Jon’s posterous

Jon’s posterous

Jon Hickman  //  I'm Jon.
I work at BCU in the Interactive Cultures research team:
http://www.interactivecultures.org

Find out more about me with this lovely CV:
http://uk.linkedin.com/in/jonhickman

Sep 20 / 12:16pm

How I use Twitter

Firstly, credit where credit's due, I have based this on Michael Grimes's Twitter Following Policy (I have lifted a lot of it, I'm sure Mike won't mind: he's a lovely man, please read his blog).

How I use Twitter

I follow a lot of people, possibly too many. I've developed my own ways of making Twitter work for me, so really I'm fine and generally coping pretty well. I use Tweetdeck when I'm on my computer and I use this to segment my Twitter followers into my close friends and colleagues, my students, and everyone else. That means I won't catch everything you say unless you're a close colleague or friend.

What I Tweet about

I tweet about my work and some things that I do in my private life, but I'm more private than you might think from my Tweets. I do chat a lot with people I know, most of whom live in Birmingham, so some of my tweets are a bit cliquey, and irreverant too. You'll only see these tweets if you follow my friends too, or if you're looking at my public profile. Again, don't judge me too much by silly in jokes I'm having with friends, there's some pearls in there somewhere I promise.

My Followers

Please don't judge me by my followers. There's a lot of spam accounts in here. I turned off email updates months ago, and I have stopped trying to tidy this up. So please look at who I'm talking to, not who claims to be following me.

Please say "hello"

As I turned off email notfications I have no idea tha you're following me until you say "hello" with an @reply, so that's a nice way to show me you're there. Who knows, we might get on.

Following back

If you follow me, thank you: I hope you enjoy what you see. If I don’t follow you back it’s because I’m struggling with what I’ve got and don’t want to add to it. It also probably means that you don’t fit the profile of who I want to follow at the moment, but that is entirely arbitrary on my part and not at all a reflection of your tweets: and it may well change in your favour at some point.

Unfollowing

I’ve tried very hard not to stop following people, but at some point I feel it will be inevitable. I occasionaly do try to cut back. If I do unfollow you it is very probably nothing that you have said. Ignore Qwitter, if you use it (Qwitter’s a service that alerts you when people stop following you and tells them which message pre-empted it). If I stop following you it’s simply down to my capacity to stay engaged with other people: please don’t let Qwitter make you think I took umbrage at something you said!

Blocking

If I block you it’s because you’ve followed me purely to promote your product or service with no intention of informing or engaging, and you are very probably a spammer. Take the hint and go away.

Students

Please think carefully about how you talk to staff on Twitter. It's not the place to ask big questions about your course or your life. We have tutorials for that, and email is a bit more private. Do @ reply me so I know who you are, I will follow you, but if we have only just met it's worth pointing out that you're one of our students: remember we're getting several hundred people in an intake at BCU so it's hard for me to know who's who! Oh, and also try to come up with a professional Twitter name.

Sorry if this all seems odd or a bit  Do keep chatting to me though, and do chat to my friends. They're lovely people.

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Feb 25 / 11:03am

Some thoughts on good meetings

I love the fact that "good meeting" is an emergent meme on Twitter: the phrase is seen by a lot of people on Twitter as an empty platitude, the twitter equivalent of saying "er". We can see it as an example of one of the ways we just keep the conversation going. Perhaps we could even go so far as to read it as a way of putting on a brave face in these difficult economic times: after all if every one thinks you're having a good meeting, they'll think you're doing well, which marketing folks suggest is a good thing if you want to keep getting work.  The interesting thing is I've seen the rise of the "good meeting" before.

I used to go to lots of these weird BNI meetings to win new business.  The idea was that we all passed business to one another at the end of the meeting as part of a formal agenda point. We went around the room and people were asked to make a positive contribution to the meeting (there was a big pressure to be positive).  The ultimate contribution was bringing lots of business leads for other people.  A close second was having brought a visitor to the meeting (because all your friends could tap them up for work).  Then came reporting back on a "good meeting" you'd had with someone in the group, and how you were going to do lots of great work together (but people tended to be vague on detail).  Finally, if you were desperate, you just said that thought it had been a "good meeting" that morning.  Often we found there were a lot of "good meetings". Remind you of anything?

As a bit of fun, the other day I set up @goodmeeting to retweet from a Twitter search for "good meeting". It rightly got closed for being a daft bot and breaching Twitter TOS.  But here's the punchline: the majority of people who bothered to @reply, follow, and DM the account were all connected to BNI.
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Filed under  //  networking   twitter  

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Feb 19 / 10:34am

Brum TwitPic Chain (#brumchain)

This game is based on Flickr Chains (e.g. http://www.flickr.com/groups/thelondonchain/): a chain of photos linked by themes (and probably memes knowing you lot).  To keep it simple, let's try a chain where we nominate the next person in the chain.

How to play

If you receive an @ message on Twitter tagged #brumchain, then here's what you need to do

  1. The previous player will have uploaded a photo to TwitPic.  They will have specified what you need to link to e.g. #brumchain Sutton Station B73 6AT, a bench, a digital sign: they have included a bench to link to the prior image, and they want you to upload an image with a digital sign
  2. Take a photo, or choose a photo you already have (it needs to be your own!).  The photo should be clearly taken in Brum!
  3. Upload an image to TwitPic and tag it "brumchain"
  4. @reply a new player in the format #brumchain Where I took my image, previous link, new link

Your done!

If the chain fails, anyone can pick it up again.
You can make your own chain with a new tag.

Have fun
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Jan 24 / 9:58am

How to NOT play @cluedo

It's not the first time in my life I've been accused of breaking twitter, but I was a little surprised when @dubber told me I'd done it again.  The nice thing about twitter is that even when being curmudgeonly, people in the community can be helpful.  Dubber shared his own way of not playing @cluedo, which is also a handy way of blocking any meme you don't have the time for.

He uses Tweet Deck, and has pointed out the under used filter button:

the off button

I suppose the other way round it is to leave Twitter for a bit.  The three @cludeo games so far have been short and late at night, so it's easy to opt out by using technology, or by going away and having a nice cup of tea (which solves everything).

Happy guessing.

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Jan 22 / 7:34am

How to play @cluedo

@cluedo is a twitter based guessing game.  The idea is simple: test your powers of deduction and your knowledge of twitter-folks by working out who is running the @cluedo account.  To play you simply need to be on twitter and follow http://twitter.com/cluedo

Notes for Guessers

I'm a game. Read the advice. Follow me, @reply me some questions, guess who I am. Possibly win a prize perhaps.

  • My tweets will be honest answers to questions. 
  • I will post at least once an hour while I'm online.
  • If there are no questions, I will tweet a clue
  • Once you have asked me THREE questions you are allowed to guess my identity.
  • When I'm identified, I'll close the game, and favourite the winning tweet, then pass the account off to a new player of my choice.
Please note, these are not so much rules as guidelines.  This is a community game and we're not sure that rules have a place  or much value: over time the community will evolve this game as they see fit.

Notes for @cluedos

So someone has put you in the hotseat?  Here's what you need to do:

  1. Confirm you want to play and wait for the username and password to be sent to you
  2. Login, and start playing!
  3. Favourite the winning tweet and confirm the end of the game
  4. Select someone from your network and invite them to be @cluedo. We suggest you ask them to reply to you in a certain timescale
You should at least do the following, but once you have the keys it's your game:
  • always be truthful, but feel free to be evasive
  • follow anyone that follows @cluedo during your play
  • you can request retweets or for new followers to "hello @cluedo" but shouldn't illicit followers in any other way (it's more fun and tells us more about Twitter if we allow the @cluedo network to grow organically from the twitter stream and through hearsay)
  • have fun
Make up your own tactics, put on a silly voice, ask questions from your main alt: it's your game, play it your way.

Who?

This game was made up by @bounder and @jonhickman over a pint in the Hare of The Dog, which is the shed at the bottom of the Treehouse's Garden.
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Filed under  //  cluedo   rules   twitter  

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