October So Far

October 6 2010 |

Wild Salmon and You


counting out Canadian Tire money in order to buy a humidifier for our floor


B.A. Johnston Concert on Third Ave

Filed under: personal, photos




Interesting…

October 5 2010 |

BC’s largest lumber company is now on Twitter.
Currently, the account is following the premier, the leader of the opposition, the deputy premier, two of the Vancouver Sun’s more storied writers, and me.
Interesting choice.

Filed under: personal, social media




Ferret Rescue, Prince George Politics, and Quality Audiences Online

October 4 2010 |

Earlier this year, I was invited to give a presentation on “how to blog” for a youth forum focused on sustainable management of local water systems. I don’t know much about the specifics of that, but I do know a little bit about how to set up lines of communication using the internet and I thought it would be an interesting experience, so I agreed.
The one major change I made was to take the focus away from “how to blog” and move it to “how to build communities online.” I feel like blogging, Facebook, Twitter, etc all have negative connotations to the uninitiated– they have an air of triviality about them. And indeed, much of it can be banal, but then so can many books, newspaper columns, and conversations, yet that doesn’t mean those mediums can’t also be capable of great work. The word “blog” may as well be “book” since it refers to nothing more that the way the content is presented, whereas the actual content can range anywhere from the silly to the highly academic.
I was a bit nervous about how I would handle a room full of people of various ages coming at this with different levels of experience, but it turns out I need not have worried. After a fifteen minute on-stage interview for the full delegation, I wound up in a room with only one person (it may not have helped that midway through my on-stage interview about why I thought social media was useful I mentioned that I had essentially given my talk already). However, I did not take this as a negative, and here’s why:
It’s quality, not quantity
My primary message, both in the interview and in my prepared presentation, was that with online communities, it’s more important to focus on quality of your audience rather than quantity. You don’t have a lot of overhead to sustain a Facebook page, so why focus on trying to build a large, largely unengaged audience rather than focusing on those you really want to be speaking to. The example I use is Ferrets North Information and Rescue. For those who don’t know, this is the non-profit society my significant other runs out of our house focused on fostering and re-homing unwanted ferrets in northern British Columbia.
When she was first toying with the idea of starting the society, the first step she took was to set up a blog full of ferret information. Some of the information was highly generic and could be applicable to anyone with a ferret: ferret colours, how to litter train, nutrition. But other posts were highly specific, such as vets in Prince George who will see ferrets or the best places in northern BC to get deals on ferret supplies. To 99.999% of the people online, this information is absolutely useless. But the the 0.001% of people who live in northern BC and have ferrets, this is highly relevant– and this blog was the only place to visit and share this information. Northern BC ferret owners found this information, added their own tips in the comments, and ultimately joined the Facebook community created around Ferrets North (facebook.com/ferretsnorth).
Now, here’s the key. When Ferrets North was ready to move beyond a website and into a full-fledged society, it was this small community of people who helped make it happen. In fact, the founding board was made up almost entirely of people who had connected online thanks to the blog and Facebook page. This is a small group of people– but they are the right people. They make up the core volunteers who provide the time and money to make ferrets north run and provide a home to unwanted ferrets. They may not be a large audience, but they are a quality one. And, of course, once they got involved they ceased being an audience and started being a community– another tenant of social media.
So to bring it back to my talk. There was one person in the room. A couple of others stopped in and asked questions throughout, but they were involved in running the conference and couldn’t stay. But the people who were around were the people I wanted to talk to. One runs a small media company a town, another is starting a blog on how students in Prince George can stretch their budgets. And the one who was there for most of the time has started a blog that I am incredibly excited about: it’s called North of Centre, and it is focused solely on municipal politics in Prince George.
Talk about quality.
I’m of the opinion that there’s a lot of room for citizen journalists to get more involved in covering municipal politics, and the fact that this is being done is fantastic news. I was able to share a few tips I had picked up, but I doubt there’s much I could have taught, so it became more of a two-way conversation, which is actually pretty great. If I was to get into a conversation with anyone about the potential for social media at spreading ideas, there is no one I would rather do it with then the one person who has decided to use the opportunities afforded by the internet to turn a sharper eye on my local government. His idea is that there are people who would like to see a more detailed analysis of municipal matters than currently offered, and I’m among those who would like to see such a thing. I am now in his community, and I’m hoping to help spread the word. And if anything I had to say helps him spread his ideas, than I consider my presentation a wild success.
Links:
Ferrets North Information and Rescue Society (website, blog, Facebook)
North of Centre (website, Facebook)

Filed under: Best Of, social media | Discussion





Social Media Resources

October 2 2010 |

I’m giving a presentation on social media resources today. I’m posting a page of links to services I describe here so that people who are interested can learn more. I’m going to try to update as time goes on, too. https://andrewkurjata.ca/socialmediaresources
This cartoon, however, is the best resource around:

Filed under: social media




October 1 2010 |


Having your own house adds yet another dimension to Calvin and Hobbes. Do you know how much it would take to replace this stuff?

Filed under: house and home, misc




September 29 2010 |


This is awesome.
Click the pic above or right here and start playing asteroids. Steer with the arrow keys, shoot with space bar, move forward with the up arrow, and if you run out of things to shoot, press and hold B.
I definitely did not make this, full credit to Erik Rothoff.

Filed under: misc




How I Fell Out of Love With Scribd

September 24 2010 |

Scribd 101: What is Scribd
This was going to be a post about how I fell in love with Scribd, but instead it’s one about how I could have fell in love with it, but instead now find it less than perfect.
First, what is Scribd? The object at the top of this post is both a guide to what it is, and an example of what it is. It’s a way of sharing documents (.pdf, .doc, .txt or pretty much anything else) across the web in a format that is readable on any screen without losing styles such as font or spacings. In that sense it’s a lot like Google Docs, but to my mind it has one clear advantage: the ability to embed the documents in a page. That’s how you’re able to read the little presentation above without having to go to a different page. And for me, it was a huge boon– over the last couple of days, I’ve used it to put volunteer forms on the Coldsnap website, foster requirements on FerretsNorth.org, and a full policy manual on CFUR. No clumsy attachments on the page, no worries about whether or not the forms are compatible with the user’s software– it’s right there, for all to see. Why is this important? One of the number one barriers to having the general public access forms (like ferret adoption forms) has been the complaint “I wasn’t able to download the document.” Often, it simply means they weren’t able to find the link to click on to take you to the document page and then download it. But with Scribd (it seemed), the document was there in plain sight– impossible to miss! Easy to read! And downloadable and printable right there from the page! It was this last point that made me fall out of love with it.
Indeed, Scribd documents do have “download” and “print” buttons right on them. And when I was testing them out, they worked great– you could even choose what format to download in, depending on your preference. But after putting them on the Ferrets North website, I decided to show off what I had done to my significant other. I went on her computer, navigated to the page, demonstrated the full-screen read mode, and then hit “download.”
Nothing.
Tried again.
Nothing.
Went to the document page and hit download. This time, it took me to the login/signup page.
Every other time I’d been testing Scribd, I’d been logged in. And when I was, everything worked fine. But apparently, without an account, you can’t download documents. A new step– and a new barrier. This is the exact opposite of why I wanted to use Scribd.
I wanted to use Scribd because it reduced the number of steps it took for someone to access forms. But in order to download something like a volunteer form, they are now being asked to sign up for yet another service. Granted, it’s easy enough– anyone with a Facebook account or e-mail address can do it– but for some people, the requirement of having to hand over your information to another website will be enough to deter them. And that might be enough to deter them from using the form at all.
Scribd is still a good service. Embedding is fantastic, and anyone (with or without an account) can still read and print documents. But I wonder why they’ve decided to make this little barrier to downloading. In their FAQ, all they offer is a vague notion of curbing “abuse of the Scribd system“, which I suspect might be linked to their metrics, but if that’s the case I would happily make it so my forms aren’t measured in their system so that they are freely downloadable. Or why not just have captcha requirements for downloads in order to verify your humanity?
As it is, I’ll still be using it, but I’ll be keeping my eyes open for something better, and I’ll be offering links to Google Docs files for those who want to download without an account. As soon as Google perfects an embed system (they currently only offer .pdf embeds, and they’re less than perfect), Scribd will be out of luck.

Filed under: reviews, social media




For Fantastic Customer Service, Go to Marine Plus

September 23 2010 |

I don’t have a boat, but if I did I would get all my supplies from Marine Plus. Here’s why.
One of our mic stands at CFUR broke. Well, it didn’t break, but the bolt holding it onto the desk did. Seems fairly straightforward to replace, but as it turns out, it was pretty tough. I spent the better part of the morning driving around town trying to find a music or hardware store that had one with the right thread and at the right length. Not that these places didn’t try to help, because they did, and without naming names let me just say this: shop local if you want people who will actually try to help, and if they don’t have something will still try to offer a solution.
Which is how I wound up at Marine Plus, a boating store. One of the guys at Northern Hardware (another case-study in customer service) surmised that it would likely have a selection of long bolts, one of which might serve our needs. He was right, but not without work. The guy at Marine Plus spent a good fifteen minutes searching through his stock to find something with the right thread before finally finding one that was about five feet longer than what we needed. So he cut it, then added some bolts in order to make sure it would stay secure on the desk. Then, he charged me nothing. Not for the part, not for the service– even though, as a radio station, we likely wouldn’t be giving him lots of repeat business. So I’m doing what I can– recommending Marine Plus to anyone wondering where they can go to get help with their boats– or their bolts.

Filed under: CFUR, personal, Prince George, reviews | Discussion





Sometimes, My Hair Illustrates Exactly How I Feel

September 20 2010 |

Owly Images
Goodnight.

Filed under: personal




Shout Out to Prince George Bus Drivers

September 20 2010 |

Prince George bus drivers (and bus drivers in general, probably) get a fair amount of grief, for various reasons. But really, they have a pretty tough task– if you leave late, people are late, if you leave early, you miss your stop. Staying on schedule in variable traffic cannot be easy. But I want to give a thanks to two bus drivers this week who saw me coming to catch the bus and were sure to wait for me– one said she always waits a little bit because people usually are just a bit late. It goes a long way to spreading goodwill to the organization. Cheers.

Filed under: Prince George, transit




The Archival and Ephemeral Properties of Blogging and Twitter

September 19 2010 |

For whatever reason, a cough that was better today than it had been for the last few days and had been pretty much MIA returned with a vengeance and interrupted my (and my significant other’s) sleep. So I’m up drinking some niocitrin and decided to change the way my blog’s Twitter digest works.
Regular readers (ha!) will notice that over about the last couple of weeks I’ve had two nearly-daily posts called “links for d-m-y” and “my day in twitter updates for d-m-y”. These are both minimalist ways for me to take content I create elsewhere (my Delicious bookmarks account and my Twitter account) and automatically import them into my blog. Part of what compelled me to do that was this post by Scott Rosenberg:

“Everything we put on the Web is both ephemeral and archival — ephemeral in the sense that so much of what we post is only fleetingly relevant, archival in the sense that the things we post tend to stay where we put them so we can find them years later.
“Is there any way to find what you wrote on Facebook last year? I hope so, for the sake of the millions of people who are chronicling their lives on Mark Zuckerberg’s servers. But I’ve certainly never been able to find it.”

This is true. Go ahead and try to find your first post on Facebook. Or even a specific one from a few months back. It’s time-consuming at best. Search functionality is minimal, permalinks are tough to find– for all intents and purposes, that information is lost. If you think there’s any value to what you’re saying on the web, even just in the personal-diary or personal-correspondence sense, this can be problematic. Essentially, Facebook cares about what’s going on now and nothing else.
I tend to think of online activity as a little bit more than that. To me, it’s both a means of communicating what’s going on now, but also a fantastic tool for chronicling what was going on then. I can go into my Flickr account or my blog and search by date, letting me have a view of where I was and what I was doing at specific points in time. In this sense, it acts as a daily log, no different than the personal journals kept by people for ages, except that it also happens to be available for others to see, if they so choose. There’s other things at play, of course, but for me it’s these archival properties that are useful.
It was thinking about it in this way that made me decide to start importing my Tweets into this blog. First, Twitter has spotty archival ability and second, who wants to go through the process of finding individual tweets when it would make more sense to have them be sorted by day using the more-refined search capabilities attributed to a blog? So I started using Twitter Digest to import my daily status updates and conversations. Not only did this give me more ownership and protection, it gave me an easy way to update my blog.
But having done this for a couple of weeks, I don’t like the effect it’s having on my blog’s readability. Since I post a couple of times a week, at most, my longer-form essays are being drowned out in a sea of status updates. There are other solutions to this, such as removing the “Tweet” category from the front page or changing the layout, but ultimately I think the best solution is scaling-back the digest to be updated/imported once a week, rather than once a day. If anyone really wants to know what I’m doing in the last 24 hours, they’d be following me on Twitter. If they’re only mildly curious, they can check in on my blog once a week to see the digest alongside whatever else I’ve written. It solves my primary problem without sacrificing the readability of my blog.
As a side note, I’m keeping the daily links update. I have a constant pull between a main blog that consists solely of my own, longer-form content and a more Tumblr-style blog that includes my content and content I’ve found elsewhere. The daily links helps me achieve a happy medium, allowing me to share (and archive) things I’ve found interesting on a daily basis without creating multiple “re-blogged” posts a day.
If you are a reader of this blog, I would appreciate some feedback on what you find makes for a better/more interesting reading experience, but otherwise, I think I’m happy with what I’ve got.

Filed under: ideas, meta, social media




Possible Causes of My Sore Throat

September 15 2010 |

Possible Cures: Green Tea in One, Cayenne Pepper and Salt Water in the Other


1. Shaking people’s hands as I meet and greet new students
2. Having lunch with someone who was recently sick
3. High-intensity bike-riding in a high-pollution zone
4. Staying up late to do home renovations
5. Staying up late to dance
6. Being exposed to fine particulate as a result of home renovations
7. Poor nutrition
8. All of the above over the course of one week.

Filed under: personal | Discussion





September 14, 2010

September 15 2010 |

Busy day today. After staying up until 2 am grouting our tiles (so glad we had extra wood to do the halls, instead of full tile as initially planned), got up this morning for a 9 am meet and greet with the new cast of Health on the Hill. This is program on CFUR radio put together by medical students as a year-long assignment, where they discuss various aspects of health care and the training they have to go through to do it. It’s a good program, started by a separate group last year, and they managed to find a new set to take it on (apparently third and fourth year med students don’t have a lot of extra time to produce a weekly radio show). They’re all enthusiastic about it, and are obviously reasonably intelligent people, so it’s nice to have it coming, alongside ideas some new volunteers are talking about. It’s nice to have bodies around again and meet new people. It’s like going back to school without all the homework. The toughest thing is explaining that I’m not a student, and I’m not planning on doing a masters, either.
After that I did some office tasks, including cleaning out my inbox, which had piled up over the summer. I use various “inbox zero” techniques that include mass filing emails from the same person, and especially flagging things that are “to do” and then filing them in a folder of the same name. Something about taking over a hundred emails and getting them down to three key items or so is very satisfying.
For lunch, I rode my bike downtown to meet with people from my other job, the CBC. A higher-up was in from Vancouver to meet the northern staff, and we got the opportunity to discuss my thoughts about the show. The first question was “what do you like about Daybreak North?” and the answer I gave was essentially the last paragraph of this post— helps to have your thoughts in order. We also had lunch, where I saw one of my photos in a poster. Also, a ladybug and a new Listen Bird. Oh, and we talked scheduling, and I’ll be back at CBC 2.5 days a week from Sept 20 until Christmas– it’s two-job time again.

I then went and picked up a bunch of audio cables CFUR needed– various ones had stopped working, plus we needed new ones in order to hook up some new equipment, and it hadn’t been done over the summer until we got a final tally of what we needed. After missing the bus from downtown and biking like mad to catch it partway back to the university (huge cardio burst), I managed to hook everything up, including an old record player for the pre-record studio. It was too quiet, so I boosted it through an old amplifier. It’s a pretty old-school set-up, but I’m proud of it.

Also had two bands stop by– they were touring through town– and they asked if there was any possibility of getting on-air. Fortunately, at just that time it was the CFUR Mixtape, which is a new portion of programming designed to be flexible so that we can slot in interviews, psas, and the like. So we went ahead and had an impromptu on-air session. The stand-out thing to me about the band is that they had these promo cards where you go to a website, enter a code, and download a cd– then you throw the card in the ground and it goes to seed and with luck turns into flowers. Pretty cool idea.

Then it was home to polish tile, dinner with family (including aunt and uncle from out of town) and home, where I started writing this and we let ferrets out. They’ve been cooped up while we’ve been doing renos, so they’re pretty hyper. It’ll be nice to be able to let them out regularly, soon.

Filed under: personal




Photos From Writing-On-Stone Provincial Park

September 14 2010 |


I’m still going through photos from our southern Alberta trip. It was great for photographs, but it makes sorting them tough.

Filed under: personal, photos | Discussion





Some Things Never Change

September 13 2010 |

Neighbour’s Kid: Hello!
Me: Hi.
Neighbour’s Kid: How was your day?
Me: Fine. How was yours?
Neighbour’s Kid: OK.
Neighbour’s Kid: It would have been better if I didn’t have to go to school.
Me: Yeah, mine would have been better if I didn’t have to go to work.

Filed under: personal




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