228 Web-Sites Added

I have added about 228 web-sites to BrickBuildr — look for them under the ‘sites‘ menu on the web-site.  I feel this is still the tip of the iceberg in terms of the on-line LEGO Community.  This list doesn’t include Facebook fan sites and Twitter accounts (which I don’t feel inclined to add those at the moment, maybe as additional links down the road), or related Flickr groups… I’m trying to build the web-site/Flickr group relationship in the database — this will take some time to accomplish.

The biggest challenge to creating a list of web-sites, is how to display information in a useful and easy to access… On one hand, I know our group’s GFLUG ‘brand’ is a nightmare of web-sites where our club disseminates information — we have information on Twitter, a Facebook fan of GFLUG page, a public/private Facebook groups, a public/private Yahoo Groups, on our main web-site, etc.  With some of those web-site have more up-to-date information than others…  Now multiply this by about by 50 LEGO clubs world-wide…

On one hand, I like some of the tools social media gives you… but on the other hand, it’s made getting information out a chore — multiple sign-ins, different user interfaces, no fine-grain control on how information is shared between sites, no concept of public/private information within groups…

AN ASIDE: If you haven’t seen it, check out the web-site Swooshable.  It maps LUGs, LTC, LEGO Events, location of LEGO Stores and theme parks onto a interactive Google map.  It’s a great resource of information… just needs a little updating.

Thinking down the road, this information is very dynamic; it’s constantly changing.  A web-site here today is gone tomorrow… Groups change names and directions… Funding and hosting costs are factors… Lost of interest in the hobby… Blogs change hands from WordPress to Blogger… Thinking about an interface, information needs to be easily updated without too much hassle.  “Brands” are no longer one web-site, but a whole string of URLs… calendars, event schedule, photos, discussions both public/private, sharing of documents & layouts… Then thinking about information from another perspective, once a new LEGO product is released, or somebody builds an interesting MOC, it’s blasted across 20-30 blogs and personal fan web-site… And getting this information from one web-site to another means more data entry — this no common language for sharing/exchanging these types of complex data relationships with other web-sites…

I’m over simplifying this, but a few years ago at Brickworld, there was a workshop, asking AFOLs what they think the biggest problems facing the LEGO Community; there was talks of fragmentation, lack of a central source for information… From what I gathered afterwards, people wanted a AFOL version of Facebook, thinking this would help.  I thought it was naive.. the real issues is this lack of a common language for sharing multi-dimensional  ideas related to our hobby — be it information about our MOCs (where you can find pictures of it, textual inspiration, where it can be seen/shown, etc.), to LUGs (pictures at events, where our discussion go on, information about us, etc.), to news affecting our community.

…to be continued…

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