networking with one another

32
WEB 2.0 AND SOCIAL MEDIA TOOLS – PART III Communications for the Digital Age Tuesday, July 26, 2011 – Notre Dame Cathedral Latin HS Sponsored by the Sisters of Notre Dame Chardon, Ohio

Upload: caroline-cerveny-ssj

Post on 16-Jan-2015

510 views

Category:

Education


1 download

DESCRIPTION

 

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Networking with one another

WEB 2.0 AND SOCIAL MEDIA TOOLS – PART III

Communications for the Digital Age

Tuesday, July 26, 2011 – Notre Dame Cathedral Latin HS

Sponsored by the Sisters of Notre Dame

Chardon, Ohio

Page 2: Networking with one another

Networking with One Another via LinkedIn and Facebook

25 July 2011 New Media

Page 3: Networking with one another

Once upon a time, long, long ago …

• There was, in a land far away …

25 July 2011 New Media

A Handsome Print(s)

Page 4: Networking with one another

Meet the Handsome Print(s) • Print(s) is the oldest ruler of Medialand

• He was born around 1450, when Gutenberg invented the printing press

• At first he was a “high brow” ruler, courting and pleasing the gentry only (bibles, academic texts, etc)

• Later in his career he embraced the masses, making literature and news widely and cheaply available

• He is intellectual, proud, sometimes stuffy, though a generally popular leader. He’s not afraid to buck authority, is sometimes mischievous, and like, the rest of us, is fallible. Yes, he can get stuff wrong.

25 July 2011 New Media

Page 5: Networking with one another

Print Definition

• Definition of print media:

– “Printed [media], as distinguished from broadcast or electronically transmitted communications, includes all newspapers, newsletters, booklets, pamphlets, magazines, and other printed publications, especially those that sell advertising space as a means of raising revenue.”

– (http://www.answers.com/topic/print-media)

25 July 2011 New Media

Page 6: Networking with one another

Print Timeline • 618 to 906: T’ang Dynasty - the first printing is done in China, using ink on

carved wooden blocks.

• 1423: In Europe, block printing is used to print books.

• 1452: In Europe, metal plates are first used in printing. Gutenberg begins printing the Bible, which he finishes in 1456.

• 1476: William Caxton begins using a Gutenberg printing press in England.

• 1605: First weekly newspaper published in Antwerp.

• 1702: Multi-colored engraving invented by German Jakob Le Blon. The first English language daily newspaper is published called the Daily Courant.

• 1800: Iron printing presses invented.

• 1846: Cylinder press invented by Richard Hoe. Cylinder press can print 8,000 sheets an hour.

• 1891: Printing presses can now print and fold 90,000 4-pg papers an hour.

• 1903: The first tabloid style newspaper, the Daily Mirror is published.

• 1933: A war breaks out between the newspaper and radio industries. American newspapers try to force the Associated Press to terminate news service to radio stations.

• 1954: There are more radios than there are daily newspapers.

• 1967: Newspapers use digital production processes and began using

computers for operations.

(http://inventors.about.com/od/pstartinventions/a/printing_3.htm)

25 July 2011 New Media

Gutenberg, 1398 - 1468

Page 7: Networking with one another

Now, enter another character … • She’s new,

she’s cool, she’s rocking the world…

25 July 2011 New Media

She’s Princess Broadcast!

Page 8: Networking with one another

Meet the lady of the show, the Sassy Princess of Broadcast

25 July 2011 New Media

• Her date of birth is unclear (a lady never tells): Morse code and telegraphs of the C19th are types of broadcasting, too, but our princess rose to prominence in the 20th century with the rise of radio and TV

• She was a popular leader from the beginning, ruling by appealing to the masses, providing entertainment, and breaking down barriers

• She is brassy, bold, AMBITIOUS, sexy, alluring, accessible, dominant, and able to tap into popular culture.

Page 9: Networking with one another

Broadcast Definitions

1. To transmit (a radio or television programme) for public or general use.

2. To send out or communicate, especially by radio or television

3. To make known over a wide area

4. To send a transmission or signal; transmit. (http://www.thefreedictionary.com/broadcast)

25 July 2011 New Media

Page 10: Networking with one another

Broadcast Timeline • 1906 :Reginald Fessenden invents wireless telephony, a means for radio waves to carry signals

a significant distance. • 1923: Vladimir Kosma Zworykin patents the iconoscope, the first television transmission tube. • Radio broadcasting begins in South Africa. • 1925: Radio's The Smith Family introduces the soap opera format. • 1927: Philo Farnsworth transmits the first all-electronic television image. • 1928: John Baird beams a television image from England to the United States. • 1931: There are nearly 40,000 television sets in the United States; 9,000 of them are in New

York City alone. • 1936: The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) debuts the world's first television service

with three hours of programming a day. • The SABC is formed. • 1944: The first instance of network censorship occurs. The sound is cut off on the Eddie Cantor

and Nora Martin duet, “We're Having a Baby, My Baby and Me.” • 1945: The FCC creates the commercial broadcasting spectrum of 13 channels, and 130

applications for broadcast licenses follow. • 1951: Colour television introduced in the U.S. • 1956: The Wizard of Oz has its first airing on TV. • 1971: TV finally allowed in SA • 1975: First national TV broadcasts in SA • 1980: Ted Turner launches CNN, the first all-news network. • 1992: There are 900-million television sets in use around the world; 201-million are in the

United States. • 2000: Reality TV mania hits the world.

25 July 2011 New Media

http://www.infoplease.com/ipea/A0151956.html and http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/South_African_Broadcasting_Corporation

Page 11: Networking with one another

Now, meet the most memorable character of them all …

25 July 2011 New Media

• He’s ugly but he’s cute

• He’s popular and one of us

• He has weird ears and magical powers …

Super-quick

Humungous

Rough

Ever-evolving

Kool

And his name is NEW MEDIA.

Page 12: Networking with one another

The Birth of the Internet

• 1989: Tim Berners-Lee completes the original software for the World Wide Web (WWW). He envisions the WWW as a shared information space within which people communicate with each other and with computers.

• From 1991 to 1994 use of the original WWW server grows by a factor of ten each year as the world begins to take note of a new information phenomenon.

• The Internet does not consist of a physical network. It is a loose system of connections between different computers, located all over the world.

• The seed of “new media” is planted.

25 July 2011 New Media

Page 13: Networking with one another

New Media Ogre

• He is a huge, new, popular king of Medialand, born at the same time as the internet

• He is the champion of the “every man and woman”.

• He is a growing power, largely accessible, popular, fractured, and many voiced.

• He empowers his users to define their own news agendas.

• Some say he’s just a buffoon.

25 July 2011 New Media

Page 14: Networking with one another

New Media Definition

• New media is a catch-all term for all forms of electronic communication that have appeared or will appear since the original mainly text-and-static picture forms of online communication. New media usually includes any and all of these: Online news, streaming video and streaming audio, 3-D and virtual reality environments and effects, highly interactive user interfaces, mobile presentation and computing capabilities, CD and DVD media, telephone and digital data integration, online communities, live Internet broadcasting

Source: http://searchsoa.techtarget.com/sDefinition/0,,sid26_gci213507,00.html

25 July 2011 New Media

Page 15: Networking with one another

Online Communities via Social Networking

• Social networking: is the grouping of individuals together into to specific groups, often using online networking services.

• People have always social networked but the internet has opened up ways of doing it globally

25 July 2011 New Media

Page 16: Networking with one another

Denial

Fear

Resistance

Reluctant

Toe-Dipping

Immersion Dog Paddling

Swimming

Stages of “Swimming” in Social Networking

Page 17: Networking with one another

MESSAGE OF THE HOLY FATHER

BENEDICT XVI

FOR THE 43rd WORLD

COMMUNICATIONS DAY

"New Technologies, New Relationships.

Promoting a Culture of Respect,

Dialogue and Friendship.“

Page 18: Networking with one another

Facebook

25 July 2011 New Media

Page 19: Networking with one another

Facebook

• One of the most popular social networking services in the world: over 700-million people have joined Facebook!

• Networks: Regional, national and interest group based. Eg: South Africa, Wits University, TAC support group, fans of “Freshly Ground”

• Uses: 1. Search for groups related to your story 2. Put you in touch with sources 3. Search for events

25 July 2011 New Media

Page 20: Networking with one another

Value of Facebook

• Provides a single place to gather.

• One-stop shop for: blogging, media, calendaring, communication, sharing ideas, work together.

• Keep in touch with family and friends.

• Used to make announcements.

• Organize groups (e.g., Peace Song)

25 July 2011 New Media

Page 23: Networking with one another

LinkedIn

25 July 2011 New Media

Page 24: Networking with one another

LinkedIn

• World’s largest professional network

• Over 100 million members

• Trusted Contacts

• Exchange Knowledge, ideas, and opportunities

25 July 2011 New Media

Page 27: Networking with one another

Demonstration

25 July 2011 New Media

Page 28: Networking with one another

Questions

25 July 2011 New Media

Page 29: Networking with one another

FB Help

25 July 2011 New Media

http://www.facebook.com/help/

Page 30: Networking with one another

Saint Petersburg Diocese

25 July 2011 New Media http://bit.ly/lwzAci

Page 31: Networking with one another

Social Media Resources

• Use http://www.youtube.com and search for facebook tutorial, facebook privacy settings, facebook

• http://www.facebook.com/help/

• To learn more about facebook - http://www.delicious.com/ccerveny/facebook

• Saint Petersburg Diocesan Guidelines - http://home.catholicweb.com/dosp/files/Resources/SocialMediaPolicy.pdf

25 July 2011 New Media