Jim Groom – ELS Blogs http://blogs.elsweb.org @UMW Sun, 27 Aug 2023 08:17:34 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.3.2 Trying to get an ELS Blog? http://blogs.elsweb.org/blog/2007/08/25/trying-to-get-an-els-blog/ Sun, 26 Aug 2007 06:41:08 +0000 http://blogs.elsweb.org/blog/2007/08/25/trying-to-get-an-els-blog/ ELS Blogs are now being incorporated into a university-wide blogging initiative. Head over to UMW Blogs and create a blog there, only difference is that it’s just a little bit larger stage!

UMW Blogs

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“We aint one-at-a-timin’ here, we’re mass communicatin” http://blogs.elsweb.org/blog/2007/06/27/%e2%80%9cwe-aint-one-at-a-timin%e2%80%99-here-we%e2%80%99re-mass-communicatin%e2%80%99%e2%80%9d/ Wed, 27 Jun 2007 19:22:07 +0000 http://blogs.elsweb.org/blog/2007/06/27/%e2%80%9cwe-aint-one-at-a-timin%e2%80%99-here-we%e2%80%99re-mass-communicatin%e2%80%99%e2%80%9d/ Continue reading ]]> Download link

Well, if you don’t know the quote from O Brother, Where art thou? it is worth a listen for it speaks to what exactly we’re doing over at ELS Blogs -this project ain’t no one off -this is the whole kit and kaboodle in one simply complex install!

We are getting ready to build a more extensive WPMu installation for UMW that touches many departments throughout the campus that will be starting with many of the Freshman Seminars for the Fall and Spring semesters -but by no means limited to these seminars. That being said, I have been using the last couple of weeks to experiment more extensively with WordPress Multi-User, something I enjoy tremendously. It was nice to discover that there are a lot of cool new options, plugins and theme packs (see this post for more on themes) that I will be blogging about in the near future. But right now I want to focus in particular on the aggregating possibilities that are beginning to emerge in WPMu.

WP-Autoblog has been around for single-installations of WordPress for a while now which does a nice job of aggregating content into blog posts from various feeds around the web -much like WP-o-Matic discussed here. I like WP-o-Matic a lot because it uses SimplePie parsing that does an excellent job with images and other objects, while being relatively feed agnostic. Unfortunately, WP-o-Matic is not compatible with WPMu just yet. WP-Autoblog, on the other hand, has been made to play nice with WPMu (get the WPMu version of this plugin here) and it is a really dead simple interface that allows for an easy cut and paste approach to including feeds. So, I got to thinking a couple of things:

  • What about taking all the feeds from ELS Blogs and putting them into a WP-Autoblog blog -you can see an example of this up and running here. What WP-Autoblog provides is a site wide aggregator in the guise of a K2-themed blog (although you have 66 other themes to choose from on ELS Blogs) that is capturing all the content from around the environment. Simple enough to do and yet another way to capture and re-present all the rich content that is coming in over the wires, or is it tubes?
  • OK, so now we have this plugin that pretty much anyone with a blog on ELS Blogs can use to create an aggregator of feeds within a blog (with these feeds themed to their preference). Hmmm, so does this mean that professors and their ilk can create their own aggregator blog by asking students to record their blog’s RSS feeds in something like wiki, google docs, spreadsheet, or what have you? It is a quick and easy way to locate content in one specific blog that may give folks who come across a blog like this an interesting and different visualization of a group of posts in relationship to one another within the context of a “class blog,” which is quite distinct from the logic that will emerge on an individual student blog. We have experimented with aggregation like this already here, but it wasn’t something anyone in the environment could do by simply activating a plug-in and copying and pasting feeds. And while I like this aggregation space referenced (find out how the two plugins BDP RSS and Optimal were used to create this space here) it requires a small php hack which is impossible for general users on WPMu. So rather than hacking around these limitations, the idea here is to make it simple in order to multiply the ways people can access content and map relationships within various contexts.
  • Last, and by no means least, the best way at cross-pollinating student content within a specific class as well as throughout the entire ELS Blogs environment might be to create these little blog aggregators (and remember that anyone on the system has access to this plugin -a [[splog]] nightmare if you aren’t careful) in order to syndicate sites they are reading and highlight content that they are interested in. The genius here is that content becomes re-purposed and propagated throughout an environment (sometimes redundantly) with the idea that you create myriad possibilities for serendipity by republishing content in various spaces throughout this distributed collection of blogs.

I’m pretty excited about this because I think it offers a quick, easy and informal way for users, profs and students alike, to create spontaneous collections of feed-driven content that will in turn populate blogs throughout the community, potentially giving rise to a certain amount of content chaos that may ultimately result in a new way of avoiding the “one-at-a-timin’ [Aggregator and single WordPress installs in relative isolation] so that we can work towards mass communicatin’ [throughout campus]” the web for one another on a more regular basis within a specific environment.

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Original post by jimgroom

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6 months later, 37 new themes http://blogs.elsweb.org/blog/2007/06/26/6-months-later-37-new-themes/ Wed, 27 Jun 2007 00:54:15 +0000 http://blogs.elsweb.org/blog/2007/06/26/6-months-later-37-new-themes/ Continue reading ]]> There are now 67, count ’em sixty seven, themes available at ELS Blogs, too many to create a list here. So, just dive right into your new blog by clicking on the presentation tab and presto, just about as many themes as a young and inspired English, Linguistics and Speech major could ever dream of. Now say it with me, ready…

Photo by Xeer

These themes were made freely available by the tireless work and good will of Farms here, who I believe is James Farmer of edublogs fame (if it is, indeed, -well then thank you James, if not, well then thank you Farms).

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Widgets are now available on ELS Blogs http://blogs.elsweb.org/blog/2007/04/23/widgets-are-now-available-on-els-blogs/ Mon, 23 Apr 2007 21:26:16 +0000 http://blogs.elsweb.org/blog/2007/04/23/widgets-are-now-available-on-els-blogs/ Continue reading ]]> ELS Blogs is the blogging service that just keeps on giving! You all now have the options of widgetizing your sidebar -which basically means you can customize how your sidebar looks by adding “Widgets” with customized text, html code, flickr images, YouTube videos, del.icio.us bookmarks, etc. You can also list all the blogs in the ELS Blogs environment, including the most active blogs, the most recently updated blogs, and the most recent posts from around this network.

You can start using sidebar widgets by activating them in the plugins tab. Widgets are automatically enabled. You can view and manipulate these widgets within the “Presentation” tab –>under the “Sidebar Widgets” sub-tab.

Note: if you have a problem dragging the widgets around the screen press the “Shift”key  and the “Refresh” button on your browser simultaneously (a hard refresh) to reload the page.

As always, be careful out there and have fun!

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You can take it with you! http://blogs.elsweb.org/blog/2007/04/23/you-can-take-it-with-you/ Mon, 23 Apr 2007 21:07:21 +0000 http://blogs.elsweb.org/blog/2007/04/23/you-can-take-it-with-you/ Continue reading ]]> If anyone who has been utilizing the ELS Blogs and would like to take their work with them -it is as easy as 1-2 (no 3).

Here’s how:

  • Within the Manage tab in the backend there is a subtab titled export. Click on this subtab and you will get a screen that looks like the following
  • Next just click on the export button in the center of the Export subtab and all of you posts, pages, etc., will be downloaded to your desktop as an XML file. You can then take this file and import it to your own blog on WordPress.com or where ever you’d like.

Please note: If you have uploaded a number of images to your own blog, then you should contact me at jimgroom_at_umw.edu. If not, all of the links to online images, videos, etc. will remain in tact. Additionally, if you are graduating this semester and you don’t want to move your blog (and you intend to keep using it) please send me an e-mail saying as much.

Easy, right?

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The Anarchy Media Player for WPMU http://blogs.elsweb.org/blog/2007/04/15/the-anarchy-media-player-for-wpmu/ Mon, 16 Apr 2007 06:13:59 +0000 http://blogs.elsweb.org/blog/2007/04/15/the-anarchy-media-player-for-wpmu/ Continue reading ]]> WordPress Multi-User now has an all-in-one multi-media player thanks to the Anarchy Media Plugin. To make it purr, look for the little yellow “A” (for Anarchy) on your Editor toolbar and click on it. Then just copy the url that points to your media in the appropriate field and you can include sound, images, videos, and flash files from just about any place you can imagine. Amazing when you think about it!

Here are the file formats and online services this plugin supports:

Simple href links: Upload your mp3, flv, mov, mp4, m4v, m4a, m4b, 3gp, wmv, avi or asf file via the WordPress editor’s upload browser then “send to editor” – or make a hypertext link to any external file on the web – and you’re done!

Rich text editor: Flash swf (including Google Video, YouTube etc., players via the “A” for anarchy button) or Director dcr use the respective rich editor buttons. To embed the various media players supported by AMP enter the full HTTP address (url) to your YouTube, Google Video, iFilm, Revver, Metacafe, MySpace or GoEar web page. For DailyMotion video and Apple iTunes iMixes just copy and paste the code from their embeddable players.

[kml_flashembed movie="http://www.youtube.com/v/ZiYhSwP0Y20" width="425" height="350" wmode="transparent" /]

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Annotating online videos with Mojiti http://blogs.elsweb.org/blog/2007/03/29/annotating-online-videos-with-mojiti/ Thu, 29 Mar 2007 17:09:23 +0000 http://blogs.elsweb.org/blog/2007/03/29/annotating-online-videos-with-mojiti/ Continue reading ]]> Update: Mojiti is deader than a doornail. Long live Mojiti!

Mojiti is an online service that allows you to add comments within a video. You can then quickly and easily embed this video into your blog and open it up so others can also annotate it. More specifically, anyone who has a Mojiti account can add spots to a video that has been opened up to the larger community right within a blog post. And while you have to be logged on for Mojiti’s service to do this, they are so smart that they allow you to login right through the video on your blog -never having to leave the page. Here is an example.

So, there is really no more than three very simple steps to integrate Mojiti into your blog:
1) Sign-up for a Mojiti account,
2) Add a video and make it public,
and 3) embed the video on your class blog/site.

Here are some screen shots of the in-blog login and commentary possibilities:

Mojiti_login

mojoto_in_blog.jpg

Try it out, and let me know via the comments if you have any problems.

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Having problems commenting on other blogs? http://blogs.elsweb.org/blog/2007/02/22/having-problems-commenting-on-other-blogs/ Thu, 22 Feb 2007 10:40:37 +0000 http://blogs.elsweb.org/blog/2007/02/22/having-problems-commenting-on-other-blogs/ Continue reading ]]> There have been some reports of comments showing up in strange places for certain folks. If this pertains to you, do us a favor and give a brief description of the issue in the comments below (if you can!), or send an e-mail to jimgroom_at_gmail.com. Rest assured that the elves in the WordPress shop are on the job. Please describe which blog and blog post you made the comment on and where it ultimately ended up.

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Feed me, Seymour! http://blogs.elsweb.org/blog/2007/02/10/feed-me-seymour/ Sat, 10 Feb 2007 22:25:47 +0000 http://blogs.elsweb.org/blog/2007/02/10/feed-me-seymour/ Continue reading ]]> The little shop of ELS blogs is now serving up class feeds. The “Class feeds” tab in the header now links to a still growing directory of courses that are utilizing ELS blogs. When you click on respective links you will have access to the latest blog posts for that class. Moreover, for courses with more than two blogs (namely Dr. Campbell’s Film/Text/Culture class) you can get a comprehensive list of student blogs in the sidebar, which will allow you to browse the posts for each blog quickly and easily by clicking on the rightwards arrow (→). Be sure to check the directory of class feeds to be certain we have placed your blog in the proper place, remember this is alpha going on beta! Report any problems using the comments for this post.

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Embedding YouTube videos in your blog http://blogs.elsweb.org/blog/2007/01/30/embedding-youtube-videos-in-your-blog/ Wed, 31 Jan 2007 05:59:48 +0000 http://blogs.elsweb.org/blog/2007/01/30/embedding-youtube-videos-in-your-blog/ Continue reading ]]> YouTube LogoI noticed some folks have been adding links to YouTube videos (or even embedding them!) in their posts. This is a great way to bring the film text into your discussion. If you are interested in embedding a youtube video into your post it is quite easy. Follow the steps below:

  • Find a video in YouTube and copy the code from the “embed” field to the right of the video
  • Paste this code into the your tab on your editor that says “HTML” (there are two tabs on your blogs text editor: “Editor” and “HTML” -use the HTML for all code you are copying).

That’s it… now bring on the multimedia!

Have a question?  Use the comments.

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