.:|randgaenge|:.

thomas n. burg – on social media, software tools and its benefits for us, and sometimes gossip.

!about blogtalk

Back then in the summer of 2002, I remember, I had a certain feeling or better a certainty that emerged out of a very simple but effective daily practice and experience. After only 3 months of using a piece of software that was built to create a weblog I knew that the network I tapped into is going to change my view of the world that I live in. At that time I was heading the Center for New Media at the Danube University of Krems and somehow peripherally, partly due to my job description, I was drawn into that enormous learning network. It started off as a simple practice of collecting links to sources on the web thus becoming an information-filter for others. Within a couple of weeks I became part of a network of like-minded people on a global scale. Via reading their blogs – via RSS – I started participating in an ongoing chat that dealt with all the topics I was interested in from my professional point of view. This conversational style increased or even sparked off my daily dose of learning. I never learned that much before. And I still do that. Not only do I learn on a factual level but I also get to know the people that are closely linked to this pieces of microcontent that are published all across the world and – at least for me – interwoven via RSS.

After 2 months of usage that certainty made it evident for me that with blogs and the related networks we do have a very powerful personal publishing tool available that will augment our personal scope of networking as a base for learning enourmously. I was quite certain that this will not only effect the private usage but even more the organizational usage of it. Since then I am most interested in transfering the lessons learned in the open web into the professional and organizational context.

So in 2002 after a brief introspection I decided to organize a conference on that topic and together with Max Scheugl the first draft of BlogTalk – the first international conference on weblogs – was created. It turned out to be a huge success and had a successor in 2004, thanks to Markus Toyfl for helping to design it, and eventually turned for its third edition – that was conceived and organized together with Jan Schmidt – into a more general conference on social software – a practice and phenomenon that took shape already in late 2002.

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burgWeine Click

Libri.de – Messages from the Lost Continent

Horst just published a new book. He asked me: if you conceive of it of any value then you might post it here. Well, I do:

Messages from the Lost Continent: “Five agents are sent to a mysterious continent on a mission so secret that not even they are told anything about it. Their only link back to headquarters is an encrypted ( ) e-mail channel through which they receive instructions and report back the results of their investigations.

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Social Patterns

dumpster.jpgFound this fantastic example pf pattern recognition ( ) and navigation via Chris Langreiter.

I wonder if social software as a term, concept, and especially interaction ( ) metaphor depends on quantitative analysis.

The Dumpster: “The Dumpster is an interactive online visualization that attempts to depict a slice through the romantic lives of American teenagers.

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places

I spend some time these days at the Österreichische Nationalbibliothek ( ), it’s completely refurbished. Found this old photography from 2003 . The new main reading room looks now completely different will provide a new image soon.