Videoblogging using Facebook and Viddler

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Last night I saw that Connie Crosby had made a video straight into Facebook using her Macbook, so I installed the Facebook Video application and made a little movie for my own profile using my webcam.

Today I noticed that 6 of my friends have now added the ap, so I wanted to make another little video asking them to hurry up and start posting videos. When I tried to do this, there was an error saving…and by the fifth time of saying the same thing, I was sounding a little loopy.

I decided to try out viddler, which has a facility to record staight to the site. I used the “highest” quality setting, but even then the audio pickup is not as good as Facebook.

Maybe I need to get a microphone like they used for the podcast Lachie recorded in the Librarians series tonight. (Dear world, please note..they showed librarians running an English as a Second Language class, dealing with porn on public internet PCs, podcasting and handling graffiti on the building..welcome to libraryland)

I can understand how people could get addicted to daily videoblogging. Here’s the results of my viddler upload.

Stephen Abram: the movie

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Stephen Abram graciously agreed to launch the 23 Things program at MPOW last week- although he was on the other side of the world.

I made a six minute movie with him after the CAVAL seminar here in Perth on 31st August. He’d just spoken for three and a half hours or so and had to contend with people clearing away dishes and running the dishwasher in the background – so I think he does a jolly fine job. The video is here,Stephen Abram launches Murdoch University Library 23 Things

The full post,Stephen Abram launches Murdoch University Library 23 Things lists the questions I asked and has a list of links to the sites he mentions in the video.

Online Learning Virtual Worlds clips

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Sorry if you tried to click through from the links in the last post about the Online Learning in Virtual Worlds Symposium. I uploaded the clips from my presentation yesterday to viddler . Unlike YouTube, this allows you to upload the original format, and lets you add a comment at a particular point in the video. I didn’t see the big “Save Changes” button that I should have selected to make the video public.

These links should work:

Libraries in Second Life

Murdoch University Library gets a Second Life

As an added bonus for bearing with me, here is a link to mashable’s Video Toolbox: 150+ Online Video Tools and Resources.

Online Learning in Virtual Worlds

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I had two mixed Real Life/ Second Life work events today. The first was more successful than the second one.

The second was a meeting with 6 ICT students who are working on some Teaching and Learning projects in Second Life as their semester long project. The library is the client for this. Our Uni Second Life Interest Group had identified potential pilot projects, so I kept track of who wanted what done, found a few relevant resources, gave the students some building/ navigation tips and watched them quickly outstrip my skills within a day or so.

Two of the group members are in country towns and one is in Europe. They had their avatars in Second Life during the meeting, however we had some hardware problems and I forgot my headphones, so they were left in silence for a while and I don’t think they really knew what was going on. It will be interesting to see whether the group develops an efficient method to use Second Life to communicate or fall back on something like Skype party calls.

The first event involved staggering out of bed and on to the PC by 7:30am. The University of Southern Queensland’s Faculty of Education Symposium Online Learning Using Virtual Worlds was streamed live on the web, into Second Life and involved people presenting at the campus in Real Life. I presented from within Second Life as Emerald Dumont and was on a telephone line into the room at USQ at the same time. My voice was then streamed into SL on the big screen…where Emerald Dumont was listening.

Other presentations were from Dr. Rob Sanders who coordinates the Appalachian State University Library Science program, and uses Active Worlds in his teaching, Dr Penny de Byl, a Senior Lecturer (Computing) with USQ Faculty of Sciences about ALIVEX3D and Lindy McKeown, PhD candidate at the University of Southern Queensland about Action Learning in Second Life. Dr. Daniel Livingstone who teaches Computer Games Technology at the University of Paisley and was going to present on sloodle must have slept through his alarm, as he couldn’t be found…not in RL, via IM or in SL.

I had prepared two clips – a 15 minute one about Libraries in Second Life and a shorter one called Murdoch University Library gets a Second Life, explaining what we are doing with SL at MPOW. While they were playing, Emerald was part the back channel typing comments within Second Life….so while I (Kathryn) was presenting in RL (although via telephone and streaming), I (Emerald) was also being an audience member with critical input. And I swear I never left my seat in front of my PC to do it all.

There were quite a few comments like “oh wow, those librarians are cool” and “these aren’t like librarians I know” and “oohh…a science fiction portal”. One avatar from Australia even asked me for a copy of my presentation so he could show his fellow scientists how far ahead librarians were of scientists. ( And so I think I may have unintentionally created more work for my librarian friend, Sue who works in the same organization – sorry).

For the panel discussion / question time, I was answering questions and once again part of the back channel typing responses and questions within Second Life. I think I was even Twittering when it all got a bit slow. The questions were about topics like copyright, plagiarism, what you say to people who call it “just a game”, how “real” you need to be to keep the experience immersive and whether Second Life is being used for research as well as Teaching and Learning.

I was surprised at how much I felt like a participant, rather than a spectator. I think it helped that the streaming video looked rather jerky – so the people in RL seemed less real and more avatar-ish. Lindy and her team of 11 geeks are to be congratulated on making an experimental event such a success.