Thursday, February 7, 2008

Reintroducing the paragraph

One reason blogging is popular is because readers can easily post comments about what the author has written. One reason blogging is less popular among higher ed is that, until now, the tools have been limited to commenting on an entire article. The comments typically come at the end of a post, and typically in chronological order. With such limitations, it is difficult to have several lines of thinking or dicussion that remain coherent for more than a few comments.

This forces bloggers to post single-idea posts of one or two paragraphs if a discussion is expected. Either depth of writing or specificity of comments are sacrificed.

A Wordpress plugin called CommentPress from the Institute for the Future of the Book promises to free thoughtful blogging from those restraints, and to reintroduce the paragraph as a unit of thought to writing and digital publishing. CommentPress places a comment bubble next to each paragraph and allows readers to comment specifically on that paragraph. The comments are tallied under the little bubble ("2" means there are two comments on this paragraph) and the comments can be read in a floating, scrolling window. Click here for an example of how it works.

What results is a kind of digital marginalia, not merely from the author or a single reader, but as an interchange of ideas between the author and the readers. I have WordPress installed on a server; perhaps I'll post a few entries and see how it goes.

The Institute for the Future of the Book is one of many Web 2.0 software developers who are not merely taking the tools we have and putting them on the web, but rethinking what it means to be an author, or a reader, in the Digital Age. I'll have more to say about the Institute later.

Warts and all

The previous two posts are remarkable, not for what they say, but how they were created.

Acting on a tip from one of my students, who was goofing around with this as I got to class yesterday, I have become an instant fan of Jott, a web- and phone-based service that transcribes voice into text, then sends SMS messages, emails or posts to blogs, calendars or task managers.

In the past 24 hours, I have sent text messages to friends (maybe my wife, Therese, will get off my back about texting while driving!), posted the aforementioned blog entries, added several items to my Google calendar, and sent an email to a mailing group of 18 Photoshop students, all from my cellphone, by speaking, rather than typing.

Jott's FAQ says the service uses a "combination of machine and human transcription" to convert your spoken words into text. I've left the blog posts as-is to show you, warts and all, the quality of the transcription. As an added bonus, Jott includes a link to the audio file, so if something is garbled in text, your audience can hear your original message.

Currently in public beta (and my guess is a lot of the web services I'll be talking about may be in perpetual beta!) the service is free and signup is fairly painless. My guess is that once the bugs are worked out, there will continue to be a free basic service, with pay-per-feature for added controls, and maybe there will be a cap on the number of messages you can send, or the length (currently limited to 30 seconds).

What is truly amazing about this service is not so much the voice-to-text, although that's pretty neat in itself, but in how it is designed to work with all your other Web 2.0 services. I mentioned how I've been using it, and that doesn't begin to wring it out. The Google calendar trick is a wowser - call the Jott number from your cell, speak "Google calendar" and "lunch with Mike April 15, 11:30am to 1:30PM" and in a matter of a few seconds to a few minutes, the event is in your calendar, on the right day, at the right time, with a note. What a great 5-minute demo!

I showed this to my friend and colleague Mike Fleishman today and he had the same reaction I did - "My mind is reeling with the possibilities!" Yep. Sent a reminder to 18 students in two sections with one phone call. Insta-blog a thought from the car. Twitter your friends and family travel updates as you're running through the airport to catch a flight. Add tasks to your to-do list. Schedule meetings, dentist appointments six months out (did that!), birthday reminders....

Jott is definitely a technology/service to watch.

Hi, this is me again....

Hi, this is me again. I am talking to a friend of mine Mike and he does not really believe that this is going to work, so I am going to do another blog post just to prove my point, this is pretty amazing. listen

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Wednesday, February 6, 2008

This is amazing, I am...

This is amazing, I am sending a blog entry through my cell phone and it will be transcribed into text and posted on my blogger side, if this works, this is a kind of thing that can absolutely revolutionized how people use the web. listen

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