A A A A Search :
Toledo Talk   (musing about Lake Erie West and beyond)

Article source for : Community Media Toolset

Excerpts from a Feb 11, 2008 MediaShift Idea Lab posting titled "Toward a Community Media Toolset":http://www.pbs.org/idealab/2008/02/toward-a-community-media-tools.html :

---- start ----

bq. The good news is that there are now hundreds of free, open source content management systems to run your publication or social network on. The bad news is that, out of the box, these platforms were created by coders with only a passing acquaintance with the English language. More often than not, it takes months to learn the lingo of modules, blocks, categories, themes, orphans, aliases, input formats and all the other technical mumbo-jumbo.

bq. In my view, technological ease of use remains the last remaining barrier to widespread rollout of community publishing sites. Blog publishing platforms are designed for individual expression but are not especially optimized for community contributions and collaborative solutions.

bq. The initial idea was to create a set of plug-ins, scripts, guides and tutorials that will make it extremely easy for citizen media sites to take advantage of the advances in social media technology - without having to build it from scratch themselves. The toolset would consist of:

* A set of social media components based on creating new modules or extending existing ones in the Drupal or ArmchairGM (backers of the Openserving.com initiative, now Wikia) publishing platforms.

* A free, cross-platform publishing tool for publishing videos, podcasts and photos to multiple hosting destinations. It's likely that multimedia elements such as citizen videos and podcasts will be a key driver of community media sites in the next five years.

* Instant RSS and media RSS feeds.

* Google Maps configured for use by local communities.

* These content management system modules or capabilities: advanced search, navigation controls, social networks and groups, community chat, customized blog posts, comments, forums or message boards.

* Sleek, CSS-ready, customizable templates with mastheads, themes and graphic icons that can be adapted to different localities, regardless of CMS or platform.

* Preconfigured community channels of Internet video that enable individuals to publish to local channels based on tags or a structured ontology. If you're a community publisher in Boise, you may wish to create channels about the City Council, Crime, Recreation, Senior Living, Youth news, etc.

* A resource directory consisting of public domain and Creative Commons-licensed images and clip art to draw upon.

* A prototype for wiki integration into local sites to spur community involvement in structuring solutions to local issues.

* Tutorials and screencasts that would offer a detailed guide of how other local sites -- such as Chicagocrime.org -- successfully use Web 2.0 tools and databases in their communities.

* A screencast on Web accessibility, showcasing the simple steps editors can take to make a Web site more accessible to the blind and disabled.

---- end ----



tag=media
tag=citizenjournalism
tag=technology