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	<title>OUseful.Info, the blog... &#187; Why I (Edu)Blog &#8211; Questionnaire Response</title>
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		<title>OUseful.Info, the blog... &#187; Why I (Edu)Blog &#8211; Questionnaire Response</title>
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		<title>Why I (Edu)Blog &#8211; Questionnaire Response</title>
		<link>http://blog.ouseful.info/2012/06/14/why-i-edublog-questionnaire-response/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.ouseful.info/2012/06/14/why-i-edublog-questionnaire-response/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 14 Jun 2012 12:52:17 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Tony Hirst</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Anything you want]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Alice Bell is &#8220;currently working with colleagues at the OU’s Institute of Educational Technology on a small research project exploring communities of education blogging&#8221;. She has a questionnaire here. Below are my responses&#8230; &#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8211; Blog URL: blog.ouseful.info What do you blog about? My blog is a catch-all searchable notebook, where I tend to post code [&#8230;]<img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=blog.ouseful.info&#038;blog=325417&#038;post=8000&#038;subd=ouseful&#038;ref=&#038;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Alice Bell is &#8220;currently working with colleagues at the OU’s Institute of Educational Technology on a small research project exploring communities of education blogging&#8221;. She has a <a href="http://alicerosebell.wordpress.com/2012/06/01/research-education-bloggers/">questionnaire here</a>. Below are my responses&#8230;<br />
&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8211;<br />
<strong>Blog URL:</strong> blog.ouseful.info</p>
<p><strong>What do you blog about?</strong> My blog is a catch-all searchable notebook, where I tend to post code fragments and tutorials relating to tools and techniques that may be of interest to &#8220;digital scholars&#8221; and/or relevant to open, online educators. I also posts thoughts, observations and round-up posts on things that interest me (open data policy and data visualisation at the moment, but in the past I&#8217;ve also focussed on search engine matters, the role of digital libraries, information skills). The style of writing is at times quite unforgiving &#8211; the blog is primarily my working open notebook, and makes heavy use of links to previous posts of my own (eg <a href="http://blog.ouseful.info/2010/08/30/the-structure-of-ouseful-info/">http://blog.ouseful.info/2010/08/30/the-structure-of-ouseful-info/</a> ), as well as third party posts. Which is to say, some things I post only make sense if you know what I&#8217;ve posted before, or follow the links! I also use blog posts as a hub for linking to other resources I&#8217;ve posted on Slideshare, for example, code snippets/gists on Github, data scrapers and UIs on Scraperwiki, bookmarl stacks on delicious, etc. The blog (and blog feed) also syndicates occasional &#8220;feedthru&#8221; links tagged as such on my delicious account.</p>
<p><strong>Are you paid to blog?</strong> I blog in work time and my own free time, but the OUseful.info blog posts are always done with a view that folk may associate them with activities I am engaged with as an OU academic, albeit working to a personal research agenda. I see the OUseful.info blog in part as a knowledge transfer/public engagement activity that tries to demonstrate how to work with information by using and appropriating tools that are freely available &#8216;in the future that is already around us&#8217;.  I post several times a week, with posts that typically take anything between 10 mins and an hour or two to put together. For practical write-ups, it often takes longer to write the blog post than to it took to work out how to do the thing I&#8217;m blogging about..</p>
<p><strong>What do you do professionally (other than blog)?</strong> I am an academic in the Open University&#8217;s Department of Communication and Systems. I&#8217;ve worked on a variety of courses (Artificial Intelligence, robotics, information skills, game design and development) as well as chipping ideas in a variety of OU projects where my activities and ideas may be, erm, OUseful&#8230;</p>
<p><strong>How long have you been blogging at this site?</strong> On wordpress.com, since July 2008, but I had a Typepad blog with the OUseful.info name on an OU blog server from 2005 and had been blogging for a while before that using Blogger.</p>
<p><strong>Do you write in other platforms? (e.g. in a print magazine?)</strong> My communication activities are based around OUseful.info, the blog, my Twitter account (<em>@psychemedia</em>), and conference/workshop presentations (slides from which get posted to slideshare &#8211; <em>psychemedia</em> again). I occasionally post short &#8220;blog like&#8221; annotations to images/screencaptures posted to flickr (<em>psychemedia</em> again) where I think I may want to point folk to the image their rather than posting about it on the blog, or as annotations to bookmark links on Delicious. I&#8217;ve also started pulling together curated Delicious stacks (ordered bundles on bookmarks, account name is&#8230; <em>psychemedia</em>) on particular topics. The important thing for me is that: 1) I can rediscover whatever I posted, wherever it is; 2) point to it via a URL.</p>
<p><strong>Can you remember why you started blogging?</strong> Searchable, personal notebook. My assumptions were (and still are) that: no-one would read it; only people who were interested would find it; if they were interested they may either find it useful and/or be able to correct something I&#8217;d said or answer a question I&#8217;d raised. I also believe that the power of the web (at least, in a web dominated by search engines that in part rely on PageRank/link related SERP rankings) is related to its link structure, and that it it part of my *duty* as an open digital scholar to help shape that terrain by linking together content that seems to me to fit together. My PageRank influence may be weak, but it&#8217;s there.</p>
<p><strong>What keeps you blogging?</strong> If I don&#8217;t blog my notes, I don&#8217;t have any notes. Having been a blogger for several years, and having been tracking odd bits of technology on a daily basis for years, I&#8217;m also finding there is value in the archive, for example as a way of recalling what was current or upcoming two, three, four years ago, or what we thought the future might be in years past&#8230; It&#8217;s also interesting to see the extent to which weak predictions either play out, or don&#8217;t&#8230; Some posts I &#8220;maintain&#8221; with updates that show the progression of a particular idea (eg <a href="http://blog.ouseful.info/2008/10/22/amazon-edge-services-digital-manufacturing/" rel="nofollow">http://blog.ouseful.info/2008/10/22/amazon-edge-services-digital-manufacturing/</a> ).</p>
<p><strong>Do you have any idea of the size or character if your audience? How?</strong> WordPress blog stats, which are pretty ropey, suggest daily views of about 1000 on the blog.ouseful.info site (it was around 1500 a day a couple of months ago but a Google search engine algorithm change knocked me back) over 950 (in total) or so posts, and 150 or so email subscribers. A handful of posts pull 50-100 views each per day, then there&#8217;s a long tail. I was getting about 30-50 views from a single shared link on twitter (~3k followers) but that has dropped off too (I guess more folk are following more folk, so there&#8217;s less chance of seeing a particular tweeted link; I don&#8217;t tend to try to socially optimise when I tweet a link). Feedburner stats give me syndication stats &#8211; 1700 or so subscribers, reach of around 200. My original ouseful blog archive gets about 25 visits a day, according to Google Analytics.</p>
<p><strong>What’s your attitude to/ relationship with people who comment on your blog?</strong> I don&#8217;t get a lot of comments, but there are some regular folk who either remark on what I have said/challenge claims I have made or point to additional resources. WordPress shows trackbacks and referrer sources, so from my site dashboard I can see something of who else has linked to me. (Links in from third party sites is as low as it ever has been; folk aren&#8217;t creating the link structure that helps the web work&#8230;)</p>
<p><strong>Do you feel as if you fit into any particular community, network or genre of blogging? (e.g. schools, science, education, museums, technology)</strong> Techie notes and rants? I get a better view of where the interests of &#8220;my audience&#8221; lay from Twitter social positioning maps (eg <a href="http://blog.ouseful.info/2011/06/11/a-map-of-my-twitter-follower-network/">http://blog.ouseful.info/2011/06/11/a-map-of-my-twitter-follower-network/</a> ).</p>
<p><strong>If so, what does that community give you?</strong> An imagined audience, which means I try to write as if someone else might read it (lots of typos slip through, but as and when I spot them I go back in to posts to correct them). I also occasionally get comments back with useful responses, questions, links to other resources etc. I try to respond to comments&#8230; That said, I&#8217;m as likely to get personal emails that thank me for the blog then ask a question or howto based around one or more particular posts.</p>
<p><strong>What do you think are the advantages of blogging? What are its disadvantages/ limitations?</strong><br />
<em>Advantages</em>: searchable notebook; increasingly valuable archive; contribution to the structure of the web (if  you link); profile raising (possibly); pull model knowledge transfer (folk finding things they need by searching for it); fishing (eg corrections, comments, related resources from comments and trackbacks); community/relationship discovery (eg monitoring trackbacks, referrals).<br />
<em>Disadvantages</em>: it takes time to post (but then, it also saves time wrt looking up things you&#8217;ve done before); profile raising (possibly); struggle to find a voice, then potentially feel as if you are locked in to that voice (even if no-one is reading;-) &#8220;Formal record&#8221; &#8211;  I have pretty much given up on formal academic communications; folk are often unwilling to reference &#8220;informal&#8221; blog posts; granular nature of albeit linked posts means there are no comprehensive summary statements of a tool, technique or idea that I have written about. I am starting to explore use of delicious stacks and delicious category/tag feeds as a way of pulling together sets of posts that may (possibly) be used as the basis for longer form formal writings.</p>
<p><strong>Do you tell people you know offline that you’re a blogger? (e.g. your grandmother, your boss)</strong> I think my family knows I do things around the web, but it&#8217;s way too geeky for them and their interests often don&#8217;t extend much past Facebook, if that far&#8230; Friends know, ish, but it&#8217;s way too geeky for them too&#8230; If truth be told, it&#8217;s probably way too geeky (and too frequently posted to&#8230;) for many of the people I work with/know professionally;-) I do have a couple of other blogs &#8211; eg f1datajunkie.blogspot.com &#8211; which I use for particular niche interests that I don&#8217;t want to swamp OUseful.info with and that tap into other communities. On occasion, I cross link between them. So for example, the F1DataJunkie blog is trying to explore ways of communicating knowledge and techniques about data viz tools into a technical audience via a common &#8220;other&#8221; interest; so in a sense, it&#8217;s an outreach activity, or so I like to claim ;-)</p>
<p><strong>Is there anything else you want to tell me about I haven’t asked?</strong><br />
<em>Do you syndicate your content?</em> Yes: for example, my <em>RStats</em> blog category feed syndicates content to Rbloggers [ <a href="http://www.r-bloggers.com" rel="nofollow">http://www.r-bloggers.com</a> ] and my <em>onlinejournalismblog</em> category is also disctributed via the Online Journalism blog [ <a href="http://onlinejournalismblog.com/" rel="nofollow">http://onlinejournalismblog.com/</a> ]. I post specific items to these feeds knowing that they will be further syndicated to audience groups with very particular interests; they also generate small amounts of traffic back to my blog.<br />
&lt;emTechies stuff &#8211; what platform do you blog on?</em> I use a hosted blog on WordPress.com with a custom domain mapping that I pay for personally (I think I may also pay to stop WordPress ads? Maybe?!). I don&#8217;t want the grief of administering/updating my own installation, although it would be useful to be able to install plugins, use Google Analytics etc. My employer do offer WordPress blogs that I could add plugins to, but I&#8217;m not sure how kindly they&#8217;d take to the domain mapping?</p>
<br />  <a rel="nofollow" href="http://feeds.wordpress.com/1.0/gocomments/ouseful.wordpress.com/8000/"><img alt="" border="0" src="http://feeds.wordpress.com/1.0/comments/ouseful.wordpress.com/8000/" /></a> <img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=blog.ouseful.info&#038;blog=325417&#038;post=8000&#038;subd=ouseful&#038;ref=&#038;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></content:encoded>
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			<media:title type="html">Tony Hirst</media:title>
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