SHARE
Follow this article on Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Bookmark and Share
Home >> Enterprise Business Applications >> Online Retailing and Ecommerce

The return of ComputerWorld Canada's Blogging Idol

The return of ComputerWorld Canada's Blogging Idol

By:  ComputerWorld Canada staff  On: 26 Mar 2009 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

We're off and running with IT industry contestants spending the first week writing about the iPhone, the changing nature of IT departments and the growth of Microsoft SharePoint. Read the highlights

IT World Canada Editor-in-Chief Shane Schick is sounding more like Simon Cowell every day.

His vowels are broadening in a distinctly South English manner, and he’s saying things to the reporters like, “If your lifeguard duties were as good as your writing, a lot of people would be drowning,” and “Oh, shut up, Paula.” (We don’t have anyone on staff named Paula, but it helps him keep in character.)

It’s time for our second annual Blogging Idol competition, wherein contestants will blog over a six-week period on a series of technology-related topics. We’ll give the bloggers themes and ideas, best practices training and feedback. What they’ll give us is a front-line perspective on subjects like how we can use IT to solve real business problems, how technology can make us a greener society and how to deal with the profusion of legacy networks.

Fortunately, Simon — um, Shane — won’t be alone in judging the quality of the postings. That’s a role you, as a reader, will play. The blogger that draws the most traffic wins our $1,000 top prize. The single posting that draws the most traffic wins a Nikon Coolpix digital camera, and a third-place winner gets a BestBuy gift certificate. Several of our bloggers from last year’s competition continue to write for us today, and have been profiled in print and online. And that’s part of the end-game of Blogging Idol — to encourage user-generated content.

UGC is increasingly on our radar at IT World Canada. Our readers are among the most talented and creative people in IT today, and a source of genuine wisdom about how technology solves problems (and how to solve problems with technology). We want to tap that resource on behalf of the IT community in Canada and offer a source of accumulated knowledge and opinion regarding corporate computing. Here’s a sampling of the wit and wisdom of this year’s contributors so far:

? "They are not ”users” that just do not understand how significant the impact of the Star Trek franchise is almost everything we take for granted today. They are your ”customers” and if anything, you need to become more like THEM. Being intimidated by you is not a good thing. Making them feel like they are asking ”user, i.e. dumb” questions does not increase your power, but diminishes it. If technology is hard, it IS up to you to make it easier." -- Pedro Cardoso

? "IT certainly can’t make people communicate more. If you aren’t letting your staff know what’s going on, it doesn’t matter what tools the IT department has put at your disposal. But a project should never break down because of a lack of appropriate tools for communication. There are far too many, and they can be far too effective for this to be the case." -- Nathan Griffiths

? "Imagine a business reaping dual benefits of its investment in a system that is orchestrated with SOA and stabilized using AGILE approach…the system that is robust yet flexible enough to adapt to any changes without affecting seamless service delivery and that’s the beauty of SOA mixed with AGILE methodology!" -- Asma Rafi


Sign up for our Newsletters












Print |  Views: 823   |   Rating:offoffoffoffoff  (0 votes)
Rate this article on a scale of
1 to 5 stars,5 being the best.




blog comments powered by Disqus