DTLT Today: The UMW Blogs Upgrade Show

I can’t begin to tell you how much fun it has been having Tim Owens at DTLT rocking the joint. He’s been experimenting madly with Andy Rush‘s Wirecast/Live Boradcast setup, a.k.a “the kit,” and it’s evermore apparent we’ve only scratched the surface of what we can do with the live broadcasts during the ds106 Summer of Oblivion.

We’ve done nine episodes of DTLT Today so far, and it has been a ton of fun—which makes all the difference. With very little overhead, a loose approach, and not more than a rough idea of the topic we’ll be discussing it seems to challenge us to get to the point and keep the discussion moving. And the fact that the show can be no longer than 15 minutes is one of my favorite aspects of the whole thing, I like how limitations can help focus a format. What’s more, the shows are usually born of something broached while chatting in the office earlier that day.

And while there is a nonchalance to the whole thing, Timmmmyboy has been doing some really awesome stuff with the Live broadcasts. For example, we can bring tweets directly into the live broadcasts if they include @dtlttoday —a pretty cool live commentary using tools people are already on. And Tim gives the play-by-play for how he did this here. Additionally, Tim has been using the iPad to remotely control the different shots for each broadcast. For example, we had 8 shots for today’s broadcast, each with a different background image, lower third, intro, outro, etc. All of these were controlled at the touch of a button on an iPad (see how he did it here). No fumbling around, just smooth, live TV brought to you thanks to some elegant hacks by Timmmmmyboy. Also, it’s cool how quickly we are getting the live broadcast format down while at the same time innovating in the space, sharing out what we do, and having fun. Tim Owens has made DTLT a lot stronger, we love this guy!

Anyway, here is today’s live broadcast covering the recent upgrade to UMW Blogs.

DTLT just finished a major upgrade to UMW Blogs and a ton of plugins and themes. Join Jim and Tim as they talk about some of the new themes, plugins, and features of 3.2 that Mary Washington is taking advantage of with UMW Blogs.

Show Notes

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UMW Blogs Upgraded to WordPress 3.2.1

Image credit: darek.zon’s “Blue Sky”

Yesterday UMW Blogs was upgraded to the latest version of WordPress (3.2.1), and it was surprisingly seamless. Why surprising? Well, we hadn’t updated since December 2010 and we had more that 69 plugins and themes that were waiting to be upgraded over the last few months, and I thought this would be the time when we finally paid for our sin of theme and plugin gluttony. But, we didn’t—so far we’ve escaped relatively unscathed and laid a couple of  workhorse plugins over the years to rest, a couple of which had far outlived their time. Here is the shortlist of mu-plugins we killed (I will be posting the longer list of plugins and themes we let go as we continue the culling process all this week and next). It is WordPress time at DTLT!

Userthemes is gone. When dsader created Userthemes it was the only way to edit and customize individual themes on a WPMu install without manually copying and re-creating existing themes and then add custom hacks. With the 3.2.1 WP Multi-Site setup this is built into the network admin space. I am loving the uber admin network center.

Anarchy Media Player has been retired. It pained me to do it, but we had to. The instances of AMP shortcode still needs to be converted throughout the site to convert YouTube embeds (working on that) but in the meantime this plugin was a drag on the system and hadn’t been updated since 2008—kinda surprised it worked for so long after it was killed. My very special zombie plugin. And still haven’t found a media plugin as versatile, but with embedding YouTUbe videos in WP as easy as copying and pasting a URl in the visual editor, how could I rationalize this plugin anymore?

MU Multi-Site Manager has also been retired, and I am sad to see it go. This is the pluginw e used to get Longwood Blogs, Faculty Academy, and other WPMu sites that were hosted within UMW Blogs. Interestingly enough, deleting the plugin doesn’t effect the existing networks within networks at all. This week I will be experimenting with James John Jacoby’s Multi-Network plugin as a replacement. And I am planning on testing it as I try and bring the precursor to UMW Blogs (ELS Blogs) into the UMW Blogs fold.

Akismet was also retired on UMW Blogs, but that had nothing to do with functionality and everything to do with money. They wanted $750 a month for a site as big and active as UMW Blogs and we just couldn’t afford it (more details in my previous post here) so we are going with TypePad AntisSpam, so far so good. And I will be crossing my fingers because without a good spam filter we are kinda finished.

Finally, anyone have any recommendations for plugins that they love and think we should play around with in UWm Blogs?

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TypePad AntiSpam on UMW Blogs


Image credit: Dok1’s “Spam”

After about 3 years with Akismet on UMW Blogs we switched over to TypePad Antispam so that UMW would no longer be breaking the new licensing for Akismet—under which we would be paying $750 a month for this spam filter on a multi-site installation with 5000+ blogs (actually that quote was for 4000+ blogs back in December 2010). We were more than willing to pay something for Akismet, but the $750 figure was too rich for our blood. I understand no free lunch and all—the liberterian mantra—but that quote seemed rather extreme. I know others have tried to work out something with Akismet, and I’m not sure where that went, but I can’t see how small public colleges like mine where the WordPress blogging platform is an experiment and an afterthought can come up with $10,000 a year for spam protection. We operate on a shoe-string budget and pay less than what Akismet wanted for spam filtering to host and backup all of UMW Blogs. The sad thing is that anyone who has run a large blogging system knows that without a good spam filter the system would be crippled to the point of uselessness. We ultimately stayed on Akismet for the Spring semester because we didn’t have an alternative lined-up and really couldn’t get off Akismet before the new semester started. Luckily no one at Akismet was interested in calling us out and making us pay—and Matt seemed rather cool about looking the other way, but all the same I felt like I was doing something wrong. It was uncomfortable and I wanted out of Akismet as soon as possible.

Midway through last semester I was turned on to TypePad’s AntiSpam option for WordPress, which like Akismet was also developed by Matt Mullenweg, in fact the two seem closely related—save that one is free and one isn’t 😉 We’ve now been on Typepad’s Antispam for 12 hours now, and all is good so far save one issue we are running into. Whenever anyone posts a comment on a blog the comment takes, but in the interim this error message shows up:

Warning: stripslashes() expects parameter 1 to be string, array given in /home/umwblogs/public_html/wp-content/mu-plugins/TypePadAntiSpam.php on line 226

Warning: Cannot modify header information – headers already sent by (output started at /home/umwblogs/public_html/wp-content/mu-plugins/TypePadAntiSpam.php:226) in /home/umwblogs/public_html/wp-content/plugins/subscribe-to-comments/subscribe-to-comments.php on line 817

Warning: Cannot modify header information – headers already sent by (output started at /home/umwblogs/public_html/wp-content/mu-plugins/TypePadAntiSpam.php:226) in /home/umwblogs/public_html/wp-includes/pluggable.php on line 934

I don’t think the Subscribe to Comments error is the cause because I deactivated that plugin and the other two errors still showed up—though I might be wrong. Anyone have any ideas how we might get around this? I also posted this same query in the WordPress MUltiSite forum to see what’s what. If get an answer there I will post it here and vice versa.

Either way, it is a huge relief to be done with Akismet, and I am more than confident we can get rid of this error and see how TypePad’s AntiSpam solution works for us. It may not be a silver bullet, but that’s allright because I am all about the pewter!

Also, my next post will be about how smoothly the upgrade went for UMW Blgos to WP 3.2.1—it was very, very nice.

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Jaws Mashup

Derek Whitaker, an internaut in Martha Burtis’s first Summer session ds106, did a memorable sound mashup using the film Jaws in this post here. And given it’s Shark Week—one of the most infuriating, sensationalized, and riveting weeks of U.S. television—-I figured I would share Derek’s awesome work here:

Great White by dwhitake

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Why we loved Molly

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Totally

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Two Months Bender

Long live Paul Gleason! Mr. Vernon remains my all-time favorite K-12 administrator ever to grace the silver screen.

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Study Abroad Blogs on DTLT Today

The Division of Teaching and Learning Technologies (a.k.a. DTLT) has a new 15 minute daily show called DTLT Today. DTLT Today is the brainchild of our latest and greatest addition to DTLT: the Tim “Timmmmyboy” Owens. It’s been awesome having him aboard for the last two weeks, and he is already off and running with his own ideas for how DTLT could be better—-and that is exactly what we want! Tim’s idea behind DTLT Today to make it short, focused, and daily. It could be about anything tangentially related to what we do from our more localized work at UMW to broader news of the day. I like the free-ranging possibilities here, and the fact we can come up with a topic for that day as it hits us keeps it fresh and inspired, or so we hope. What’s more, it is allowing us to make more use of our makeshift television station at DTLT which has been awesome for our group as a whole—this Summer has opened up a wide range of possibilities for us to explore and experiment with when it comes to web video and live broadcasting.

Anyway, in today’s episode we spend 15 minutes talking about how aggregating specific blogs on UMW Blogs has helped focus for us just how much great stuff we have going on around this publishing platform. Over a year ago I wrote about this idea of “Self-service aggregation” and a year later with more than 500 aggregated study abroad related posts from 25 newly aggregated study abroad blogs I think we can say this experiment has been wildly successful. What’s more, I think it might suggests for us some possible ways for experimenting with aggregating departmental work from around UMW Blogs (and even eventually umw.edu as it moves to WordPress this Fall—UMW FTW!!!). Anyway, DTLT Today represents yet another format to talk UMW Blogs, aggregation, and the mounting media collective that is DTLT 😉

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Dr. O’Blivion interviews Jim Groom

Dr. Oblivion sits down with Jim Groom for a final interview about what has been happening, Groom’s motives and intentions, and more.

Special shout out to Tim Owens for doing the filming, editing, and split screen work!

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Summer of Oblivion: The Burtis did it!

An award-winning performance by Martha Burtis right here! Not to mention the brilliant supporting actor role of Steve Greenlaw.

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