National Broadband Plan is very well worth a read.
There’s plenty in it, it gets specific about what needs to be done to grab some civic engagement benefits from the web and it says some blindingly obvious but important things. It’s main proposals are:
Create an open and transparent government
Build a robust digital media ecosystem
Expand civic engagement through social media
Increase innovation within government
Good stuff – mostly.
Since it was published earlier this week it’s received a range of responses. Creative Commons wants other parts of the plan to go a bit further on opening up copyright use for ediucation
The FCC has recognized that robust broadband infrastructure is crucial for citizens to participate effectively in the 21st century digital environment. Open licensing is a piece of this critical infrastructure.
The plan is also being preceded by Google’s competition to offer a 1gb cable into a us community that makes the best case for it – the Boradband Plan says every US community should have one – for the benefit of public services.
The Knight News Foundation rightly highlights other parts of the plan which focus on digital literacy, although I sometimes think this gets mixed up with basic computer skills – yes being able to use a mouse and search the web are important skills – but digital literacy is much more about whether you have an appreciation of how you can use those techniques to change the thinsg you do and your place in the conversation. Meanwhile their Digital Media Centre chews over the implications of Chapter 15 for Journalists from making more data/draft legislation available.
Journalists and others who are accustomed to following and explaining legislation might find business opportunities to layer context on proposed legislation—making it easier to understand what’s going on, what happens next, optimum timing for comments, and also getting citizens’ questions answered (since often people have questions before they can formulate comments). This is an example of applying journalism skills as a direct service, rather than simply as a means to create content that’s supported by ads or subscriptions.
Bill Schrier – the Chief Information Officer for city hall in Seattle is very keen on the plan, including elements in it which will make it easier for local government to provide the ambitious (but essential) 100 mgbits of acess to home in America.

I’ve just got back from the National Digital Inclusion conference – very, enjoyable. I was particularly interested in the strand on social housing and digital inclusion which has spun off the work chaired by Helen Milner on just that problem.