Top 5 Online communities

I have been using online communities for a prolonged period of time. Ever since discovering Youtube, the internet has become an intricate part of my upbringing. As a musician, a lot of the online communities I use are music related.

  1. Ultimate Guitar– This website is an online community to discuss guitar and music related content. While this site is used for learning songs on guitar, I use this website more for its articles and the ability to discuss among other music fans. The website puts up questions for discussion, and then posts articles based on those discussions. It is a relaxed website that gives us music lovers the chance to discuss and voice our opinions.
  2. Reverbnation– This site is important as it is a way of connecting different musicians together. Think of it as individual music pages linked together with music charts and discussion forums. I haven’t used this page as much in recent times due to the rise in popularity of Facebook, however a few years ago this page was important to voice your music to an online community.
  3. Guitar World– Here we are again with guitar as the focus! This website is great for discovering new music, or old stuff I haven’t seen before. They post top 10s that are generally related to guitar. However, this site doesn’t have as strong a community, but the content is important to me growing as a musician.
  4. IPHYB– I Probably Hate Your Band is more of a fun page, with music reviews. What I like about this page is how brutally honest they are with their reviews. One of my old bands got a real good grilling on this page! They also have intimate discussions with fans of the page, but usually it is built up with hate comments and swearing!
  5. Youtube– A bit broad on this one, but to me personally Youtube is the most important online community. I watch Youtube videos everyday, keeping up to date with my subscriptions. Some Youtube channels have great interaction with their fanbase, such as Rock it Out Blog, Jared Dines, Ryan ‘Fluff’ Bruce, etc. Some have bad interaction, in the form of disabling comments. But all in all, Youtube is king for me in online communities.

Assessment Task 1: Blogging

The Networked Media course has allowed me the chance to further my knowledge of how to write content online and how to distribute it and communicate in ways my audiences can relate and access. As a musician, an online profile is extremely important. As mentioned, blogging should be ‘loquacious and occasionally garrulous’ (Miles, Adrian, 2006). These words at first created confusion, leading to a realisation that my personal knowledge of the online community was fairly barren, leading to more interest in the course and what it entailed. Research lead to loquacious meaning talkative and garrulous meaning excessive talk on trivial matters. Adrian Miles continues by discussing how blogging leads to ‘multiliteracies’ and how bloggers are ‘creators’ not ‘passive consumers’ (Miles, Adrian, 2006). For most of my online history, being a passive audience was easy, but venturing into being a creator of the content was a big step. Blogging has made me more proactive as a writer. I’m predominately a writer of music, a skill I have worked on for years. However, marketing myself and talking to my audience by the means of an online profile was a new skill to be learnt. Thus far, this course has broadened my horizons and opened a new world of creating my business. As Blogs are ‘heuristic’ (Miles, Adrian, 2007), I had to assess what I wanted to achieve with my writing. However, after heavy research into blogs and reading of Mile’s texts, my idea of blogging changed. Miles asserts that blogs are useful for ‘encouraging and supporting reflective and process-based learning, nurturing peer support and collaboration, providing a record of achievement and assisting in idea creation’ (Miles, Adrian, 2007). It was this information that cleared my idea of what blogging is. Originally prior to conducting this course, blogging to me was posting news of one’s life. However, it is after such readings that I understand that it opens up networks with other people online on a much deeper level. In week two of the course, a Creative Commons Licence was created. Once again prior to this course, I believed blogs were just one’s thoughts online. However, using a Creative Commons Licence acted as a copyright. This lead to the realisation that blogs were in essence, like books.

At the start of this course I was under the assumption that I’d be unable to produce content due to my lack of computer based skills. However, as said by Miles, ‘network literacy is being able to participate as a peer within the emerging knowledge networks that are now the product of the internet, and to have as ‘deep’ an understanding of the logics or protocols of these networks as we do of print’ (Miles, Adrian, 2007). This lead to a confidence boost to do my very best to be a successful blogger. However, week three readings further brought my attention to how serious blogging is in terms of online rules. The use of others media without permission has serious effects on the one who takes the content. However, as stated, ‘internet services and their content now chat among themselves’ (Miles, Adrian). The idea of a ‘networked media’, between different content providers or ‘creators’, is extremely inviting for someone like myself who wishes to use the internet to communicate my musical endeavours and my hopefully profitable business. This drive keeps the notion of blogging interesting and creatively satisfying, something originally I was sceptical about, due to lack of knowledge. The new knowledge from the readings and conducting the blog has opened new possibilities for clearer communication with my audiences.

 

 

 

 

 

However, week four’s readings of the meaning behind ‘hypertext’ once again opened up a new challenge. Confusion of the notion of technical, cultural and practical elements to hypertext has once again distanced myself from the idea of blogging. However, more research into such information will likely clear up any confusion. But it is important to note that such information is a set back into fully enjoying the concept of blogging. The quote ‘Hypertext thereby blurs the distinction between what is inside and what is outside of a text’ (2006:117-118) perfectly details my personal understanding of online media and how it is different to just writing. Writing text without the knowledge of a networked media is personally easier. However, that curiosity keeps the interest continuing into each workshop.

 

 

In my own blog posts, I have personally drawn out these feeling towards online media and foreign all concepts are. My first post clearly stated how the internet wasn’t something I knew much about, and how foreign such deep understandings were. However, as time progressed, I posted about my understanding of important blog information, online services and then personal accounts of my music career. These posts detail what is meant by being ‘creators’ and not ‘passive audiences’. I was now detailing important aspects of who I am and what my business is. In conclusion, blogging, a term foreign to me before starting University, has now become an active part of learning and broadening my online profile. While some aspects have been challenging, I am slowly getting a good grasp of what is means to be a part of a ‘Networked Media’.

Miles, Adrian. Blogs in Media Education: A Beginning [online]. Screen Education, No. 43, 2006: 66-69.

Miles, Adrian. Network Literacy: The New Path to Knowledge [online]. Screen Education, No. 45, 2007: 24-30.

http://www.artslaw.com.au/info-sheets/info-sheet/legal-issues-for-bloggers/

Landow, George P. Hypertext 3.0: Critical Theory and New Media in an Era of Globalization. Baltimore: John Hopkins University Press, 2006. Print. 69-71, 77-85, 107-124

Hootsuite

As part of this course, I set up a Hootsuite account. This account allows me to successfully manage multiple social media sites through a system. As a musician, I find it incredibly hard to manage all my pages, so this site is a welcomed convenience. I can manage my Facebook page, my Google+ page and hopefully my blog as well! How great! Please check out these pages, the Google+ page may be a little bleak, but hopefully it will spruce up as I use my hootsuite account! This Sunday I’ll be at a car event at Flemington, look out for a post about that.

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Effort=Reward

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This is a shot from the Knox Youth Stage Competition (17 July 2015). This is one of my favourite musical memories. Why you may ask? I ended up winning the Open category for best solo act. This was such a great memory as it was one of the first times I was awarded for my music. With the many hours one puts into their craft, being rewarded and recognised is one of the best feelings in the world. I was never great at sports or academically gifted, so music was my thing, many hours were put into my craft. Such recognition really does a lot for musicians. Moral of the story, if you put effort into the things you love, maybe you might reap the awards further on. Winning this competition as given me many gig opportunities and allowed me to meet some great people who want to heighten my profile just as much as me. So put in the effort, reap the awards! Cheers and out, Declan Zane

Music: March 18th

The past few weeks have been exciting times in terms of University. Coming straight from Secondary education, the University format is already extremely comforting. At RMIT, the new studios is what most impressed me. As a student in the Music Industry course, I get to use these studios for my own learning. I am required to record an original recording as an assessment. I don’t know about you, but getting to use a great studio to record my own music is not much of hassle!! Secondary school me would have laughed at such an assessment being exciting and generally helpful for what I plan to do with my life! It now begs the question of what style of music I’d like to record, what song, and with what musicians. I have a total DIY attitude to instrumentation, however I may need to look at my drummer contacts, as my drumming skills probably won’t cut it. However, exciting times, as this weekend I play the Basin Music Festival, a favourite festival of mine. However, waking up with a crackly voice and headache this morning is fairly worrying, hopefully everything is good by Sunday. Look out for a post Sunday Night. Catchya!

Introduction

The world of the internet is confusing and vast, however everyone can easily find their way around it. I myself suffer from a terrible lack of knowledge of the internet, that seems to work as a disadvantage when it comes to nerdy conversations with my friends. However, doing the Networked Media course at RMIT will hopefully lead to a more in depth evaluation of what the internet can do for me. So without further ado, welcome to my blog and get ready for a mix of music content, based from my own experiences to reviews, and a continuation of my journey to discover the web. Hope it works well for you!

The Student Charter

The student charter is an important statement of all the responsibilities of an RMIT student and the content they create as part of their course. Students are encouraged to be creative, connected, fair and passionate. This is extremely relevant to my blog as it talks of the information that my blog must represent.

Link to student charter: