Tag: blogging

Who are the G20Voice bloggers – a list

Dave Walker of Church Times created this original drawing.
Dave Walker of Church Times created this original drawing.

Who are the G20 bloggers (?) I hear you ask.   Here’s a simple list of our sites:

Daniel Kaufman  www.thekaufmannpost.net

Ahmed Al-Omran  http://saudijeans.org

Sokari Ekine  www.blacklooks.org

Simon Berry  www.colalife.org/blog/

Richard Murphy www.taxresearch.org.uk

Dave Walker Cartoonist

Jessica Uribe Salinas   vivirmexico.com

Jotman (writes anonymously)  http://jotman.blogspot.com/

Duncan Green www.oxfamblogs.org/fp2p/

Simon Todd www.climatecafe.org/blog

Vikki Chowney tech.bitchbuzz.com/

Cheryl Conte www.jackandjillpolitics.com/

Rodrigo Alvares  www.novacorja.org/

Daudi Were www.mentalacrobatics.com/think/

Dr Kumi Naidoo www.huffingtonpost.com/kumi-naidoo

James Simmonds www.sendmyfriend.org/news/young-campaigners

Sunball Hussain  www.myplatform2blogs.com/info/myplatform2

Joe Rowley  www.myplatform2blogs.com/info/myplatform2

Rowan Davies www.mumsnet.com

Virgina Simmons http://one.org/blog/

Michael Kleinmann http://humanitarianrelief.change.org/

Nick Booth http://podnosh.com/blog

Rui Chenggang http://blog.sina.com.cn/ruichenggang

Faik Uyanik   www.faikuyanik.com

Nacho Escolar www.escolar.net

Carole Edrich http://www.flickr.com/photos/webwandering

Richard Murphy www.taxresearch.org.uk

Alex Evans www.globaldashboard.org/

Kady O’Malley www.macleans.ca/itq

Montserrat Nicolas http://curvaspoliticas.blogspot.com/

Anthony Painter www.e8voice.blogspot.com/

Lloyd Davis www.perfectpath.co.uk/

Diana Vogtel www.350.org

Cédric Kalonji  www.congoblog.net/

Lani C. Villanueva

Also blogging with us is

Tom Watson www.tom-watson.co.uk

If I’ve missed any of you please shout.

Links – Twitter job loss, Googlewatt, play, NHS and Jade Goody, flashswap and flashlit pull content!

The cautionary tale of how not to use twitter to tell folk you don’t like the job you’ve just been offered.  “Use your brains. The internet is a very public place. More so even than the water cooler. Exercise the same common sense and decorum you would in “real life” social situations.”

Participo on the home energy monitoring software Googlewatt: “Ambient data management, and visualisation at a personal level, along with the massive aggregation of zillions of households, plays right into Google’s core strengths…a lot like the really interesting Google Flu Tracking initiative that uses their search data to detect trends in search terms that predict early outbreaks.

The NHS has had the wisdom to spend some money with google for the search term Jade Goody – it point people to the site which encourages take of of the jab which can protect against cervical cancer.
Tessy at Thriving Too has this quick post about a whole resource of tools for what she calls purposeful play:   “An amazing resource for learning through games has been created by James Neill. Neill is a lecturer at the Centre for Applied Psychology at the University of Canberra (Australia). His highly valuable collection of Games and Activities is one of the very best I have seen.”

Flashswap was a huge success, with loads of professional and hobby photographers swapping prints to support the campaign for a Birmingham Photospace.

Screen West Midlands on it’s first joint funding with 4iP – yoosk.com

Museum 2.0 reviews have 2004 project to get people to find their own content in museums: “Which brings us back to Sweden. In 2004, the firm Smart Studio created a unique flashlight-based interpretative interface for exploration of a historic blast furnace site in the old Swedish steel town of Avesta. The site itself has no interpretative material–no labels or obvious media elements. But each visitor is given a special flashlight, used both to illuminate the space (for general exploration) and to activate interpretative experiences include light projection, sound, and occasional physical experiences (i.e. smoke and heat). There are indicated hotspots in the site which activate interpretative material when the flashlights light on them. Smart Studio launched with two layers of content in the hotspots–educational (how the blast furnace works, explanation of certain elements and history) and poetic (imagistic stories from the perspective of steel workers, based on historical content). Visitors can walk through the blast furnace site and receive none of the interpretative material if they choose, or they can use their flashlights to activate content.”

It’s great to see how Birmingham’s Jubilee Debt Campaign groups has begun to get guest authors for the blog they set up through the social media surgeries.

4th Social Media Surgery for Birmingham charities, community groups and Volantary Orgs

The new venue for the social media surgeries.

Sorry it is such short notice. The next social media surgery for voluntary groups is this Wednesday March 25th 2009, as a drop in from 5.30 to 7pm.  We have a plush new venue, which is a few minutes walk from BVSC. For all the details and how to sign up please visit the link below:

http://www.paradisecircus.com/social-media-surgeries/

The surgeries are run by a group of volunteers, mostly from the Birmingham bloggers groups. They are willing to show people from the cities charities and voluntary organisation how they can make best use of social media.   If you want to see what people have made of the first three surgeries you might like to watch this video on youtube:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bEPbtfdIkVY

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)