Real-time Tutorials for the Noob Skating Fan

March 24th, 2009, 1 Comment »

Yesterday Julie wrote about the Skate Bug, a kind of auditory aid for getting from (to borrow Lee and Sachi’s metaphor again) A to G:

At the Four Continents Championship in Vancouver last month I saw the ‘Skate Bug’ for the first time. It’s a radio device that connects listeners with live event commentary. One part fits in your ear; the other part is hand held. With the Skate Bug, listeners can get real-time event commentary–even more detailed than those watching the event on TV at home–and can even ask questions about elements or scoring via text message during the event. The device is meant to make figure skating more understandable and fan friendly, according to this article in the Vancouver Sun.

It’s kind of like a real-time tutorial in your ear. I remember watching figure skating on the BBC during the 2002 Olympics. The eloquent commentators did an astonishingly good job of articulating the nuances of the sport and the judging system. This was critical, as the Beeb’s audience probably only sees figure skating once every four years. I often feel that this is an explanation failure of North American coverage of the sport–the hosts assume that their audience know more than they do.

Apparently Skate Canada is offering this device directly, as a means of recruiting new fans to the sport. In their press release, they say they’re introducing “a new multimedia tool at Skate Canada events”. That’s a misnomer, isn’t it? I mean, it only offers the one media.

The next step would be to offer the feed in stream audio, so that neophyte fans at home could tune in. And it’s easy to imagine that these could be offered for other sports, too. The first time I go to a cricket game, for example, I could seriously benefit from one of these.

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Really Simple Explanation of Really Simple Syndication

April 24th, 2007, 5 Comments »

For Normal Humans, RSS is still confusing as hell. I’ve been explaining it since 2003, and every time I give a talk, somebody asks about it. Lee and Sachi over at Common Craft have created a great, basic introduction to how RSS works and why it’s useful:

Since Lee asked, here’s my suggestion for improving the video. When I explain RSS, I always ask one of the listeners how many websites they visit in a week. Then I explain that, each time they visit each of those sites, they have to be able to recognize what information is new, and so forth. This, as Lee rightly indicates, takes time.

I’d change the video slightly to make multiple copies of the ‘Blogs’ and ‘News’ chits, and mention that, in the old model, the user has to visit each site individually.

I also really dig Lee and Sachi’s hand-rolled MySpace page. It’s their digital lifestyle aggregator all in one page. I’m going to try that.

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