Author: nchenga

  • Catherine Chikwakwa

    Wikipedia page on Malawi long distance runner Catherine Chikwakwa.

  • Zurigo

    The conf location is impressive… Sarah O’Keefe is speaking on “Working in a third culture world”.

    A couple of slides:

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  • jeans



    A weekend snapshot…

  • Loony Design

    for future reference:

    Loony Design

  • Beryl

    for future reference (when I get myself an Ubuntu laptop):
    Beryl-project.org

  • Saturday morning

    All the windows wide open, listening to some random classical music show on Deutschlandfunk, birds singing…

    My ordinary kind of life on a Saturday morning.

    Buon weekend!

  • More Photos

    I’ve added more snapshots from northern Germany:

    autoaufkleber

    DSC00110

    Rocketdog

  • Blogging for Content Developers

    At an undisclosed location in the very near future, the editor of this beautiful blog will be holding a talk on a high-flying topic yet to be prepared.

    Blogging for Content Developers

    I’ve decided to give this whole project a jump-start by writing down the outline in my blog… because getting started is always the hard part. The audience will be technical writers and communicators, but I don’t know how many of them are into blogging. I think, I’ll start with some questions like:

    • Who’s got a blog?
    • Who is taking care of a work blog (either internally or externally)?
    • Who is planning to set up a blog?
    • Who started a blog but gave up after some time?

    2nd Section: Why blog?
    Basically this section will include a little bit about my first blog at an ASP-like blog provider and the subsequent move to WordPress. My initial idea when I set out was to help cross the digital divide and point to content about my home country, Malawi.

    Example of the power of blogging: During the last General Elections in Malawi, Alex at the Polytechnic helped to keep us informed by posting regular information and allowing Malawians to comment. In general, blogging has increased the amount of direct infos available on Malawi in the Internet.

    Top reasons for content developers to start blogging:

    • Provide a continuous online sample of your writing skills, one of your top skills.
    • Learn about new technologies and keep up with development. Let’s face it: the world of publishing has changed/is changing. Blogging helps you to understand the ways and means, as well as the way online communities evolve and behave.
    • Use your blog to become a subject matter expert in your domain.
    • Expand your network (private and business). Get to know new people and explore new opportunities.

    3rd Section: Why WordPress?
    This section will kind of list my reasons to go for WordPress, but could easily be taken as a list of criteria to watch out for if you’re evaluating other CMS tools:

    • Open source and free.
    • Huge community and good support.
    • Lots of new features and bug releases per year.
    • Good separation between design and content.
    • Stable.
    • Good documentation (Thank you, Lorelle).
    • Lots of plugins and design templates to choose from.

    Server requirements: MySQL and PHP or above

    Knowledge requirement: some knowledge of CSS and HTML to tweak and customize a design template.

    Section 4: Beyond the Current Blog Hype
    Currently we’re going thru a hype phase. Everybody’s starting a blog.

    Splogs, spam comments and cyber bullying/threatening are a huge problem.

    akismet

    Nevertheless, blogs are here to stay. Esp. mainstream media is feeling the heat. A kind of independent blog journalism is establishing itself and many companies are using blogs to reach out to their customers. See Krusenstern for an excellent entry on old, established media vs. blog journalism.

    Millions of blogs are started and abandoned within 3 months. It’s not easy to write and communicate effectively. This is where I see lots of opportunities for tech. communicators (e.g. as Chief Blogging Officer).

    Section 5: Your Benefit as a Tech. Communicator

    If you’re a consultant/ext. contractor, use current CMS technology to enhance your work website. Blogging is a good way to make your business website less static. Example: I remember a conf where one of the participants was distributing tonnes of business cards. I had a look at the website afterwards and was utterly disappointed.

    Use your blog to:

    • Point to interesting industry developments.
    • Voice own opinion on a topic.
    • Publish short howto’s, code snippets, tutorials, extensions, examples.
    • Link to relevant industry developments and use “Trackback” to respond to other blogs, which you find during your daily Internet watch.
    • Personal impression of conferences / shows.
    • Keep online notes of interesting website or talks you’ve attended.

    If you offer focussed content on a special topic the chances of attracting readers are somewhat higher than with a personal blog. Frequency is important. To set up a readership you need to post at regular intervals. On the upside, entries do not have to be very long and you can post entries to WordPress via email.

    Don’t move into blogging if you don’t enjoy writing OR if you’re looking for fast money. It needs some time to establish your blog and people lurk around a long time before they start commenting (approx. 200 visits for every commenter). But if you write about a niche topic and provide good content, people will find you.

    Avoid the typical marketing glib and press release speak in your blog.

    Section 6: Demo of a WordPress Blog
    Show tags, permalinks, trackbacks, and RSS feeds (if there’s interest).

    My Very Personal Benefit:

    Thru my hobby, I know more about today’s publishing opportunities and learnt lots about CSS, which I can use in my day job.

    I’ve got a new hobby and all the flickery goodness that comes with it.

    I’ve found new friends and keep in contact with old ones.

    I’ve got my own online reference (e.g. re-setting my ADSL router) and online bookmark site.

    Section 7: Resources and Discussion
    One very good introductory resource on business blogging is:

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    The End

    I’m tired and I’ll add more resource links later. In the meantime, feel free to offer suggestions or challenge my outline.

  • Photowalking

    I went a-photowalking in Hannover and Hamburg. I’ve started uploading a couple of snapshots. Some of my personal favorites include:

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    Liebe Frau àœnlü!

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    Blohm + Voss

    errr… all of them really!

  • umpteenth WikiHow

    Today’s complimentary link is from my favo(u)rite reference site, WikiHow:

    How to Write a Press Release

    😉

  • Malawi music

    More crosslinking to Cy’s Film. Or have a look at the video:

  • Malawi photos

    Today’s recommended link: Cy Kuckenbaker’s photos from Malawi:
    http://cysfilm.com/

    The corresponding Flickr album is at:
    http://www.flickr.com/photos/cykuck/

  • TED in Arusha

    Speaking of conferences, this sounds like an interesting event:

    TED in Arusha, Tanzania, June 4-7, 2007
    http://www.ted.com/tedglobal2007/program.cfm

    Anybody interested in sponsoring me in exchange for live blogging? Oh well, too late, registration is closed.

  • BlogCampSwitzerland

    I attended today’s BlogCamp in Zurich; a so-called unConference because it organizes itself like BarCamp. But heh, we’re in Switzerland so it was fairly well organized.

    I saw a couple of familiar faces. Maybe I should get a t-shirt saying “Blog conference tourist”… And I invited some of the Basel bloggers to the upcoming Basel Flickr group meeting.

    Here are some short notes on the talks I attended:

    Jürg Stucker showed a knowledge platform they’re using internally at Namics; it’s sort of like a wiki and blog combined with email functionality, i.e. you can post and email an entry at the same time. One of the questions asked was what would happen if it was turned off: Jürg said probably the number of emails would increase and probably some of the fun entries would disappear cos it’s not the kind of information you send around by email. Another question was is there a tool like this available out-of-the-box.

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    Stephanie Booth talked about multilingual blogging, the pain of translating blog articles, and the technical difficulties of using 2 languages in the same blog. And even in multi-lingual Switzerland, our language skills vary, i.e. we might not feel comfortable commenting in our second or third language. There’s a need to bridge the gap. Her suggestion: Post a short summary to give your readers an idea if this topic is worth ploughing thru or not. Write in a simple and concise style, if you’re addressing a multilingual audience. On the Web, the language barrier is the real separator: Swiss French bloggers look towards France, while Swiss Germans focus more on Austrian or German sites.

    benbit gave a live demo how easy it is to hack into a web portal, thanks to XSS and JavaScript. His advice for users: don’t use auto login. Many companies are careless in the way they handle customer data. Even if they are informed about the security hole, no action is taken to secure the site. He suggests getting a tool like RoboForm.

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    And in the final session, I attended Denis Nordmann’s talk on the future of podcasting. This was an honest overview of the current market situation in Switzerland, which is dominated by public TV and radio broadcasters. Business models based on advertising are difficult to implement, because in general advertisers are interested in regional markets, very few companies advertise globally. And secondly it seems that the big player in this market is somewhat hesitant to fix a “bug” in iTunes which would allow podcast platforms to find out more about their podcast audience, again valuable data for advertisers. Note to myself, check out the podcast platform at: hoerkolumnen.ch

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    My feedback for the organizers:
    I’d prefer one day instead of two, and I think a Saturday is great.

    Disclaimer: this is my interpretation and view. If I get something completely wrong, please leave a comment 😉

  • Malawi bloggers

    When I started blogging back in Jan 2003, one of my high flying and lofty ideas was to help cross the digital divide and point to content about Malawi. A goal I haven’t really managed to keep. But from time to time I’ve pointed to various Malawi sites. It’s great to see that the number of fellow Malawi bloggers is increasing.

    There’s:

    • Victor Kaonga, currently based in Sweden, raising an interesting question “Is Malawi really poor?”. Victor is also writing about Malawi at Global Voices Online.
    • Cryton blogging from the UK about his studies and work and how life in GB compares to Malawi. I like the way he interweaves his texts with Chichewa comments. He’s got an interesting theory regarding soap operas. In my opinion the number of drinking holes is equally high in Malawi.
    • And Soyapi visited Yahoo! HQ
    • There’s another interesting blog collecting information about Africa’s connectivity.
  • Price comparison



    I pay 3.20 Swiss Francs for a kilo of tomato at the local supermarket.
    3.20 Swiss Franc is currently about 384.56 Malawi Kwacha

    Compare this to current Malawi prices:
    Shoprite 199.99 MK
    Peoples 110.00 MK
    At the market, between 10 to 50 MK for one tomato depending on its size.

  • The power of insects…



    We got to see the destructive power of tropical insects…. One of our cars stood idle for 3 weeks cos it needed to be repaired.

    Within those 3 weeks termites got into the seats, started eating away the insulation on the wiring, and created short circuits with their discharge in the fusebox, and thus corroding the contacts.

  • Twittervision

    Twittering on a map background:

    http://twittermap.com/twittervision