Content Curation World
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What a Content Curator Needs To Know: How, Tools, Issues and Strategy
Curated by Robin Good
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PKM Is Curation For Your Own Personal Growth | Harold Jarche

PKM Is Curation For Your Own Personal Growth | Harold Jarche | Content Curation World | Scoop.it

Robin Good: PKM or Personal Knowledge Management may be indeed a very close relative to Content Curation. But while Content Curation, is done with a specific audience in mind, PKM is done for one's own learning.

Harold Jarche, looks at the relationship between the two and writes:


"The most important part of personal knowledge management (PKM), in my opinion, is the need for active sense-making.


Merely seeking and sharing information does little other than create more noise online.

Sense-making takes time, discipline, and effort.


-> One strength of PKM is the “manual” nature of sense-making activities. The act of writing a blog post, a tweet, or an annotation on a social bookmark all force you to think a bit more than clicking once and filing it to an automated system.


-> Sense-making, or placing information into context, is where the real personal value of PKM lies.


-> The knowledge gained from PKM is an emergent property of all its activities.


Merely tagging an article does not create knowledge. ...


The difference between PKM and Curation is that the former is personal, while the latter is for an intended audience."



Insightful. 8/10


Full article: http://www.jarche.com/2012/07/pkm-as-pre-curation/



Beth Kanter's comment, July 13, 2012 10:46 AM
I have been using his framework for the past year and a half to teach curation to nonprofits. Linking curation to nonprofit staffer work flow is a great way to get people to use curation!
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Aggregate, Curate and Cross-Publish To All Social Media Channels with Streamified



Robin Good's insight:


Streamified is stream reader / aggregator / publishing platform which allows you to aggregate, filter and read news stories coming from all your selected social channels and RSS feeds. Not only. You can also easily edit and cross-post to any number of social accounts simultaneously or, at a later time.


Similar in some ways to Hootsuite, Streamified offers

  • a more elegant and streamlined interface,
  • a much better news reading experience,
  • the ability to create "persitent searches" on any topic
  • across news sources and social streams
  • and to apply a large number of advanced filters
  • cross-post directly to G+, FB, TW, LI and many more


Key additional features include:


Scheduled posting - organize your editorial calendar by scheduling each post for the day and time you want


Brand alerts - get automatically informed anytime anyone talks about your brand on any site or social media channel


Team collaboration - assign your team members to post and reply on your social networks without needing to give them your credentials for each.


Advanced Analytics and Reports - analyze all of your stream and slice the data in multiple useful ways. (Available only in Professional/Enterprise accounts)


Free version available.



My comment: This is a great tool for content marketers, newsrooms or professionals looking for a tool that brings together the best of Google Reader, Hootsuite and Analytics. Here you have it.


If you have to find and post a lot of relevant content, across multiple social media channels, this may be a very compelling solution indeed.



More info: https://streamified.me/


and here: http://streamified.com/

Pricing info: http://streamified.com/#pricing




Maggie Verster's curator insight, Today, 6:02 AM

Also looks like a great dashboard to organise all your favourite newsfeeds

JudyGressel's curator insight, Today, 11:51 AM

Great tool for students promoting their videos, blogs and other content.
Social media for social good! 

Doug Breitbart's curator insight, Today, 1:12 PM

The Uber curation tool of life. Everything you could want and more. . . .

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A Great Selection of Resources on Curation and Learning by David Kelly

A Great Selection of Resources on Curation and Learning by David Kelly | Content Curation World | Scoop.it
Robin Good's insight:



A great collection of key articles on curation prepared by David Kelly to support his ASTD 2013 session on Curation: Beyond the Buzzword.


The curated list includes nearly 40 selected articles divied into four groups:


a) Specific Session Resources

b) Curation-Themed Writing
c) Curation Examples
d) Additional Resources


Very useful. Good selection. 8/10


Full resource page: http://davidkelly.me/2013/05/curation-beyond-the-buzzword-resources-shared-at-astd2013/


Presentation on Slideshare: http://www.slideshare.net/DavidKelly3/curation-beyond-the-buzzword-astd2013-21430067





wanderingsalsero's curator insight, May 23, 8:37 PM

This is an evergreen interesting topic.  I was especially intrigued with the title up above that said "Social Media Job of The Future".  There might be a lot of prescience (sp?) in that choice of words.

Dawn Adams Miller's curator insight, May 23, 11:12 PM

Anything from LnD Dave is pure hold and very practical.  Enjoy'

Susan Wegmann's curator insight, Today, 8:51 AM

A GREAT resource for the buzzword "Content Curation." Finally!

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Curators Are The True Influencers

Curators Are The True Influencers | Content Curation World | Scoop.it
Robin Good's insight:



Here's an inspiring short article by Elia Morling on the role of curators in storytelling.


Elia reports of a discussion he has had with netnographer Olga Kravets, in which she suggested that: "...curators serve their tribe like dumpster divers.

They dive into containers to rummage through heaps of garbage to find useful stuff that can be re-purposed. When they are done they bring forth their scavenged gifts to their tribe."


But here, is the most compelling part as Elia really seems to have distilled and illustrated here the three key and most valuable traits of a modern content curator:


a) Curators represent a new type of tribal leadership that operates bottom-up and peer to peer.

b) As a member of a tribe, curators will always be more native and relevant than any outsiders will ever be.


c) Within a tribe they are not only appreciated for leveraging their insider skills, but for sustaining and developing their culture."



Definitely worth reading. Inspiring. 8/10


Full post: http://tribaling.com/blog/2013/05/15/curators-and-tribal-currency/




Sergey Yatsenko's curator insight, May 23, 12:41 PM

  Into the post - industrial era  SME's  need  new  Knowledge .

Pagina Uno's curator insight, May 23, 1:26 PM

Curatori rappresentano un nuovo tipo di leadership tribale che opera dal basso e peer to peer. Come membro di una tribù, curatori saranno sempre più nativo e rilevanti rispetto a qualsiasi outsider saranno mai. All'interno di una tribù sono apprezzati non solo per sfruttare le loro abilità di insider, ma per sostenere e sviluppare la loro cultura.

Martin Debattista's curator insight, Today, 7:31 AM

Reminds me of the 'attention economy' in Geert Lovink's book "No Comment" I am reading just now for my research:

 

"In the attention economy, value is measured in the amount of time

you happen to spend with any given media object or person. This can bea web site, watching your favorite show on television, text messaging afriend, talking on the phone, or blogging about the concert you attended-last night. For a long time the attention economy remained a hyped-upconcept, launched during the speculative 1990s to point to the shift fromthe production of tangible goods to immaterial services. The point thatmakes attention such an interesting commodity is the fact that it is soscarce. As Michael Goldhaber Writes in his 1996 Principles of the NewEconomy: "Attention is scarce because each of us has only so much of it to give, and it can come only from us-not machines, computers or anywhere else. Attention is another way of saying "time," as in "Where I choose to spend my time."
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Where Curation and Storytelling Meet: The 85 Seconds Clip

Getty Images touches people in a new campaign created by AlmapBBDO. 

Robin Good's insight:



A new promotional campaign for Getty Images, created by AlmapBBDO, showcases an excellent example of video curation at work.


In this case, Getty Images and its partner agency have decided to gather, distill and juxtapose some of the most beautiful video clips available from the stock image giant, into a "short" (less than 2 mins) capable of telling a simple, human story with no voice-over or dialog.


By curating the best video clips from the Getty Images stock library into a simple but truly engaging visual story, the authors have not only created something that naturally engages human viewers, but have also realized a fantastic showcase of Getty quality images and video, without ever talking or mentioning it in any way.


Excellent work.


Hats to Marcello Serpa, Luiz Sanches, André Kassu, Marcos Medeiros, Renato Simões e Bruno Prosperi.


Original video clip: http://youtu.be/iGgqEKP0oPc


Do not miss to check out the original "From Love to Bingo" clip, done a year ago, but utilizing only still photographs. Amazing.

http://youtu.be/E7xc7J8bdsU




Cindy Rudy's curator insight, May 20, 10:20 PM

Beautiful!

Carmenne K. Thapliyal's curator insight, May 21, 5:54 AM

A very creative video clip

carmen blyth's curator insight, May 22, 9:31 PM

Distilled images woven into a story

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Gimme The Cheese That Matters: Why The World Badly Needs Good Curators

Gimme The Cheese That Matters: Why The World Badly Needs Good Curators | Content Curation World | Scoop.it
I have rehearsed this scenario before, but try to imagine we live in a world where printed media had not been invented, and our only source of information and entertainment was the Internet.
Robin Good's insight:



"Give me the cheeses that matter, offer me a wine list that's manageable. And put all the information that's raining down on us from cyberspace in a convenient, easy-to-handle form."


That's the essence and the relevance of content curation in today's world.

To put it down in such simple and clear words is Simon Kelner on the Independent, who provides some great real-world example and reminds us later of the total non-personality of search engine results,


He shares this wonderful short story: "Opposite my office is one of Britain's most celebrated cheese shops. Once through its doors, you are greeted by the cheeses of the world.


The varieties of sheep's cheese are in double figures, and there's Cheddars of all sizes and provenance.


It is completely over-facing, to the extent that a colleague of mine has been to the shop three or four times and has walked out without buying anything, so baffled was he by the complexity and range of the offering."


He concludes his article by writing: "I'd like the sense that someone of taste and discretion and experience has already whittled down the choices.


(That's the problem with search engines, by the way - no taste!)


The world needs editing..."



To the point. Great examples. Easy to understand. 7/10


Full article: http://www.independent.co.uk/voices/comment/dismiss-ye-olde-newspapers-if-you-will-but-curation-is-one-of-the-worlds-most-undervalued-commodities-8614154.html


(Image credit: Cheeses from Shutterstock)




donhornsby's curator insight, May 15, 7:37 AM

(From the article): I'd like the sense that someone of taste and discretion and experience has already whittled down the choices. (That's the problem with search engines, by the way - no taste!) The world needs editing - and yes, I use that word advisedly. Give me the cheeses that matter, offer me a wine list that's manageable. And put all the information that's raining down on us from cyberspace in a convenient, easy-to-handle form. Sorry, I never intended to be a defence of newspapers! 

Patricia Stitson's curator insight, May 15, 2:06 PM

Would you like some wine? 

Andrew Chilvers's curator insight, May 21, 5:35 PM

Why cheese matters

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Beyond Collecting and Sharing: Twitter as a Curation Tool

Beyond Collecting and Sharing: Twitter as a Curation Tool | Content Curation World | Scoop.it



Robin Good's insight:



What's the difference between "collecting" and "curating"? How can Twitter be used as a "curation" tool?


What are some examples and ideas to put real-time news curation to effective use for those working as educators?


In this good article by Silvia Rosenthal Tolisano (published 1/2012) of Langwitches.org, you can find lots of useful info about the use of Twitter as a curation tool.


Here for example are a few key benefits of using Twitter for picking, selecting and organizing content on a specific topic:


"

  1. Taking advantage of a network of curators working for you (building your own customized network), consuming their curated information

  2. Collecting, organizing, connecting, attributing, interpreting,
    summarizing the vast amount of information that comes across your desk/ feed /books/articles/etc. for YOURSELF

  3. Becoming consciously the curator for others for a particular niche, area of expertise or interest. Disseminate resources, add value, put in perspective, create connections, present in a different light/media/language.

  4. Real time curation allows you to be part of an event, that you physically might not be attending or being on the opposite end allows you to be the bridge for others to participate at an event where you are present, but your network is not."


I think that she's right on the mark.



Well presented article and info. Useful. Good examples. 8/10


Full article: http://langwitches.org/blog/2013/01/03/twitter-as-a-curation-tool/


PDF file reference: http://langwitches.org/blog/wp-content/uploads/2013/01/Twitter-Curation-Tool.pdf



ghbrett's curator insight, May 15, 11:55 AM

See Robin Goode's comments below! Excellent.

Víctor V. Valera Jiménez's curator insight, May 17, 8:03 PM

Siempre pensamos en Twitter como una red social de microblogging en la que compartir información de una manera rápida. Sin embargo y como nos cuenta esta infografía, también puede ser una excelente herramienta de curación de contenidos.

Andrea Walker's curator insight, May 17, 10:56 PM

By using lists lists and hash tags effectively twitter can be u useful curation tool. Storify another mentioned in this article could also be a useful tool to curate twitter content

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Create Custom News Discovery Bots and Collect the Best Content with Ping.it

Create Custom News Discovery Bots and Collect the Best Content with Ping.it | Content Curation World | Scoop.it
Robin Good's insight:



Ping.it is a new web app which allows you to create custom newsbots that automatically aggregate and filter news according to your own search and popularity criteria.


Such user-engineered custom feeds are called Probes, and you can create or subscribe to, to as many as you want. Such custom Probes can, for example, scout a selected set of sites/RSS feeds and distill from them only posts that contain certain keywords, and/or that have reached a certain popularity on social media (Facebook or YouTube).


Check some cool "probes" here: https://ping.it/MariusLian#tabs/Probes


Notably, on Ping.it, not only you can create "probes" that work for you, but the "probes" you create are also useful for others as well, who can put them to their own service.

Additionally you can also "ping" any story you find on the web (with the associated bookmarklet) and, optionally, associate it to a very specific "news collection" that you have created.


"pings" example: https://ping.it/MariusLian#tabs/Pings


"news collection" example: https://ping.it/MariusLian#tabs/Collections



Ping it is the first news discovery and curation app that has finally introduced more control for the user in building and customizing, easily, the way news are found, discovered, filtered and aggregated. Not only, it has introduced the idea that such customized bots/search-algos, can be re-used by others effectively.

Although the "probe" feature it is still very limited in functionality at this time, its introduction is a milestone event for news curators, as more control, on the user-side is exactly what information hunters really need. I expect that many more tools, large and small will need to follow on Ping.it foosteps.


Hats to Ping for introducing this feature, with the wish that they will further refine it and improve it as to make it really flexible and usable for many different types of needs.


Review on TheNextWeb: http://thenextweb.com/apps/2013/05/10/ping-it/


Free to use.



Try it out now: https://ping.it/




ghbrett's curator insight, May 15, 11:57 AM

Have a look at Robin Good's extensive comments about Ping.it. They are very helpful and detailed.

ghbrett's comment, May 15, 11:57 AM
Thanks Robin for your in depth comments!
Robin Good's comment, May 15, 1:44 PM
Glad to be of help GH!
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Crap Detection for Social Content Curators: How To Verify What You Post

Accuracy is fundamental to journalism, but it’s a challenge to verify information when it flows at digital warp speed from so many sources. This presentation
Robin Good's insight:



Craig Silverman, my "reference point" for everything about "accuracy" in online journalism, has published almost two years ago a truly useful slide deck full of  valuable suggestions, tips and recommendations on how to go about detecting crap and BS when dealing with online news and social media sourced content.


Specifically the presentation includes valuable info on:

  • Verifying social media info
  • Social Account and Person evaluation
  • Verifying images
  • Verifying web info
  • Misinformation and fact-checking


The 10-item reading list on the slide is worth by itself the ticket price.



Useful. Pragmatical. Resourceful. 8/10


Full deck: http://www.slideshare.net/craigsilverman/bs-detection-for-digital-content


Full complement: http://www.poynter.org/latest-news/regret-the-error/171713/8-must-reads-that-detail-how-to-verify-content-from-twitter-other-social-media/




Stephen Dale's curator insight, May 9, 5:09 AM

Some useful tips on how to rebalance the Timeliness vs. Accuracy and Quality equation for information dissemination. A must-read for any user of social media! 

Jo Paoletti's comment, May 9, 7:19 AM
Crap detection for content curators. Is it time for everyone who shares stuff they find on the Internet to think of themselves as content curators. Beats being a rumor monger or Typhoid Mary of misinformation.
Sarah McElrath's curator insight, May 10, 8:14 AM

Could be used when teaching evaluation of online content / critical thinking skills.

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WordPress Curation Workflow, Resources and Tips from Nathan Weller

WordPress Curation Workflow, Resources and Tips from Nathan Weller | Content Curation World | Scoop.it
Robin Good's insight:



If you are interested in what could be a good workflow and set of tools to use to curate content on your own WordPress blog, Nathan Weller has a must-read article for you.


In it, he dissects and explains the tools he uses to curate content on WordPress, from how he aggregates and browses RSS feeds, to how he filters, edits and actually curates the content of each post.


Interestingly his focus is on quality, not on having his site populated by lots of "somewhat relevant" content pulled in automatically by one of the many "content marketing"-oriented curation tools available today.


I think you will find several interesting ideas that you may have not considered on how to approach your curation workflow, let alone checking the several insightful comments at the end.



Lost of valuable information, resources, examples and advice. 8/10


Full article: https://managewp.com/wordpress-content-curation




Gaurav Pandey's curator insight, May 6, 10:01 PM

Robin Good's insight:

 

 

If you are interested in what could be a good workflow and set of tools to use to curate content on your own WordPress blog, Nathan Weller has a must-read article for you.

 

In it, he dissects and explains the tools he uses to curate content on WordPress, from how he aggregates and browses RSS feeds, to how he filters, edits and actually curates the content of each post.

 

Interestingly his focus is on quality, not on having his site populated by lots of "somewhat relevant" content pulled in automatically by one of the many "content marketing"-oriented curation tools available today.

 

I think you will find several interesting ideas that you may have not considered on how to approach your curation workflow, let alone checking the several insightful comments at the end.

 

 

Lost of valuable information, resources, examples and advice. 8/10

 

Full article: https://managewp.com/wordpress-content-curation

Robin Martin's curator insight, May 15, 10:30 AM

Working on our first WP site...integrating a blog, publish newsletter w/MailChimp...thanks for the info! Learn learn learn!

Robin Martin's comment, May 15, 10:30 AM
Thank you so much Robin! This is good stuff!
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Find, Collect and Organize Curated Learning Resources with Avoca Learning

Overview of how Avoca's education search engine lets students, teachers and parents search, manage and share millions of education resources and online lessons
Robin Good's insight:



The Avoca Learning platform is a web service which facilitates the finding, collection and organizing of vetted learning resources from dozens of the leading educational sites.


The platform already offers over 20,000 resources from over 35 leading education sites. In the near future new educational resources in the fields of of Language Arts/Reading, and History/Social Studies will be added.


Users can search the already vetted and curated resources and then collect and organize them into specific "albums" dedicated to specific topics.


From the official site: "The Avoca Learning Platform brings together thousands of online learning resources that students, parents and teachers can search, manage and share.


Whether you’re looking for a very specific resource for a single concept (equivalent fractions, for example) or a collection of content that’s aligned to an entire course, the Avoca Learning Platform provides a powerful curation engine to bring you the resources you need, when you need them."


"Avoca Learning helps to solve that problem by finding and indexing the best digital content, allowing users to organize and save that content, and then making it easy to share that curated content with other users."


Curated results can also be filtered by subjects, topics, resource type, media type and grade level.


Free to use.


Try it out now: http://avocalearning.com


Video tutorial on how "search" works in Avoca: http://vimeo.com/63171301


How it works: http://www.avocalearning.com/how-it-works/



Donna Farren's curator insight, May 2, 2:42 PM

Wow this is really great!

Raquel Oliveira's curator insight, May 2, 2:56 PM

Ferramenta para filtrar as informações relevantes da net e aprimorar a curadoria de conteúdo para fins de estudo ! Vale a consulta .

Nimah Nirvanova's curator insight, May 7, 9:27 AM

sharing is the only way in education

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Curation, as a Pedagogical Tool To Embolden Critical Thinking in Education

Curation, as a Pedagogical Tool To Embolden Critical Thinking in Education | Content Curation World | Scoop.it
Exploring Curation as a core competency in digital and media literacy education
Robin Good's insight:



Paul Mihailidis, has an interesting essay on "Exploring Curation as a Core Competency in Digital an Media Literacy Education" in which he offers "a prospective attempt to build curation into the media literacy conversation..." by analyzing the analyzing effective curation practices, and six highly relevant teaching points for using a news curation tool like Storify in the classroom.


His essay "seeks to encourage instructors, particularly on secondary and tertiary education levels, to bridge the gap between informal learning outside of the classroom with formal learning to create a more dynamic place for students to advance critical inquiry, dialogue, and engagement through new forms of content creation, curation, and dissemination."


He writes: "Through student-driven, creation-driven, collective and integrated teaching approaches to curation, the framework aims to build towards savvy media consumption and production, critical evaluation and analysis, and participation in local, national and global dialog.


The framework also addresses the ability to see diversity and civic voice as core competencies in the curation process.


As students learn to build cohesive stories and ideas from a wide variety of sources, they can learn about the diverse types of content that inform a story, and the avenues they have-through social media tools and platforms-to be part of the discussion."


Curation can be an extremely effective approach to develop critical thinking skills and practices, as it forces students to evaluate, vet, verify and decide what really matters.


"When students develop a credible list of professional and personal sources around an issue and/or event, they must acknowledge how much subjective weight they place on a tweet, a blog, or a Facebook post and in relative comparison to an advocacy group, cable television operation, or news service. Arguing for the credibility of a myriad of voices online forces students to build valuable justifications for what they choose to believe, and why."



Informative. Examples-rich. Educationally useful. 8/10


Full essay: http://www-jime.open.ac.uk/jime/article/viewArticle/2013-02/html




AnneMarie Cunningham's curator insight, May 21, 7:51 PM
Great to see this analysis of role/importance of curation as literacy
Ness Crouch's curator insight, May 22, 4:29 AM

Great to have a little evidence to add to the discussion about curation as a tool. I'm a fan of online curation and think that it strengthens teacher's understandings and develops connections with the wider learning community.

Will Gourley's curator insight, May 22, 9:08 PM

Great insight into curation for a 21st century classroom.

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Video Discovery Tools: Where To Find New, Relevant Video Clips On Any Topic

Video Discovery Tools: Where To Find New, Relevant Video Clips On Any Topic | Content Curation World | Scoop.it



Robin Good's insight:



Thanks to @LutzFinger who kindly motivated me to update and share my video discovery tools list, here is a brand new and more comprehensive collection of the best free video discovery tools available out there.


From the newest ones such as Waywire and Moziy, to the classics such as Topsy or Devour, you'll find here 20 alternative video discovery tools that you can start to use right now.


If you want my personal advice go first to check out Frequency and you will not be disappointed.


Full collection: http://clipboard.com/RobinGood/boards/video-discovery



P.S.: If you know of additional dedicated video discovery tools that are not listed here please feel free to suggest them in the comments section.



LundTechIntegration's curator insight, May 1, 11:49 AM

Love these resources!  Thanks.

Heather Bunney's curator insight, May 4, 6:39 AM

Great resource Thanks

Lutz's comment, May 10, 5:27 PM
Thanks again for the great collection. Please be mind that clipboard will soon switch off this great page.
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Get the RSS Feed for Any Twitter Account with Twitter RSS

Get the RSS Feed for Any Twitter Account with Twitter RSS | Content Curation World | Scoop.it
Twitter-RSS allows you to get in RSS format the latest news of the twitter users choosen by you.
Robin Good's insight:


Twitter is a new free web service which allows you to get the RSS feed for any active Twitter account.


Highly useful for news and content curators wanting to subscribe with their RSS reader or content curation tool to specific Twitter accounts.


From March 2013 Twitter has in fact disabled its own RSS feed service.

See: http://mashable.com/2012/09/05/twitter-api-rss/ 

http://sociable.co/social-media/twitter-puts-rss-on-death-row-can-topsy-save-it/ 


Free to use.


Try it out now:  http://www.twitter-rss.com 


(Thanks to Ana Cristina Pratas for discovering it)

Stephen Dale's curator insight, April 24, 5:31 AM

Glad to see that RSS is not dead, despite waht Google think!

DJ Halp's comment, April 24, 7:26 AM
anyone remember when it was easy to discover an RSS feed right from any twitter page? the source would just be based on some unique id...a string of like eight or nine numbers. that ability went away last october. this looks a lot cleaner, and it's a great find...still i wonder why simpler feed discovery isn't possible anymore.
wanderingsalsero's comment, April 25, 12:17 AM
I'll admit I'm not really skillful with twitter and I know almost nothing about RSS but it does instantly seem apparent to me that most Twitter feeds just have so much total crap on them that saving/collecting is totally a waste of time.
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Visually Curate Your Digital Magazine or Product Showcase with Clipzine

Visually Curate Your Digital Magazine or Product Showcase with Clipzine | Content Curation World | Scoop.it



Robin Good's insight:



Clipzine is a web app which makes it easy to collect images from any website page and to visually organize them into page-based collections.

On each page it is possible to place as many as 24 pieces of content and to decide how large or small each element will be. The user can expand each imported element over two or more tiles and move it around to any position.


It is also possible to use one or more tiles to add custom text and information and to format it professionally.


One key practical use of Clipzine that can be helpful in testing out its capablities is its ability to create a visual magazine of any Pinterest board.

Just go to the selected Pinterest board page, click the Clipzine bookmarklet and select the unique Clipzine option to capture "all" images available on that page at once.


Once captured all the images in a "zine", click on Edit / Syling and then on the Styling button that appears above each page content. Now hover with your mouse on any image in the collection and experiment with the feature buttons that appear around and in the center of each image.


The final collection, called a zine, can be saved, published on the web, shared on social media, embedded on other sites or saved to a PDF file.




My comment: This is one of the very few curation tools that leverages a tremendously powerful variable: control of positioning and size of elements in a collection. This is very useful as it empowers the curator to go beyond the linear top-down list or newspaper/magazine sequence and to create a more varied "equilibrium" between the elements in the collection.

Understanding how to use Clipzine is not as intuitive as one would like, and the UI, thanks also to the presence of unpleasant and distracting ads is not as clean and straightforward as I would like to be.


Promising concept. Powerful visual control in the hands of the curator. A bit disappointing implementation and not so intuitive and simple to use (for now). 




Free to use. Ad supported.


Find out more / Try it out now: https://clipzine.me/



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A Collection of Collections: The Typologist by Diana Zlatanovski

A Collection of Collections: The Typologist by Diana Zlatanovski | Content Curation World | Scoop.it



Robin Good's insight:



If you are looking for some oustanding examples of curation at work here's one that should not be missed.


A collection of collections, the Typologist is a unique site curated by Diana Zlatanovski, Museologist at The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston  and Photographer at The Typology, and showcasing interesting objects and photo typologies that she has found around the world.

Check also her print shop at: the-typology.myshopify.com/

Follow Diana here:


Recommended.



Social Media Consultant's curator insight, May 22, 10:14 AM

A Collection of Collections: The Typologist by Diana Zlatanovski

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Backup, Archive and Search All of Your Twitter, Facebook and Gmail Data with Norton Labs Ditto

Backup, Archive and Search All of Your Twitter, Facebook and Gmail Data with Norton Labs Ditto | Content Curation World | Scoop.it
Robin Good's insight:



Ditto is a FREE, automated weekly backup of Twitter, Facebook and Gmail with integrated search capabilities.


To curate, means also ability to archive, preserve and safely store the data/information/content available in your newsradar/collection/lineup. As a matter of fact, if you decided to follow-up on an academic pursuit of your data-curation interests, you would be immediately confronted with the learning of the best methodologies, tools and workflows utilized to preserve and archive digital data.


In addition, given the times we are in, and who controls our data, you can never know what happens next, and whether you are always going to be able to access both your account and the data that's in it.


For these reasons I think it is relevant for anyone involved in professionally managing content / data, such as a content curator does, to have the ability to easily and automatically backup all of his Twitter / Facebook data as well as his own Gmail.


With Ditto, you can export all of your backed up data from Facebook, Twitter or Gmail, into a handy PDF file.



Free to use. (max 3GB of archive space can be used - if you leave out your Gmail, that's plenty of space.)


Find out more: https://ditto.norton.com/


Try it out now: http://ditto.norton.com/services




Dr. Michael Simmons's curator insight, May 20, 3:30 PM

Daunting, but probably the direction in which we need to go.

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Why Do You Curate Content? Here My Five Top Reasons for Doing It

Why Do You Curate Content? Here My Five Top Reasons for Doing It | Content Curation World | Scoop.it



Robin Good's insight:



Why do you curate content? Are you doing it because you didn't know anymore what to write about or are you doing it because it feels like you can save a lot of time by curating instead of writing?


What drives your desire to republish, mention or introduce other people's content? The ever-growing need for fresh content? The desire to become more visible on seach engines thanks to more content and on-target use of relevant keywords?


What is it really that makes you curate?


Cendrine Marrouat has a short but stimulating article, where she invites you to do just that. Stop and think why curation is something that you value so much?


I don't know what your reasons may be, but I have decided to stop and list at least my five top reasons for curating content as I do.


You can read them in the comments of Cendrine stimulating article, right here: http://www.creativeramblings.com/reasons-content-curator/



Stimulating. Valuable questioning and modelling. 7/10


(Image credit: Thinking man - Shutterstock)



OMP Digital's curator insight, May 16, 11:24 AM

A fantastic article on why you should curate content, share it and give your personal touch on the matter. 

Carmenne K. Thapliyal's curator insight, May 19, 11:24 AM

This short article provides five solid reasons why one needs to curate. Needless to say, I've bought into the idea anyway

ghbrett's curator insight, May 19, 6:08 PM

Read the other comments, they are better that what I could write. See below.

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Search, Collect and Organize Information Into Visual Learning Boards with Edcanvas

Robin Good's insight:


EdCanvas is a web service which allows you to search, find, clip and collect any kind of content, from text to video clips and to organize it into visual boards for educational and learning purposes.


Differently than Pinterest, EdCanvas is specifically targeted at the education world and at schools and teachers, and it makes possible not just to collect "images" from web pages, but to collect and organize whichever content elements you want, including full web pages.


EdCanvas boards also offer the ability to easily reposition each item in the collection according to your preferences and it provides a number of pre-set layout options for displaying content in your boards.


The strongest feature for EdCanvas is an integrated search engine, which allows you to search for images, websites, video clips across Google, YouTube and Flickr, and lets you grab and drop any relevant result into anyone of your collections. Furthermore Edcanvas can connect directly to your Dropbox or Google Drive giving you access to all of your personal library files.



Similar tools: www.Learnist.com



Free to use.


Try it out now: http://www.edcanvas.com/


Help / support: https://edcanvas.uservoice.com/


Examples of collections: http://www.edcanvas.com/ (scroll down)




Bernd Meyer's curator insight, May 22, 12:36 AM

Want to learn about this one.  Looks great.

Becky Roehrs's curator insight, May 22, 9:50 AM

This looks fantastic!

joanna prieto's curator insight, Today, 11:42 AM

Se ve genial la herramienta, la probaré y les cuento!

@JoannaPrieto

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Start Curating Your Flipboard Magazine Without an iPad: Introducing the Flipboard Editor on the Web



Robin Good's insight:



You can now curate your own Flipboard magazine directly from your preferred web browser, thanks to the release of the new Flipboard Editor, which allows you to modify, delete and check stats for your magazines and individual clips.


To add new content to your magazines you can install the "Flip it" bookmarklet which allows you to grab any web page, video or other piece of content you find on the web and that you want to be added to one of your Flipboard magazines.

P.S.: The bookmarklet still leaves something to be desired as it often fails to pick up a relevant image from the web pages you point it to, nor offers the option to associate some other image alternatively. To be improved.



Free to use.


Flipboard Editor: https://editor.flipboard.com/


Bookmarklet: https://share.flipboard.com/


FAQ: https://editor.flipboard.com/faq


Content Curation World sample on Flipboard: http://flip.it/Q4i5d





Stephen Dale's curator insight, May 16, 11:13 AM

Love Flipboard. This new feature opens up a whole new world for content curation.

Víctor V. Valera Jiménez's curator insight, May 17, 7:31 PM

Ahora ya no hace falta disponer de un Ipad o una tablet o smartphone para realizar nuestra propia revista en Flipboard, ya que con el nuevo editor online en la web de esta conocida herramienta, podremos realizar nuestra propia curación desde nuestro ordenador.

 

Este vídeo nos da una pequeña introducción de como empezar a usar este editor en la web de Flipboard, mediante el botón o "bookmarklet" que se puede instalar en la barra de favoritos de nuestro navegador para ir capturando los contenidos que nos parezcan interesantes para nuestra publicación.

Elsie Whitelock's curator insight, May 23, 9:42 AM

now this is really cool and useful.

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Multimedia Curation: Create Embeddable Video Compilations with CratePlayer

Multimedia Curation: Create Embeddable Video Compilations with CratePlayer | Content Curation World | Scoop.it
Discover, collect, play, and share your favorite online media with CratePlayer.
Robin Good's insight:



CratePlayer is a web app which allows you to create compilations of video (and audio) clips coming from all your social media accounts as well as from YouTube, Vimeo, Dailymotion, Soundcloud or from any other website (a standard bookmarklet allows to easily grab video and audio content you find on the web.)


While it is not possible to upload your own files, it is possible to apply a visual cover, a description and relevant tags to each collection, which can be set to "private" or "public" depending on your needs. Furthermore you can invite additional persons to contribute to curate a specific collection.


Final collections can be easily shared on Facebook, Twitter, Google+, Pinterest, via email, or can be embedded on any web site or blog.


Free to use.



More info: https://www.crateplayer.com


FAQ: https://www.crateplayer.com/about/faq


Examples: https://www.crateplayer.com/crates




wanderingsalsero's curator insight, May 8, 10:32 PM

This is a great idea although I don't see where, from just reading the description of what it does, where it's any different than Reel Surfer or Keeeb or probably even a few others. 

 

There's no doubt, however, that curating and aggregating video content can be a beneficial service to lots of niches.....etc. specific styles of cooking, auto repair, golf tutorials, dancing (e.g. videos on 'cross body lead').

 

I'll definately subscribe to the site and try it out.  I'll sell you what I wish I cold find:  I wish I could find a tool that made it really easy to insert notes that would display at specific points in vidoes.  A lot of times I see videos where most of it it not interesting but a certain portion of it is.

Alexander King's comment, May 9, 8:16 PM
@wanderingsalsero: Simple. Reel Surfer and Keeeb do not allow you to have a persistant, global playlist. Also Keeeb isn't just focused on playable media.. it's a lot of different things. The "liner notes" that you are referring to are a feature that is coming soon to CratePlayer!
GIANFRANCO MARINI's curator insight, May 10, 5:04 PM

CratePlayer è una web app o un webware, come preferite, che consente la creazione di compilation audio e video dai numerosi social network e social media del web (youtube, vimeo, dailymotion, ecc.) e dai vari siti web. E' possibile farlo anche attraverso un apposito bookmarklet che consente di catturare il video desiderato in modo molto semplice.

 

E' inoltre possibile, per ogni raccolta creata, inserire una caportina, predisporre una descrizione, aggiugnere dei tag, configurarla come privata o pubblica, condividerla (Goggle+, Facebook, Twitter, ecc.), incorporarla.

 

Molto utile per la didattica in quanto consente di creare raccolte di video e/o audio da fonti diverse e su un deterimnato tema / argomento da fornire agli studenti per approfondimenti e per lo studio, senza dover fornire loro lunghe liste di  link. Utile anche come esercizio da far svolgere agli studenti fornendo loro un tema sul quale ricercare fonti audio e video da oprganizzare e integrare in una raccolta

 

per ulteriori informazioni: https://www.crateplayer.com

 

FAQ: https://www.crateplayer.com/about/faq

 

Esempi: https://www.crateplayer.com/crates

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News Filtering and Discovery: Three Alternative Approaches To Get the Best News on a Specific Topic

News Filtering and Discovery: Three Alternative Approaches To Get the Best News on a Specific Topic | Content Curation World | Scoop.it
A new wave of sites based on topic curation, both human and algorithmic, are creating opportunities to reach targeted audiences.
Robin Good's insight:



Anthony Kosner on Content.ly analyzes three different news discovery services in order to illustrate the different types of approaches available today to gather and filter streams for a specific audience.


He takes as examples Fuego, Upworthy and Prismatic, which utilize three very different solutions to aggregating and filtering the news in order to provide a relevant stream to their readers.


  • Fuego works by curating - manually - a selected group of thought leaders in the field of journalism. Most everything they post becomes part of Fuego.

  • Upworthy is powered by human curators who decide what makes the news and what doesn't.

  • Prismatic is strong on extracting relevant stories based on specific keywords and on your preferences and interaction with the service itself.


Overall, the article tries to illustrate how different can be the approaches utilized to filter and suggest content to a specific audience.



Interesting. Informative. 6/10


Full article: http://contently.com/blog/2013/04/29/the-evolution-of-curation-puts-tools-in-marketers-hands/




Dennis T OConnor's curator insight, May 6, 10:49 PM

The more sources of information you tame, the more well rounded your curation becomes. 

Deb Nystrom, REVELN Consulting's curator insight, May 7, 5:13 AM

There can be filter bubbles (blind spots), and THEN there's just plain getting the best on a topic using the best tools.  Content curation and Robin Good's insights help. ~ D

SPIRUVIE's curator insight, May 7, 3:41 PM

well, well... ouvaton :-))

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Google Reader Alternatives: Which One Is Best For You? 30 Tools To Choose From

Google Reader Alternatives: Which One Is Best For You? 30 Tools To Choose From | Content Curation World | Scoop.it



Robin Good's insight:



If you are still looking for a Google Reader alternative, I have put together a growing and useful reference of all the tools I have identified myself, that could be valid replacements when, on July 1st 2013, Google Reader will be retired.


So far there are over 30 tools that I have identified as valid alternatives to the original Google Reader.


I have not yet provided additional information, specs or comments for each tool I have put aside, as I have simply collected, after having verified each, those that were active and interesting enough for my needs.


P.S.: Google is closing down Reader because in my view, Google Now and Google+ replace fully all of the services offered by Reader while building the foundations for a social, community-based information ecosystem.


Full list: http://clipboard.com/RobinGood/boards/google-reader-alternatives-rss-readers


P.S.: Feel free to suggest additional tools that should be part of this list in the comments.



Gerda van Doorn's comment, May 5, 4:01 AM
Another possibility is Symbaloo, great for categorising.
Gianluigi Spagnoli's comment, May 6, 3:39 AM
Tnx for the suggestion.
Elsie Whitelock's curator insight, May 6, 9:10 AM

sooo many choices..

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The More You Automate, The Less You Curate: Sense-Making Requires Manual Effort

The More You Automate, The Less You Curate: Sense-Making Requires Manual Effort | Content Curation World | Scoop.it
Robin Good's insight:



Harold Jarche has a good post about curation and PKM on his blog. Nonetheless is from a year back or more, it is definitely worth a read.

The short relatively post has been inspired by a somewhat misleading tweet by Cristina Milos (where she says that "curating is different than aggregating and that's why she is not a fan of Scoop.it pr Paper.li).

The tweet is misleading because, while Paper.li is indeed an aggregator for most, Scoop.it does not automate the process of selecting and publishing a curated magazine, though, I must admit, plenty of its top viewed channels do not go much beyond what Paper.li does, basically reposting other people content "as is". So I definitely sympathize with this issue.


And the key point Harold Jarche wants to make, is that, anytime there is some kind of human intervention to pick, select, re-title, contextualize or introduce some information, then, we are actually "curating" something. Not so, when we strive to automate, simplify and abbreviate the time needed to produce some valuable info.


He writes (read the word "PKM" as if it said "curation"): "...sense-making, or placing information into context, is where the real personal value of PKM lies. 


The process of seeking out information sources, making sense of them through some actions, and then sharing with others to confirm or accelerate our knowledge are interlinked activities from which knowledge (often slowly) emerges.


...The act of writing a blog post, a tweet, or an annotation on a social bookmark all force you to think a bit more than clicking once and filing it to an automated system. Other sense-making routines, like a weekly review of Twitter favourites and creating Friday’s Finds, encourages reflection and reinforces learning.


Automating sense-making is antithetical to the rationale behind PKM."



Rightful. Insightful. Useful. 8/10


Full post: http://www.jarche.com/2012/03/the-pkm-value-add/




Martin Gysler's comment, May 15, 4:57 AM
Yes Deborah, I totally agree with you.
Robin Martin's comment, May 15, 10:28 AM
Absolutely agree!
Robin Martin's comment, May 15, 10:28 AM
Absolutely agree!
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Curation Is The Future of Online Retail Shopping

Curation Is The Future of Online Retail Shopping | Content Curation World | Scoop.it



Robin Good's insight:


Carrie Whitehead, Product Manager at Zappos Labs writes about curation in the online retail shopping space, while providig some very useful examples of companies already using it effectively.


She writes: "The largest online retailer, Amazon.com has a vision to be the ‘Earth’s Biggest Selection.’ But is this vast selection too overwhelming for shoppers? A search for ‘black dress’ in Clothing & Accessories on Amazon.com brings back 65,529 results! For consumers, this large number of choices can lead to confusion, exhaustion and dissatisfied purchases, or worse, no purchase at all."


...Zappos recently launched Glance, a shopping experience allowing users to discover the most exciting products from Zappos through curated collections...


...Niche retailers such as Warby Parker (retro-inspired eyewear) and Frank & Oak (quality menswear) are providing a boutique experience with a price tag that’s accessible.


...Social shopping site OpenSky taps celebrities and influencers to select the products they love. Fancy, a social photo site similar to Pinterest, puts curation in the hands of the community."



Informative. Resourceful. 7/10


Full article: http://www.psfk.com/2013/04/online-retail-curation.html





Farid Mheir's curator insight, April 26, 6:18 PM

Absolutely a huge trend. Recent NRF show in NYC, curated commerce was very popular topic. Not only are brands and websites positioning themselves, newcomer companies are starting to prepare platforms to facilitate the creation of curated commerce. For example, Dell unveiled a special curated commerce project that will provide the platform for others to enable curated commerce on their website.

Lee Tonitto's curator insight, April 28, 3:03 AM

Fashion SKU curation is the solution to reduce consumer anxiety: A search for ‘black dress’ in Clothing & Accessories on Amazon.com brings back 65,529 results! For consumers, this large number of choices can lead to confusion, exhaustion and dissatisfied purchases, or worse, no purchase at all."

Mr Branson's curator insight, May 8, 5:15 AM

I believe, online consumers of all ages now want more than a shopping experience. They want price, place, promotion, people and ACTION. http://www.infogurushop.com Without the above they will simply continue to click, browse and surf away.What do you think?

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Collect and Organize Your Favorite Texts, Images and Videos with Keeeb

Pinterest meets Evernote. Every day you surf and find amazing things on the internet. With Keeeb you can save sentences or paragraphs, single images and vide...
Robin Good's insight:



Keeeb is a Pinterest-like content curation tool, which allows you to clip individual text passages, images you find on web page or video clips into visual collections that you can organize according to your preferences.


Within Keeb visual boards, which can be set to be public or private (default), you can in fact drag and re-arrange individual items as you prefer. Collected items can also be easily copied or moved to other "pages" (collections) you have and can be shared directly on your Facebook or Twitter social media channels.


You can also work collaboratively with other teammates on a collection by inviting them to contribute to any Keeeb page you have created.


A unique feature of Keeeb called Groups allows to tie together multiple items in a collection by dragging them on top of each other. Groups in turn, can be nested into other groups.


Keeeb makes it very easy to clip multiple parts from a web page or set of pages and to collect them in an orderly manner inside a page.


Keeeb offers much better functionalities than Pinterest, allowing serious content curators to create valuable collections of multimedia excerpts on specific subjects.


Definitely worth trying.


Free to use.


Try it out now: http://keeeb.com/


Tutorials: http://keeeb.com/info/en/help/


(HT to Ana Cristina Pratas for first discovering it)




Susan's comment, May 9, 2:28 PM
I would say it's more of a replacement for Symbaloo or other bookmarking tools.
Karen Johnson's comment, May 9, 3:48 PM
I would agree with Susan's comment. I think it is something to try instead of Netvibes.
Elizabeth Hutchinson's comment, May 9, 4:52 PM
I think like all curation tools, you need to find what works for you. If you have time investigate the next thing if not, stick with what you know.