Tag: Birmingham UK

Podnosh is based in Birmingham in the UK, so often we write about exciting things that are going on near us.

Links – Speak to Geeks plus more on Social Brum.

Social Birmingham.  Swedish Journalist Axel Anden travels to Birmingham to see if it’s true that we use social media for social good in a uniquely vibrant way. (He’ll report in Swedish in good time)
Speak to a Geek – Manchester does social media surgeries for vol orgs. Love the name – good luck.
Greenslade is cheerful about Fort Dunlop – Birmingham Post et al praised:  “my visit to Fort Dunlop last Friday dispelled every one of those concerns (and prejudices). I found instead a vibrant newspaper office on a vast scale, operating with the kind of journalistic enterprise that was heartening to see and to experience.”

We are glum about losing Jo Geary to the times. (Congrats bab)

Snow Bound? Then use this as your last chance to comment on the big city plan.

Don’t let the snow distract you from an important truth: it’s the last week to get your comments in to the consultation on the Council’s Big City Plan Work in Progress document. You can email, phone, or send an old fashioned letter (all the contact details are at the link above), but this Friday (6th Feb) is the closing date.

If you’re bemused some of the ideas or language, or would like to discuss your ideas openly in public and online, then the independent Big City Talk website may be the place to go. It’s got a “plain English” version of the document and also host comments by other Brummies who care just as much as you about how the City Centre might change over the next 20 years.

This is just one stage in progress towards a defined plan for the 800 Hectares of the city centre – but it is important to have you say now, because the next stage of the consultation may have already included your least favourite bit and some of the work is due to start soon.

Lifted almost whole from Jon Bounds – feel free to lift this from me.

New small tools for better government, horrid pdf's and the Power of Information Report in Beta

You’ve got two weeks to get your thoughts into the Power of Information Report.  They’ve offered it up on wordpress to allow people to start commenting. Compare this with how the same group were presenting information a year ago.Two chunks from the summary give you a flavour:

The public sector can play a valuable role in adding expert advice to support discussions online as long as it respects the context of the discussion.  This is a culture shift for people who work in public services and for civil servants in particular.  The Taskforce makes recommendations to help this culture shift and make more transparent the public sector’s attempts to engage online, which we think public servants should do as a matter of course.

and

Now is the ideal time for the public sector to acquire new skills and practices required to follow through the innovative approaches the Taskforce recommends.  Early signs from the Obama administration in the USA suggest that digital innovators in the Administration are thinking along about re-use of data along the lines above.  When mainstreaming any innovation, systemic culture and behaviour change is required. The Taskforce makes a range of recommendations to enable and embed those changes.

Tom Watson and  Richard Allan should be proud of where they are at.  Secretly Brum can also be. Why? Because it includes a complimentary reference to the Big City Talk work done by volunteer bloggers here in Birmingham.

The wordpress site has been created by the DIUS Social Media team. Steph Gray’s folk have also made Who Blocks?This fab tool is a survey of which social media sites government can and cannot access. The detailed results can be found here whilst the

The key problem areas then seem to be:  Online video, more than a third are unable to view YouTube videos correctly.  Social networking, nearly half are unable to access Facebook. Webmail, two fifths have access to Gmail blocked, perhaps for justifiable security reasons

    Steph has also been working with Harry Metcalfe on a simple site which should make future online consultation easier. It turns a “horrid” pdf into xml and html – which makes it much easier to use these cumbersome documents for much more agile websites. These in turn make consultation much richer and conversational.

    Something we were shown at Saturday’s hugely enjoyable UKGov Barcamp is: innovate.direct.gov.uk/  Think of this as the opening to a playground for people who want to change the way the Directgov site works.  It’s inspired by the BBC Backstage model – to encourage exprimentation and improve the relationship between huge government web projects and smaller more nimble experimenters and rapid developers.

    Rewiredstate is already planning a hack day for government next month.

    Meanwhile Pez from Lichfield District Council has bunged together a useful page for aggregating material on local government api’s (tag localgovapi ) and I’m already in for helping to organise a localgovcamp here in Brum (probably).

    What do bloggers look like?

    [youtube]bEPbtfdIkVY[/youtube]

    This video was a quick one shot at the Social Media Surgery for voluntary groups in Birmingham this evening (should say 2009 – my bad). Despite the leading questions, I hope it gives you a sense of how people from community groups feel about the help they get from volunteer bloggers and social media folk. About 25 “recipients” (real people) plus  the social media surgeons who were in no particular order:

    Jon Bounds, Pete Ashton, Jon Hickman, Joanna Geary, Gavin Wray, Benjamin Brum, Simon Whitehouse (see here), Abby Corfan, Phil Oakley, Watfordgap, Danny Smith, Katie Spragg, Mark Steadman.

    For a more general view please have a look here. Pete shot this and uploaded it there and then to demonstrate embedding. Bless him!