Friday, September 24, 2004 |
Blogs as a Research Tool The Weblog Wishlist Manifesto : "Dave Winer posed a question: ìQuestion: Whatís next in writing tools for weblogs?î. Shimon Rura and I volunteered to read through the dozens of responses and shape them into a readable whole. What follows is a series of excerpts of representative comments, with links to their authors where available. Even more exciting: Shimon and possibly Jay McCarthy may come out with their own ìtakesî on what happened in comments. ñ ñ Lisa Williams" "..... over a hundred responses came in. After printing out and reading through the 40+ pages of responses, a few major themes began to emerge. Bloggers wanted to create more easily, connect with others fluidly, create and manage communities around their weblog and throughout the blogosphere, and conserve their content" The suggestions there are so so cool ! What fascinates me along with the content of this article is how powerful the weblog can be as a tool to brainstorm and generate ideas. And how well it can lend itself to analyses - there is live content there, consumer speak in real time, jazz play with thoughts bouncing off more thoughts, stories and analogies and some really neat suggestions and wishlists. This is something i have been talking to a client in India (no name for confidentiality purposes) about for a while now. They've got an active website with several hundred thousands (this is not an exaggeration) of online journals from their target audience which is the youth. It is a real goldmine of consumer speak, voices, lingo, relationships, perceptions, preoccupations, lifestyle and attitudes. We've been thinking of ways to mine the 'data' in order to analyse content. The other thoughts is to convert these journals into blogs that may lend themselves to greater data analyses. And then carry on continuous 'netnography' on this online community ! I've had an interesting round of meetings in the last two weeks with them and slowly but surely, we're getting there. 1:42:48 PM comment [] trackback [] |
Parsis sinking into extinction - stuck in the mud of 'purity' More reaction to the census result that reveals Parsis are close to extinction, from Rohit Gupta at Worldchanging, who feels fertility clinics are a positive step to stem the decline. I don't think this is going to work - the Parsi Panchayat has an incentive scheme for couples to have a third child in the last decade - this does not seem to have had much impact as reflected in the census findings - in a few articles i found, the opt-ins are about 100 families in 10 years. Because, having more children is merely a statistic and a symptom, and not the real issue. I feel the problem is more fundamental - one that Jeremiah has suggested in the comments at Rohit's post - "to embrace the outside world" is indeed the way to go. But first the community needs to embrace its own. Take the case of my family - we are three daughters born to Parsi parents all of us have had our initiation ceremonies (navjote) - and we're all married outside the community. This technically ex-communicates us from the community. Our children cannot be Parsis either, even if we so wished. Do i feel part of the community - not really. Am i proud of my community that has contributed so very much to the development of industry in India - not any more. And most importantly, am i motivated to change things - no - because i donot feel i belong anyways. We live in a different world today that the fundamentalist leaders cannot see. Its a world where networks and relationships and community do not evolve around ethnic or religious affinities alone. Schemes the Parsi Panchayat are thinking of to arrest this precipitate slide in numbers are once again 'exclusive' in nature. Not allowing conversions and not embracing others into the community is an attitude of superiority built on the grounds of 'purity' of race, based on ethnicity which may have been relevant many moons ago. It is one of the most bitter controversies between fundamentalist and liberals in the community today. Much has been written for and against this. If the fundamentalists (who make up most of the priesthood) win, there will soon be no race. This is so self-defeating. The Panchayat can continue sticking its nose in the mud and eventually sink itself and the community into extinction, or begin to change this attitude. 1:04:57 PM comment [] trackback [] |
Link Bytes Some links, comments and articles that i've read with interest recently :
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SMS for a diamond necklace SMS 7827 for a diamond necklace .... Launching the wireless service was a strategic move for STAR India. It's actually yielding profits from both sides. While the wireless service is being used to promote on-air programmes, the wireless revenue (through mobile games, content and song downloads) means some extra revenues for the television bouquet. 9:16:11 AM comment [] trackback [] |
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Copyright 2009 Dina Mehta