As we are seeing some growth in the pilot of SB You, I wanted to reflect on why I feel it is so important for a community to have a platform the powers simple publishing … in doing so, I was drawn back to the post I made right as I was working at Penn State to spin up the original Blogs at Penn State project. At that time I was trying to move people to see that we weren’t talking about blogging per se, but instead about personal content management and simple publishing. From a post on May 25, 2006 I shared this observation,
So, when is a blog not a blog? When you brand it as a personal content management system. Think of the power then … you want to blog, publish, take notes, turn in papers, or do anything in an e-model? The personal content managent system can do it and it can do it so it is stored, managed, searchable, accessible, and easy.
The really interesting part about that post in my mind to this day are the comments … imagine at that time, people still commented on blog posts instead of clicking “Like or +1” links. What is striking to me is that the text came alive with the addition of the voices of the community. It was an important illustration of what that original project would become for us at PSU — a platform for digital expression. Trust me, we didn’t know inherently it would become that, but it did.
Fast forward to today and I am hopeful that our own steps into SB You will bring as many amazing opportunities and surprises as our students, faculty, and staff begin to write, share, and collaborate in a digital space. Even as the world has shifted from blogs to social networks of all types I still think a platform like SB You is a critical piece of the fabric that can bring a community even closer. If this happens it will become a public and living illustration of the collective intelligence this campus has. So, when is a blog not a blog? I think when it becomes the place that each of us individually or collectively can create, curate, share, explore, and engage each other.
Wow. Reading that 2006 post and all the comments… really takes me back. Amazing how far we have come while at the same time still fundamentally grappling with the same questions.
Like you say, the rich comment stream and the value we are seeing by reviewing it today makes the great case for personal content management.
That is exactly what I thought when I stumbled across my own words from 2006. The comments really blew my mind and I bet we would see many like it as more institutions embrace the idea of open, personal, public platforms to support digital publishing. Funny that my first comment here came from you, Brad.