eduWEB 2008

Seems like all the cool kids in higher ed are at the eduWEB Conference, which wraps up today in Atlantic City, N.J.

Lots of bloggage and tweetage is emanating from the conference, much of it good (see links below). But perhaps the most important and underreported story — from this blogger’s perspective, anyway — is the fact that Missouri S&T’s Name Change Conversations blog won the eduStyle Award for best institutional blog. I learned about this award via a direct tweet from Kyle James (nom de tweet: @jameskm03. (Hats off also to the College of William and Mary’s re:web blog, which won the people’s choice award in that same category.)

But enough gratuitous wallowing in my 15 seconds of Internet fame. On to the important eduWEB links.

  1. Karine Joly is posting like crazy, with the help of other eduWEB participants. Check the series of eduWEB in 140 words posts at CollegeWebEditor.com.
  2. Kyle James’ presentation on email marketing.
  3. If 140 words a post is just too much for you (and if that’s the case then you haven’t read this far), then visit Twitter’s #eduweb2008 backchannel for updates, links, comments, critique, etc. in 140 characters or fewer from all the tweeting participants.
  4. Brad Ward posts a nice reading list inspired by the conference. It’s a little heavy on the Seth Godin books (albeit no Purple Cow, oddly), but to each his own.

That’s it for now. Off to a meeting.

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Now playing: John Mellencamp – My Sweet Love
via FoxyTunes

Blogging the North American Solar Challenge

nasc_header.gifStudents from our university have participated in solar car races since 1993 — the early days of this particular student design competition. We’ve even won two championships — in 1999 and 2003 — and our solar car success has helped pave the way for other types of hands-on, student design teams. This year’s North American Solar Challenge, a nearly-two-week, 2,400-mile trek from Texas to Calgary that began this morning (Sunday, July 13, 2008), finds us in some heavy competition.

The competition is not just among the students and their sun-powered vehicles, but also among the bloggers who are covering them. Blogs, Utterz, Flickr, Twitter and FriendFeed are among the social networking tools being used by colleges and universities to cover the solar car race.

solar42-screen.jpg

For our part, we actually have two blogs devoted to this race: the official solar car team blog (pictured above) and our official student design blog, Experience This!

Our communications department dispatched two staff members to tag along with the Missouri S&T solar car team. The duo of Lance Feyh and Tom Shipley will post reports from the road throughout the duration of the trip. These will including some Utterz audiocasts and (soon I hope) some video clips. Meanwhile Bob Phelan of our student design center is also along for the ride, taking photos for his Flickr site and posting updates on the Experience This! blog.

Back home, I’ll be using our university Twitter account to send out updates and links back to both blogs.

Several other universities are also blogging the race. The odds-on favorite University of Michigan Team has a nice blog going, as does Red River College, the only community college in the running — and apparently the only team with a chef on board.

Finally, one solar car fan has created a North American Solar Challenge FriendFeed site aggregating all the NASC solar car team blogs and other feeds. If you’re looking for a single stop for all your solar car news, that’s a good place to go.

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Now playing: Carsick Cars – He Sheng (Rock N Roll Hero)
via FoxyTunes