Points of View Message Board 2: Off Topic and Off Site
Thanks for all your comments on my previous post.
My apologies that this one is late (due to technical problems beyond my control).
Some of you have asked what exactly I'm doing. As I explained before I'm now in charge of the POV boards. So I'm thinking about them (and doing some hosting as well). To reassure Curmy and Nippiesweetie I don't yet have a plan. I have some ideas and opinions which I'm sharing with you in order to help me think.
Before I get to the main thrust of this post, I agree with you there are some things that blogs could learn from message boards. For example, I'm wondering whether users should have the ability to reply to an individual comment on a blog more easily, so it feels like more of a dialogue (and a search function on message boards might be a boon). I'll discuss these things further with my colleagues and see if they should go on our "to do" list.
It's blindingly obvious that what many of you like most about the POV boards is the ability to start a conversation about anything you like.
But the trouble with having a relatively open board is that if people can start threads about anything at all, they will, even if its unrelated to the subject matter of the board.
Which in the case of the Points of View boards is supposed to be "any aspect of the BBC". (My bold)
And the more open the board the easier it is to start multiple threads (something many of you have complained about), and to break the house rules.
In the short amount of time I've been hosting parts of the board I've spent nearly all of it moving threads to different places or closing them because they've been off topic. There's only been one instance where I've managed to encourage a conversation which might actually be useful to someone.
When I see a thread like this one for example I start scratching my head. The original message was someone asking what the music was on an advert for Barclays bank (it's been moderated out, but you can read the rest of the thread) Why does this conversation start on a BBC board when the subject has absolutely nothing to do with the BBC? Should we be spending licence fee payers' money on this?
Some of you reading this may have heard of a gentleman called Tom Loosemore. He did a lot of work for the BBC a while ago and outlined some "Web 2.0 principles". One of these principles was "Link to discussions on the web, don't host them".
So in that spirit I'm going to be provocative.
The POV message boards currently has threads on Coronation Street, Emmerdale, I'm A Celebrity and Sharpe's Regiment. ITV.com also has its own forums, with threads about Corrie and Emmerdale and I'm A Celebrity.
POV has a board called "The BBC". Yet most newspapers who are online when they write a story about the BBC now allow comments. Here's a recent example from the Daily Mail. The Guardian's Comment Is Free has a section on the BBC (here's a link to all comments). There's even community blogs like Biased BBC (if you've never been there before I should warn you the views there can be strongly expressed and sometimes extreme).
POV has a board called Digital. Digital Spy covers the same ground and more. The Internet blog has a section about BBC HDTV.
POV has a board called "bbc.co.uk". The Internet blog was precisely set up to talk about what the BBC does online.
Do you ever use any of these alternatives? How are the POV boards better?
And what do you think of Officer Dibble's comment on my last post:
..."the only reason that the board is superior to the Digital Spy alternatives is the BBC brand that drives the traffic..."
Comment and I will engage. And there will be more posts to come. In particular I have one in mind about accountability which seems to lead naturally on from this one.
Nick Reynolds is editor, BBC Internet blog

~RS~q~RS~~RS~z~RS~20~RS~)
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I have seen some blogs (zdnet.com do this) which allow responses to individual blog comments but, in my mind, that only serves to make the whole thing difficult to follow because the comments don't flow naturally in chronological order.
This is fine if you intend to go through the comments all in one go, or follow individual conversations, but useless if you don't have time to do that and need to go away part way through as new posts will have been added both before and after where you were when you come back.
I have always felt that creating conversations within blog comments effectively turns that blog into a de facto discussion board thread anyway, so why not encourage use of the BBC boards for this type of exchange, and link blog entries to specific follow up threads within the discussion boards.
Beyond that, it does seem a little counter-intuitive for the BBC Points of View board to be handling discussions on ITV programmes (or Sky/Bravo/Virgin etc.), particularly where those same discussions can be had elsewhere, but unless the bandwidth costs of those additional threads eat into Licence Fee payers funds I don't see the harm, except ...
My only problem with the PoV boards has always been the sheer volume of stuff there that is unrelated to PoV so I don't go much anymore.
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Being able to respond to specific comments has advantages and disadvantages. It's great being able to reply to other people but the point of a blog is a conversation around the original post, rather than the responses. However, I really like that many of the big WordPress powered blogs out there are using improved commenting functionality such as that provided by Disqus or IntenseDebate to allow threaded comments rather than a simple linear listing.
As for the POV boards, I've never visited, but I can't help but wonder if they should be there at all. Why not just have one for people to submit opinions on the BBC and that's that. If the moderators removed everything which is off-topic, people would soon learn to look elsewhere to post. As you've just demonstrated, there are plenty of other places to go and post, and if you pointed people at the Digital Spy forums, and then the "bbc brand driven traffic" will end up there (though they have a pretty huge community posting on all their forums anyway!).
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Hi Nick,
I've just read your latest blog - over on the POV board (I couldn't find it on your original blog!)
I appreciate what you're saying about discussions about the BBC should only be on a BBC forum. However, the Beeb is very high profile and does have a very public forum for comments on its programming - Points Of View. It's natural then for people to be drawn to the BBC forums. They're connected to that major brand (POV) and are easy to find. Try finding message boards on other websites, for instance.
It'll be a difficult balancing act. Encourage discussion, or drive people away...
Do comments on the message boards, at the moment, influence decisions within the BBC or any other broadcaster, for that matter?
Television is television, as far as a lot of people are concerned. They will want to raise points where they'll be discussed.
Ultimately, whose BBC is it? Is it ours or does it belong to those fortunate enough to run a blog?
Regards...
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Hello Nick
Made it over here - some of the others seem to be having problems finding you here (still think if you are discussing messageboards you should do it over there, where the posters will ALWAYS find it)
May I ask a question? Are you EVEN CONTEMPLATING closing POV messageboard, and just having blogs, or is there no possibility of making messageboarders become bloggers? If there is no possibility of closing messageboards, but simply tweaking them, you would have received MORE input, and genuinely helpful answers over on POV board. Sorry to keep coming back to this, but, it is at the heart of the problem.
Another thing which you should perhaps be made aware of, is that, unlike myself who doesn't actually mind reading long postings (and posting them myself) - a GREAT many messageboarders will state "I don't read long postings", or "I only read the first part as it was too long a posting", so, to expect posters to become bloggers and read your blogs, regularly, is a big ask.
I fear you are failing to grasp just how important to posters the feeling of Community is on messageboards. We all have our own favourite posters we like to see posting - some for their intelligence, some for their strength of feeling, and some for their witty comments, (which genuinely can lift spirits within the community). Blogging just seems to be so insular - the blogger posting, and individuals posting to THAT host, not so much as to the other posters. Blogging is very much the domain of those who are happy to post and run, whereas posting to messageboards is very much interaction BETWEEN the posters, as much as the topic. Some posters will get the bit between their teeth and post dozens of times to a topic, or inform other posters where to look for that info. It is very much a family unit (and sometimes families fall out, but they always sort out their differences and move on - the Hosts should be part of that family and stop any backbiting).
If a decision is made to close boards and make it simply blogging instead of messageboards too, then, I fear many will just wend their way elsewhere. The old Points Askew is a point in case. Not only did BBC viewers in UK post to that board, but posters from around the world did. The board was closed, and a great many good posters were lost.
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This comment was removed because the moderators found it broke the House Rules.
My major problem is that host-driven boards would be the ultimate turn-off for me and a large majority of people.
Look at the last 2 blog entries - 25th Nov at 10:23am, and the next one at 4:02pm on the 26th. Not exactly frequent postings.
Tom Loosemore also said "Build web products that meet audience needs". By the looks of the threads you mentioned above, the audience needs an "off topic" thread.
Another thing "tomski" (shudders smiley) says is "Admit your mistakes." Think about that one please, Nick.
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My major problem is that host-driven boards would be the ultimate turn-off for me and a large majority of people.
Look at the last 2 blog entries - 25th Nov at 10:23am, and the next one at 4:02pm on the 26th. Not exactly frequent postings.
Tom Loosemore also said "Build web products that meet audience needs". By the looks of the threads you mentioned above, the audience needs an "off topic" thread.
Another thing "tomski" (shudders) says is "Admit your mistakes." Think about that one please, Nick.
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Like my double posting mistake....!!
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Hello again Nick,
1 Search facility on boards (thumbs up)
2 Reply to individual comment on blog - not sure how this would work, so can't comment.
3 God, by the time I scroll down to put my comment, I've forgotten what I was going to say, so..................
4 If you insist on blogs, I would advise copying the Comment Box system on POV messageboard - brilliantly easy.
5 Return the quote facility on messageboards.
6 Merge threads covering the same topic on the messageboards - that would cut down on the number of similar threads (SCD, Dr Who etc)
7 On the subject of ONLY BBC programmes being talked about, you have to realise that sometimes, posters post about old programmes (Nostaligia is a great thing - particularly about BBC ) (and they won't remember which channel it was on, so unless you have some computer programme which bounces comments about old programmes on other channels, this will mean the end to Nostalgia threads)
8 Would you be planning to simply put a thread for each BBC programme appearing that week, and letting posters post to the threads of THEIR choice? That way, YOU could have some control over topics, but the posters would ultimately have control over WHICH programme they wanted to post about. Of course that would probably be more threads than now appearing on boards.
9 I've frequented the bbc.co.uk/BBC/radio boards but the more technical boards are not really of interest, BUT, would be for those of that mind. Spent time on OUCH,NEWS,Archers and would LOVE to have had access to a MEMORYSHARE for Scotland, but none exists. I loved the Travel,Talk Scotland boards but they no longer exist.
10 I think you will find that the messageboard posters are discussing your blog on the POV board. Took longer than I thought for them to weary of blogs. (laugh smiley)
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Chosun
I thought I was going to have about six duplicate postings, as I kept getting a message saying that a mistake had happened due to HTML being mistyped.
Think it was a link to POV messageboard (and yet, yesterday I was able to link to a messageboard) (shakes head smiley)
NEVER experienced anything like that in all the years I've posted to messageboards, so another thumbs down for blogs from this messageboarder.
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OK, here I am, engaging.
“In the short amount of time I've been hosting parts of the board I've spent nearly all of it moving threads to different places or closing them because they've been off topic.”
- If you want to make sure people stay on-topic, Nick, you need to have a much more visible host presence. Expecting people not to stray conversationally is like telling a class of schoolchildren not to talk about anything other than ‘To Kill A Mockingbird’, and then buzzing off and leaving them to it for not just a term but the entire school year. More than that: sometimes hosts have joined in off-topic chat. They’ve certainly never ever in the history of the board commented adversely on or removed threads about non-BBC programmes.
If you feel the forum should only be about BBC progs, fine, but police it. That’s all the board needs.
“There's only been one instance where I've managed to encourage a conversation which might actually be useful to someone.”
- That rather depends on how you define ‘useful’. The boards are meant to be about expressing opinion on BBC programmes and related issues. And that’s what I see going on in all the forums. Such discussions, where people say whether they like a programme and for what reason, are fulfilling exactly the remit of the boards. How can that not be classed as useful?
As for your comments about alternative forums and blogs, I’ve been on some of them briefly, but what draws me back always to PoV is it’s all handily encapsulated in one spot, plus I’ve spent three or four years getting into a community there, building a relationship with regular posters. That’s a hugely important aspect to me and I suspect it’s the same for many others.
I’ll say again: I don’t want a blog, I want to be part of a forum. More specifically, I want to be part of the PoV forum.
If you want to put a stop to people posting about non-BBC programmes, then do so. Go on the boards, make yourself known, explain the rules have changed* and enforce them, till members get the idea. It’s a very small and fixable problem, and certainly no justification to consider anything drastic.
*I know you’re going to say the House Rules state BBC programmes only, but in practice this has never been enforced in the history of the forum.
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Yes Nick, you have thoroughly understood the entire ethos behind the Internet.
Namely, the rigorous proscription of the actions of your consumers according to a set of arbitrary rules.
That's what "Web 2.0" is all about isn't it.
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Niclara that happened to me the other day on here, and it posted three times - got an email saying I spammed the board!
They (as in blogs) aren't user friendly if you aren't used to them.
So I can take from what Nick has said the the POV as we know it has limited time left. The new whatever will probably be ruled with an iron fist, making it totally unusable and unfriendly.
Okay we get the odd question or thread about adverts, but they are closed down. As for moving threads about - its just one of those things, supposedly new posters (hit and runners which are the majority of) putting the query in the wrong place. As for the other channel threads, are they really doing any harm?
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Hmmm....this is not looking good...
I want to reinforce again the feeling of community on the POV board. Many regular posters have been there a long time and we feel we know each other. New posters are made welcome (unless they are very rude! LOL!) but there is a *real* community on the boards.
If you don't want multiple threads or off-topic threads, then just police the board better. Please don't destroy it.
Because....if it does turn into a blog, you will lose a lot of people and a real internet community.
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mirandashell, you make a good point about 'community'. These were the same points made 3 years ago when the 606 boards were, hmm, re-organised from a thriving 'community' into a soulless, fragmented shell of a place.
Those cries for retaining the community were ignored, there is no reason to suppose it won't happen again.
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Good work whoever closed the Bonekickers thread, you've obviously taken the White Season Debacle and the Bonekickers Debacle as a blueprint of good practice, not heavy handed petulance.
Once again it was too much effort to explain the reasons for closing a thread, I guess whoever did that has not been following the opinions of the people that frequent the boards.
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Chosun - if I put an open thread/post on the BBC Internet blog, would you use it? Would others?
Nick Reynolds (editor, BBC Internet blog)
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Nick,
I may be wrong, but I think when Chosun said that he felt we needed an Off topic THREAD, he did NOT mean an Internet blog, but in fact is not talking about blogging at all, but THREADS as in messageboard THREADS.
We used to have an Off topic Board called Points Askew where we were encouraged to go to talk about all things off topic of BBC (in other words to chat). POV board was then much more about the programmes (much more focused). Perhaps you just have to bite the bullet and re-open Points Askew, if you want POV to be about programmes only.
You seem hell-bent on getting Messageboarders to blog, when I think they have made it very very clear that the majority do not want to entertain blogging. They just want better policing of the POV messageboard to stop WUMs/multiple threads/personal insults (but then these appear on blogs too).
It was noticeable that on the link you gave us to BBC blogs in newspapers that the one I clicked on took me to "Chatterbox" in the Guardian, or an Off Topic blog!!!!!! So, you CAN chat on blogs, but we are not allowed ANY off topic on POV messageboard.
You already seem to be getting the cold shoulder with this blog. There's only 11 different posters to this blog. As I said they are over on POV talking about it there, AND NOT HERE. I think that gives you your answer quite clearly.
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Nick
I note over on POV messageboard that you say
"I clicked on "reply to this message".
Hmmm... maybe message boards have their drawbacks."
This is a really worrying comment. Just because YOU don't understand how to quote, or any other myriad of techniques we use on messageboards, that does not make it a "Drawback". Quite the contrary. Please go back, with an open mind, and look at Nippie's comment (message 351)below yours, and you will see that, quite the opposite of a "drawback", the quote facility makes it very clear what your comment was (it's enclosed in the box). Once you learn the coding for quoting, this is a phenominal aspect of messageboarding, as you can quote like this from SEVERAL different posts/posters, in the ONE comment - (it helps to put "quoted from message No.X, if you are going to quote from a lot of different postings, and then do the quoting code, as explained by Nippie). As she says this is one of the most asked questions (along with "how do you know that a poster is online" - the answer is that two asterisks will appear alongside the posters name to show they are online). As I say, it is worrying that you would see these terrific tools as "drawbacks". Also, although I know the posters and don't need smileys to indicate "tongue in cheek"/"thumbs up"/"laugh" etc. it may be well worth your while to learn how to use the odd smiley to lighten your postings there. (thumbs up smiley)(wink smiley) (can't use the correct brackets here as it conflicts with the coding). Some posters use smileys to lighten postings, whilst still getting their point over, others simply put a smiley (just a smiley) to respond to a posting, and others can hold a whole conversation with practically no words, but lots of smileys. Then, there are the posters who are so well known for their wit, that they don't even need to use a smiley - we just all know they are generally lighthearted or helpful.
Nice to see you engaging with the posters over there.
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Me again Nick. Seems to be just you and me in hereeeeeeeeee.
Another good aspect of messageboarding, is that you can click on the poster's name, and up pops their posting history (unless like some of us oldies you delete your history - most don't), you do this in h2g2. This means that if a poster is posting what you know is rubbish, you can check their history to see if they have posted to previous threads offering a different viewpoint. You can then quote from THAT thread in their history, letting you shoot down their argument (great facility as it stops dead a lot of WUMs)
(thumbs up smiley)
Just take a wee while playing with all the facilities on offer on POV messageboard (although these have been curtailed over recent years). It takes a wee bit of perseverence (and no-one gets it right first time), but, once you are able to utilise these aids, it is a real Eureka moment.
The other posters usually jump in first with information for Newbies, before Hosts get a chance. It's part of our board etiquette, as is the general welcoming of Newbies to the fold.
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Just in case you are wondering why in message 9, point 5, I say "return the quote facility", when the posters have been trying to teach you how to quote properly on POV, you should maybe be told that there was an extremely easy "quote" function, which was removed from the board.
You simply found the quote you wanted to quote, and pressed one button, it then did all the coding for you, to highlight the quotation, surrounding it with a box. YOU might actually prefer that function (wink smiley)
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Hi Nick,
I was the one who called into question the whole episode prior to this blog post and used the phrase "blatant lies".
I did this because in the morning you said that the blog was finished and had been passed to Dave to post. In the evening you then posted from the library claiming that the blog hadn't been finished and that you couldn't post anything until your internet problems had been fixed, and you repeated the fact that the blog wasn't finished the following morning.
So basically you had deceived us about the blog being finished and in the capable hands of Dave...?
Anyway.... as I said before, just tell us if you have a problem and we'll understand...!! We *want* a vibrant community here, with an interactive host. We all hope that you can be that person, entertaining BOTH messageboard AND blog traffic.
In answer to your question above - no, I would not use an off-thread blog. Why? Because blogs are so unwieldy. Anything over 50 posts or so and it becomes a chore to use them.
An off-thread messageboard area? YES. Definitely, YES.
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Interesting blog entry... Also interesting as you decided to put it in a blog entry as opposed to posting this within the POV community.
Surely any discussion about the site would be better discussed _on_ the site?
To compare the BBC POV boards with external 'independant' messageboards/blogs is a little difficult as I would hazard a guess that one of the reasons users post to the POV board is that they feel they are interacting _with_ the BBC as opposed to simply complaining about it into the ether.
One other reason people may well post to POV is that using the DNA engine driving these boards gives a user access to the entire range of messageboards/communities across the BBC with the ability to centrally manage conversations from many different boards. For instance, this post is, unfortunately, completely separate from the rest of the posts I have made on the BBC boards, and will thus be far harder for me to come back to tomorrow.
One of the things about any area on the web encouraging user provided content of any form is that, in time, it develops into a community (which of course is what the DNA engine driving these boards was originally designed for).
Anyway. What you appear to be questioning is the level of control you can have over what has developped into an on-line community of users.
That's a horrendously complicated question. At one end of your potential options is to restrict the boards, limit the ability to start threads to hosts, but I suspect that would destroy any sense of community.
The other end of the spectrum is equally unpalletable, a free for all messageboard, which would rapidly become unusable.
Somewhere in between those two just might be the right medium. Maybe making it clear, as you have started, that non-BBC conversations will not be permitted is the way forward, but that, in my opinion, has to be enforced in a transparent manner, with a degree of human intervention from active hosts on the board and a little leeway given here and there when it won't do any harm.
One point I would make however is this. Everything you may be questioning now has already been asked. There are some excellent articles on the DNA Hub about how on-line communities develop... This is one.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/hub/A787223
If, however, your idea of the future of a web-based presence for the POV TV show is not to develop a community or to host conversations/debates/screaming arguments (delete as applicable) about all aspects of BBC productions, rather to simply provide somewhere for people to drop in, leave their opinion and leave, then it is possible that a DNA messageboard is not the best method of doing this... Comments on blogs or the software used for the 'Have your say' sections are far easier to control and less likely to encourage long conversations.
Not the way I personally would like things to develop, but I'm not the one making the decisions.
So, my suggestion would be to take this discussion over to the POV board and ask its regular users what could be done to improve things. You never know, some people might actually be on your side.
I do, of course realise that the very nature of the POV boards does attract some people who's sole raison d'etre seems to be to attack any aspect of the BBC in general.
However, whilst there are some people with a pathological hatred of DOGs, end-title crunching, Top Gear and spelling mistakes on BBC web pages, there are still quite a few of us over there who are thankful for what this organisation provides, and even if we don't always agree with every decision made by the organisation, we can still work together to help develop POV to its full potential.
Come and talk to us on POV - we won't bite (much).
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Nick now that you have ventured over to POV, and that you aren't familiar with them, well that is what it is like for us here. We aren't used to blogs. You have got peoples backs up because the way this is being handled, on a blog on not on POV which is our territory - and the fact what Chosun has said as well re the delay to this blog.
All POV needs is a host to keep things in check. Leave the long running threads on other channels programmes, otherwise there will be no one left because that place would be horrendously boring if all we could talk about was the BBC, I for one watch very little television but I enjoy the community, and I like to help other posters in their queries etc.
Ignoring the questions that have been asked as well, again people (like myself) think you are picking and choosing your questions - and that makes us highly suspicious that the days of POV as we know it are numbered.
Don't be a stranger to POV learn about them, and look before you leap.
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Chosun - rather than continuing to insult me perhaps you would like to address the questions I have asked in the blog post.
Have you ever used any of the alternatives I point to? What makes the POV boards better?
And to be clear, would an "open" post on a blog where you could raise any subject you liked in a comment, be something you would use?
Ugelicweeyin - I think I have the right to choose where I start a conversation. And I did with my first post put a link to it on the POV boards (in the bbc.co.uk section as the subject is about message boards not television).
Nor am I ignoring questions. I think I've been very clear in what I've said.
But this thread is already starting to drift a bit. You say you don't watch much television but enjoy the community. Have you ever used h2g2? What do you think of that community
Nick Reynolds (editor, BBC Internet blog)
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I've used h2g2 when I was on another BBC site. It's much too vast and too fragmented for me, I can't find my way around it, and I also don't like the fact there's pressure on you to post personal info about yourself on your homepage. Yet another good thing about PoV is that you're simply a forum name, and that's the beginning and the end of your ID. It's very liberating and allows you to expore ideas more fully.
In an ideal world, most BBC producers would come and take a look at relevant PoV threads (I know some already do) and then the forum could be used as a valuable source of feedback. In my other life I sometimes meet people from the BBC, and I was dismayed that the last producer I spoke to had never heard of the forum, or seen the thread relating to one of her programmes.
You still haven't defined 'useful' for me, Nick, but I'd say a place where the public were invited to give feedback on the BBC's output would be of mutual benefit, on all kinds of levels.
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This isn't about h2g2 (though I am on there, its a bit over whelming) this is about POV which I am a part of. I only watch specific programmes and yes some of them are on BBC. I am not into reality really except for the one on ITV, I am not into SCD etc. just not my thing and I do not think some of the programmes merit the boards that they have got. Though I do think Springwatch does because its the only chance some people on here get to discuss nature.
POV is fine, just the lack of a host to keep things in line.
Plus my name is Angelicweeyin but the A doesn't come through on this blog because its not standard.
I am not getting on to you, normally I run from confrontation, but I think the thread on bbc.co.uk should have been left open, but its not widely used, the television one is that's why we bump that thread for everyone know about here.
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Hi Nick,
I did answer your questions, and I don't think I insulted you at all - I just questioned the validity of your excuses!!
Anyway, to reiterate...
In answer to your question above - no, I would not use an off-thread blog. Why? Because blogs are so unwieldy. Anything over 50 posts or so and it becomes a chore to use them.
An off-thread messageboard area? YES. Definitely, YES.
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@niclaramartin
(I do a similar job to Nick but for our Audio and Music team)
We currently do allow users to see in their profile comments they have made to both message boards and blogs across bbc.co.uk.
Having a public history of users contributions has lots of benefits as you point out ...
I'd agree however that currently its hidden away, hard to use and not presented as well as it could be. We are looking at how this can be greatly improved.
But its not a blogs vs boards thing. Its something that should "just work" for any contribution a user decides to share with bbc.co.uk, wherever they share it. Hopefully more on that next year.
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"POV has a board called "The BBC". Yet most newspapers who are online when they write a story about the BBC now allow comments. "
It's probably worth baring in mind that some of these newspapers have a habit of censoring comments, either by editing or not publishing them. I've had at least one case where a certain paper has edited my comment to suit their agenda.
Also the other boards tend to require additional logins. It's not bad if the other sites (and eventually the BBC) support OpenID as that would overcome that problem.
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Just some general thoughts on replying to posts on blogs and boards.
A system of replying to individual comments, so your comment is placed immediately underneath it, can be misused. To be placed near the top (most readers scroll down) all you have to do is find a way of replying to the first comment in a sentence, then you make your real point. Digg has this system and it is misused.
Something I do like is the Reply With Quote feature on the Channel 4 forum boards. (I use the science one.) This doesn`t place the reply under the original comment, but does let you select a portion of its text, then underlines it so your reply is seen beneath. It helps people see what is being replied to. The disadvantage is that you have to delete the text you don`t want, novice users can end up posting the entire post a second time. (Comment 21 describes something similar.)
I find that as long as people put the comment number they`re replying to at the top of theirs, those that want to can cross reference OK.
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Hi Nick
Your posting No. 25 (shakes head smiley)(wink smiley)
I'm not talking about the content, BUT, the tone, which appears on the written page - very blunt and defensive. Now, on a messageboard, you could have put
"Ugelicweeyin - I think I have the right to choose where I start a conversation."
followed by a wee (wink smiley). By doing THAT, YOU would have asserted your position, BUT, then softened it, so as not to offend/put up the back/annoy the posters. It's a very small point, but worth bearing in mind, about the differences in blogs and messageboards. Blogs are all about the written word (and often a series of words written on a page can be read - and misconstrued - many different ways, simply by poor punctuation. Messageboards allow posters to post quite strong opinions, but still retain a friendly approach to their fellow posters by placing a soft smiley, which indicates, "I have a contrary opinion to you, BUT, I do not wish that to come between us". As you can see, board etiquette is very important to messageboarders. We VERY MUCH want GOOD QUALITY postings, (even if they sometimes gets a wee bit heated, as people defend their viewpoint), BUT, we also, have a very strong sense of community, and do not wish to spoil relationships with fellow posters. There HAVE been occasions of posters who delight in winding up fellow posters/BBC Hosts/BBC etc, but THEY are NOT the norm. Generally, posters to POV messageboard WANT to discuss programmes with like-minded posters/answer queries/point fellow posters in the direction of information - in other words, act like friends, and adults. WUM/trolls SHOULD be ferreted out, as they do spoil the feel of the board, BUT, don't throw the boards out because a very small minority of posters become very brave once they have the anonimity of a computer screen to hide behind. At the same time, strong-minded, but fair postings/non-personal attacks, SHOULD be encouraged. I have often changed an opinion on a programme simply by reading impassioned postings, letting me see a new perspective.
(helpful smiley) (ok smiley)
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Thanks Niclara
btw its Angelicweeyin!!! :-D
I think I have been told off - nothing new there though.
I could take a strop, but I will say this no one seems to be listening to us about the blogs!
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Hi Nick,
I don't think the BBC is the place for hosting off-topic discussions...plenty of other places for that.
The BBC brand drives users there, especially as many make the incorrect assumption that it is the place to voice their complaint or comment (like the POV programme) and that it might make a difference. The rest are resigned to talking amongst themselves. This distinction differentiates it from Digital Spy. The "keep on topic" also ensures it is smaller, maybe friendlier and more manageable that Spy.
All the clutter of multiple messages would be avoided immediately if a professional design with search was used. Someone needs to do the brave thing aand state that the MB design is not fit for purpose. (I understand the search function is systemically crippling for the database -as the database crosses all MBs) PS some posters on the food board have created their own food forum search function! (see in my posts for a link).
secondly the database is huge and costly, yet items from say 2 years ago could be deleted without any loss of function (especially as no-one can search them so they might as well be on the moon).
There is no doubt MBs beats blogs for the functionality that "we" want... I find navigating this split blog a real chore.
So in summary - MBs with professional functions identical to Spy, no off topic areas, ownership by producers of the specialist topic, modertation as currently, purely to protect the BBC brand. - OR make MBs independent so not "BBC liable" but heavily linked via a conduit from the BBC brand (ie it would be first choice for every comment on BBC).
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PS the quote function was disabled early on for another "BBC might be liable" reason. Pointless of course because we bodge around it, if we can be bothered.
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The answers to a lot of the apparently odd and random things that go on on message boards are to be found in the notion of 'community'. I do admin duties over at cableforum.co.uk which exists ostensibly as a self-help forum for Virgin Media customers. It has its roots in the protest site nthellworld, although we hope we've become a little more constructive since those days.
Anyway, the reason I mention it is, we have an extensive section where threads are posted on cable TV and internet issues, but an arguably even more extensive section where just about anything else - lifestyle, current affairs, technology - is discussed. We find that nurturing the community and allowing people to stick around and chat about any issues that interest them means they will be more likely to be online when a thread asking for help with a broken cable modem comes along.
Running a lively 'off topic' section brings its own issues of course. People start threads in the wrong place, or they start threads with no easily definable topic. We call these 'chat threads' and generally disallow them. But this sort of activity, especially the chat threads, or threads that had a topic but drift off into nonsense (puns are a favourite, for some reason) are again a product of the sense of community we've striven to build up. People spend time on the forum, they get to know each other online, they get to know each other offline (heck, we even had a wedding recently), and they want to chat. They want to ask each other's opinion about stuff, even when there are other forums out there where the specialist knowledge they want is more likely to be available.
I'm not saying that a sense of community is the only thing that drives people to post on a particular forum, regardless (sometimes in spite of) its purpose, but in our case at least it is a major driving factor. And if the net effect is to support and improve the service you want to offer, then the extra modding and admin work it entails is well worth it.
Chris
Admin
Cableforum team
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Nick - closing threads, moving them etc is a Host' job. You sound like you don't like doing the admin, which is not a good starting point for considering whether a process or system is worthwhile.
What are the BBC objectives that you want the boards to meet? Why were they set up in the first place?
Tell us that, then we can talk about whether they are doing a "good job" in meeting them, or if they need changing.
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Nic asks
Should we be spending licence fee payers' money on this?
Most message board users know that questions about adverts are not allowed. I believe someone even went on the thread and told them this.
The question you ask can be asked about the whole of the BBC online content. I believe it gets other corporations backs up that there is a publicly funded online BBC. I think the BBC online is a superb site, but I question what much of it has to do with broadcasting.
Why should the license fee pay for gardening message boards, revision for kids, games, sport talk (not BBC broadcast sport but all sport), information about learning another language, online games, and much more?
The POV messagboard is about television, it's "what you do" so feedback from license fee payers SHOULD BE INVALUABLE to the BBC. And feedback about other channels should surely be poured over by the BBC. If the BBC actually read the boards and took note of what was said then they would have a goldmine of viewer feedback.
If Channel 4 show a documentary and people go on the BBC message board and post about what they liked about it, then the BBC can learn from this and put it into practice for future Horizon episodes.
This cannot be replaced by a blog, unless you are the most perceptive person on earth, and can see in advance what feedback viewers wish to give.
Don't get rid of a helpful tool, use it better, and you and the BBC will benefit.
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"Should we be spending licence fee payers' money on this?"
Perhaps Nick you could open another blog, and ask a question, "what online facilities should we spend the licence fee on?"
If you are questioning the validity of POV, you must also be questioning the six Archers boards - I'm sure there are others to take into account.
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In actual response to the CONTENTS of your message 25, I think that Chosun has apologised to you
Message 364 POV Board
"Hi Nick,
I was the one who called into question the whole blog-gate episode.
It was maybe a bit petty of me, but it just rubbed me up the wrong way."
and
"Anyway... suspicious as that whole episode was, I'll forget it and extend to you a warm welcome to the boards."
As I say posters CAN hold strong feelings, express them, but generally, offer the hand of reconciliation to put differences behind them, and Chosun has just confirmed my point.
Back to your Comment 25 above..... you say, to Chosun
"And to be clear, would an "open" post on a blog where you could raise any subject you liked in a comment, be something you would use?"
and yet.......
In Chosun's comment No.22, he says.....
"In answer to your question above - no, I would not use an off-thread blog. Why? Because blogs are so unwieldy. Anything over 50 posts or so and it becomes a chore to use them.
An off-thread messageboard area? YES. Definitely, YES."
So, he HAS answered your question. Simply asking it over and over is not going to get a different answer (wink smiley)
I would think that that is a very clear answer to your oft-repeated question, asking if messageboarders would like an "open" blog thread.
I'm afraid that with your comment to Angelic
"Ugelicweeyin - I think I have the right to choose where I start a conversation"
I can't shake the mental image of you standing with your arms folded and bottom lip sticking out (sorry smiley), WHEN, you quite reasonably could have been trying to say in as few words as possible (not MY strength - laugh smiley), simply the fact that you CAN choose where to start a conversation. It's all down to perception of the written word.
I DO think you are being a wee bit pedantic about your defense of posting to bbc.co.uk messageboard (as this conversation is about messageboards). Actually, it is about messageboards AND contents on POV Television. Some messageboarders NEVER leave POV Television board, so wouldn't look at bbc.co.uk. So, yes, to be perfectly pedantic, bbc.co.uk WAS the correct board, BUT, if you genuinely want dialogue with boarders who post to Television, then, a bit of lateral thinking would have helped. Several posters have tried to get you to understand that messageboards are more flexible than blogs, AND, that YOU would have to be more flexible, and think laterally about involving messageboarders to POV Television. It WAS nice to see you enter into the spirit on POV last night, as that is WHERE your audience for this discussion is. As you can see, only us hardy few have made it here, and more importantly COME BACK, after your initial blog.
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This is the first time that I have responded to a blog.
I have tried my best but I cannot read it all, one long stream of comments, no quote facility, nothing to encourage any sort of conversation. But I guess it's not *supposed* to encourage conversation.
In this day and age people spend less time communicationg with one another and message boards fill some of that void.
I have watched BBC TV programmes because someone has alerted us to something good coming up.
The message boards are user friendly. For the most part they ran quite smoothly - until Peta left, but they still haven't gone to pot. They just need a little attention from a pro board host. Instead they have the attention of a clearly pro blog host.
Hello Nick, nice to 'meet' you, please give us plenty of warning of when you close the POV boards, I would like time to say goodbye.
:(
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Why must we have the attitude if it's not broke well lets break it then!
The POV board has a lively community which works, it was a bit like a garden that got a bit overgrown by not being actively hosted - the solution is a bit of pruning here and there and a bit of a love and some attention, but no chop it all out and break it up and make everyone go everywhere else.
There's also the whole issue of TRUST.. remember that a BBC value at one time, I and other people may (though that's slowly being eroded) trust the BBC with my/their comments, they/I might not on some of the outside boards.
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@42 - The thing is, the Beeb isn't allowed to do something simply because it has a trusted brand and is good at it. It has to pass a public value test and not clobber commercial competitors in the process. Not so very long ago they were forced to shut down a lot of education/national curriculum support web pages because of these rules.
Nick is obliged by the BBC Trust to ask whether the services he is in charge of are compatible with the public value test.
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christownsend - not quite true as this is not about any kind of public value tests (which only apply to new things the BBC wants to do).
But you are right that the BBC shouldn't do things just because it can. Which in the case of the POV boards leads to questions like:
What are the boards supposed to do?
Are they doing it sucessfully?
Should the BBC be doing it?
Good comments from everyone by the way.
Nick Reynolds (editor, BBC Internet blog)
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christownsend (message 36)
(thumbs up smiley)
Nice to have the thoughts of someone with a professional interest in messageboards.
This raises the question, Nick and Jem, - are professionals from BBC Messageboards having dialogue with you, or, are bloggers (the two of you), seriously trying to decide what messageboards need (when, you, especially Nick have admitted that you are amateurs)?
Blogs seem to be very very much simpler than messageboarding, and no-one will expect you to be experts immediately.
The basic benefits of messageboards over blogs are...
1. Community
2. Interaction with other posters (not just the Original Poster)
3. The quote function (although it was better before it was tweaked - supposedly for legal reasons !!!!!)
4. Smileys, to lighten, or enforce comments.
5. 20 postings to a page - much easier to read
6. Wider page, so postings don't seem so squished.
7. The signing in, and posting process is much better
8. The ability to reply to a specific posting (bringing it up, above the comment box, whilst you compose your comment - no scrolling up and down blog page - arghhhhhhhhhhh)
9. Although far more "threads" on a messageboard, than blogs on THEIR board, far far easier to find the one you want to comment to.
10. Less problems with coding interfering with your posting (can't use certain brackets etc on these blogs - just keep being refused as a fault)
11. Help box is very easy to access on EVERY page - no need to scroll and search.
12. POV is big on Fairplay and protecting one another from unfair postings (witness the support for Lee when he received grief)
Other posters will be able to think of MANY more reasons where messageboards score over blogs.
I have to say, to have wound Angelic up, takes some doing. I've NEVER seen her respond negatively to anything on the boards in all the time she has been on there. SHE'S one of the most placid, witty and temperate posters, and yet, you've pressed all the wrong buttons.
I have to say, one of two things is happening on these blogs.
1. Either you GENUINELY do not understand messageboards, and, get the allure of them, or
2. The decision is made, and you are simply paying lip service/going through the motions of dialogue.
I hope the boards are not disassembled, simply because BLOGGERS, don't understand them, BUT, have the power to.
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Nick, to address your questions:
What are the boards supposed to do?
- I would say, provide feedback on BBC programmes and associated issues, through community discussion.
Are they doing it sucessfully?
- Given the lack of leadership lately, I'd say they were doing it extremely well. Off-topic posts can soon be reined in with a few reminders. But take a look for yourself: there are some highly articulate reviewers on there, coming from a range of backgrounds.
Should the BBC be doing it?
- If they don't, they'll look a bit feeble! Closing down the opportunity for viewers to give their own, public feedback looks as though the BBC is frightened of hearing negative criticism. In that circumstance, no one wins.
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In response to your questions (AGAIN)
"What are the boards supposed to do?"
They are a meeting place for people who have a similar interest, to discuss, pass on information, complain, praise or wallow in nostalgia about their chosen topic.
Are they doing it sucessfully?
I assume we are only talking about POV Television/Digital/BBC/bbc.co.uk/radio (falling under the umbrella of POV), and not the wider franchise of BBC messageboards. I think YOU feel that Digital/BBC/bbc.co.uk, and possibly radio (though not to the same degree) ARE doing more or less what you want to see. I think you have a problem with POV Television. I would say, when hosted properly, Television board DOES work very successfully. The problem has been years of inconsistent Hosting/modding to keep posters in line. As has been said, you never know which thread/postings are going to be wheeched off. It MUST be working because there are a lot of posters and some have been there for years. As an aside, I think if you are keeping POV television, it WOULD probably benefit from ONE thread, which is for "off-topic" (then the chit-chat can be kept to one THREAD - much easier to oversee)
Should the BBC be doing it?
Of course BBC should be doing it. Where else should people be talking about BBC programmes - digitalspy!!!! As to the multitude of Boards which are outwith your remit, that is up to those Editors to decide.
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Jem, (message 29)
"But its not a blogs vs boards thing. Its something that should "just work" for any contribution a user decides to share with bbc.co.uk, wherever they share it. Hopefully more on that next year."
This comment has become lost in the longggggggggggggg column of comments on this blog (not many postings, but a long way to scroll, none the less.)
From that comment, do I take it that you DO see a future for messageboards?
Two questions for you and Nick
1. Will professionals who know how to run messageboards be involved in decisions about improvements to bbc blogs and messageboards, or will it come down to bloggers alone deciding if messageboards are viable?
and
2. Why do comments by Jem and Nick come up white some times, and grey/blue other times? It is not consistent, and what is happening is that comments by YOU get lost in the column of comments. It's not a plus for blogging, is it?
Thanks, niclara
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niclara - comments come up in white to indicate that it is a BBC person speaking in an official capacity. but i happen to have two usernames/logins and on one of them this function is not enabled. i'll get it fixed, sorry.
even when it doesn't come up white i always give my job title.
apologies for lower caps. writing one handed in crowded station - bakerloo line suspended.
nick reynolds - editor, bbc internet blog.
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This shouldn't be about "bloggers versus people who like message boards".
As Jem says we hope to be improving functionality on all the BBC's social media including blogs and message boards.
The question I'm trying to explore is about the POV boards specifically.
How are they better or worse than other BBC blogs and message boards and other social media not run by the BBC?
If they are simply for people to chat about whatever they like, there are plenty of places online for that.
Nick Reynolds (editor, BBC Internet blog).
Sitting down on a train so typing two handed - but train not moving.
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Nick
I realised it was BBC staff who came up white (like the coloured names on messageboards), BUT, when you come up in blue/grey instead, your comments just get lost, even though you put your title.
What about my first question now (wink smiley)?
Safe journey. (thumbs up smiley)
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Just to briefly say Nick you might benefit from the history and current practice of the Radio Three message boards, which are a community, have had members go off and start their own message board, have influenced the BBC schedules and presentation style. One particular board on Choirs had probably a readership and contributors from every cathedral organist in the UK as well and other interested in choirs. Management and hosts are mostly absent, but occasionally there are ''distinguished' posters who are welcomed politely. R3s attempt to engage presenters on the boards and contributors by email to the live shows was a failure because presentation style and the balance of music and talk are highly contentious points among the community. Soi it works more or less and w2 people expect (except it was long before w2) (it is monitored for libel of course.
I do have a question thought about whether people should run their communities on my front lawn which I have paid £130 a year to rent.
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Hi Nick
In this blog you say:
1) "I have some ideas and opinions which I'm sharing with you in order to help me think."
To be honest, I can't say that I have actually read what you're ideas and opinions actually are, apart from that you prefer blogging to messageboards.
2)But the trouble with having a relatively open board is that if people can start threads about anything at all, they will, even if its unrelated to the subject matter of the board.
Which in the case of the Points of View boards is supposed to be "any aspect of the BBC". (My bold)
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Sorry, my mouse clicked on the Post Comment button, when I was actually trying to paste.
I'll start again.
Hi Nick
In this blog you say:
1) "I have some ideas and opinions which I'm sharing with you in order to help me think."
To be honest, I can't say that I have actually read what you're ideas and opinions actually are, apart from that you prefer blogging to messageboards.
2) "But the trouble with having a relatively open board is that if people can start threads about anything at all, they will, even if its unrelated to the subject matter of the board.
Which in the case of the Points of View boards is supposed to be "any aspect of the BBC".
Yes, this does happen but surely it is the job of the mods/hosts/whoever to move the threads to the more appropriate board.
And yes, there are many subject being discussed which are not about the BBC, but again, surely this is for the mods/hosts/whoever to sort.
I and probably many other posters see the POV messageboards as a kind of "one stop shop" for being able to raise and discuss topics from outwith the BBC, but still related to broadcasting.
You then go on about newspaper sites and Digital Spy and ask "Do you ever use any of these alternatives?"
I do not post on newspaper sites and although I am registered on Digital Spy, I rarely visit or post there, as I prefer it over here! I think it's because I'm familiar with the site, where things are, who posters are etc.
When I go onto the POV site, I for one DO, check out what's posted on the other boards, hence why I found your original post in the BBC.co.uk board. I also post on The BBC board and the Digital board.
I started a thread on the Digital board concerning digital switchover, as my region was the first to be fully 'digitalised'.
Granted, only a couple of people replied, but knowing the amount of people who post on the POV messageboards, I thought I would do my bit to let others know a bit about the process of switchover.
As I said before, I see the POV boards as a "one stop shop".
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Now, Nick (wags finger smiley) (actually I made that one up), I think we know that you REALLY mean POV Television (wink smiley). AND, the reason POV Television is on your radar, is simply that it is SO much busier than probably all the others put together.
We've listed at length, both here, your other blog, AND, over on the messageboard, what we LIKE about POV, so now you're moving the goalposts to ask us, what we prefer about POV to outside agency run boards. I think you are now, probably asking one question too many. A great many posters to POV don't frequent many (if any) other boards run by BBC. It took me about a year, before I ventured off POV Television and Askew. It takes quite a long time to get used to, and comfortable with some messageboards.
Blogs I have seen (everywhere) are stale, and devoid of personality, and those which confine you to a certain number of keystrokes, stop real passion in it's path.
BBC messageboards (as has already been mentioned), sail under the banner "BBC" which still holds a lot of sway. Posters SHOULD feel that the BBC brand counts for a lot. Whether they do, or not, comes down to the employees of BBC.
Messageboards outside of POV, come in such a myriad of styles. I frequent two very small boards, with really a comfy, chatty feel, where we talk about life, and anything we want to discuss. These are very pleasant BECAUSE they are frequented by so few posters and we really get to know each other, and give support. There are other messageboards, which seem very confusing to use, so I don't hang about. There are others inhabited by too many children/student types who are looking to stir others up (not all children/students, but enough). There are boards where posters pm each other and arrange meetings (that's a step too far for me). Some are just places for slanging matches. Some you just want to read from outside the community, but really don't want to step inside.
So, what BBC messageboards CAN'T do, is have an all encompassing friendly feel - it is too big to try to emulate what smaller boards can do. It CAN encourage friendly/helpful postings, and a feeling of Community. It CAN'T allow WUM's who just want to upset the board, but, it CAN, encourage people of all ages to post to it. It CAN'T make joining/reading and posting too complicated (we're not all computer nerds) - although I'm married to one (looks skyward smiley), but it CAN'T be too bland either. The forté of BBC boards, is that people from all over UK (and beyond) come to it because of it's name. You then have a massively diverse range of posters In other words "BBC" will bring in posters who won't post anywhere else, simply because of the brand name.
What I am saying is, that ALL boards are different BECAUSE they fill different needs. BBC should fulful the needs of it's viewers/listeners, by providing messageboards (and blog thingies) that it's audience and license payers want. And, I would respectfully suggest that the viewers/listeners/posters to POV boards have made VERY clear that they like MOST of what already exists, and that it just requires minimal tweaking, and a few upgrades to the techie stuff which supports them. That's actually another important point - the boards seem to crash all the time, due to technical faults.
Quoted from your posting -
"If they are simply for people to chat about whatever they like, there are plenty of places online for that."
So, not like what we are doing here then (laugh smiley)
Hope you've made it home safely.
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Me again Nick.
You say
"So in that spirit I'm going to be provocative.
The POV message boards currently has threads on Coronation Street, Emmerdale, I'm A Celebrity and Sharpe's Regiment. ITV.com also has its own forums, with threads about Corrie and Emmerdale and I'm A Celebrity. "
So, I'm going to play devil's advocate with you.
Over on the 5live MB's, the Central Communities Team posted on July 24 2007 that "All new discussions should contain a link to a story about today's news."
These links can be from anywhere (within the House Rules, of course). These mainly seem to be from newspapers, which of course, have their own forums/posting facilities, as does, as you point out, ITV.com.
So IF one of your ideas is to ensure that only postings about the BBC are allowed on the POV boards, should the 5live boards be made to follow suit and only allow links from the BBC website when a discussion is started?
And if not, why should it be one rule for some boards and another rules for others?
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... and of course, the BBC is dead set against off-topic chat on their mesageboards.
They'd never encourage a place where useless banter is the norm...
http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/h2g2/alabaster/MiscChat
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OK Nick
So, I followed your link to itv.com and you know what, I quite like it. It's easy to read. ALL the messageboards, with links to the threads are on ONE page, and they do seem to have threads which are about ITV programmes, BUT, it also has "off topic" areas, ", "Men & Motors" section, a "Jokes" forum, "Games" section, as well as a "News" section - ALL on a TELEVISION board.
And YOU want US, to pare down POV to be about BBC programmes ONLY. (slaps hand to forehead smiley)
BUT, you know what was the MOST surprising thing about my visit - it showed that out of 849,080 members, there were 4 (FOUR) online by the time I finished trawling through the boards (10.30), although they don't close until 12a.m. There were also only 205 new posts in the last 24hours. It would be interesting to know how many posters post to BBC messageboards in 24 hours, and if BBC as EVER only had 4 members online. But, then the way the BBC boards are set up, I would never be able to find those figures. In fact, I noted on h2g2 a poster actually posted that very question. "How do I find out how many members are online?" NO RESPONSE.
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niclaramartin - glad you enjoyed your visit to the ITV boards. I think "Men & Motors" is something owned by ITV so wouldn't be off topic for them. If ITV boards want to have games and such then that's nothing to do with me (or the BBC)!
Your point about knowing who is online is a good one. Although I think there is some indication of this on h2g2 but possibly its not as obvious as it should be.
NippieSweetie - Five Live is about news. It's therefore logical to encourage people to link to news stories, both from BBC and other sources.
Points of View is about BBC programmes and services.
Suerat - thanks for the h2g2 link. One question to be asked is "if off topic comment should be allowed where's the best place for this to happen?"
Good comments by the way. Useful. Keep them coming.
Nick Reynolds (editor, BBC Internet blog)
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Just a quick one - what does h2g2 stand for?
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Morning Nick
Having been on itv.com, it is VERY noticeable just HOW easy to access ALL areas of that board, it is.
It's ALSO noticeable that ITV APPEAR to decide the programmes/news items/entertainment shows etc which should be discussed (by use of folders). An example is "Shows" forum. They have subforums for "Celebair", "South Bank Show and "Bonkers", BUT, when you scroll down, upon opening "Shows", the majority of the postings (started by posters themselves) are about X Factor, Britain's got talent etc, and NOT about the topics which were chosen for viewers to post about. So, somebody is creating Folders on programmes ITV want discussed, BUT, still allow the posters to start their own threads.
It's also noticeable that in the News section, they have areas where you can chit chat (unlike BBC newsboards, where you must post a link to a news article you wish to talk about). In the News section on itv.com you have posters asking "what happens to a guarantee if a company goes bust". You also have posters getting on their "Soapbox" about a subject dear to their heart (BBC Scotland messageboards used to have this, where people discussed politics etc - without the need to link to a current news item).
itv.com DOES seem easier to navigate, thereby making it easier if you are on say, a thread (let's use the recent Brand/Ross as an example, I know they're BBC, but....just an example), discussing Brand's radio show, but the furore became a news item. Posters would find it MUCH easier to hop over to "News" on itv.com, than BBC messageboards.
You mentioned that "Men and Motors" IS part of the ITV franchise, BUT, the forums being discussed under that banner on itv.com are NOT just about programmes. There are "General man rants", "Improving fuel consumption" etc
So, although itv.com APPEAR to be setting the Agenda for which programmes THEY want posters to discuss, they are actually allowing the posters THEMSELVES to start and post to the threads of THEIR choice. THEY perhaps accept that to enforce a situation where itv.com decide the programmes which they will allow posters to discuss, COULD be seen as a form of censorship or cherrypicking. OR, perhaps they just realise that if you shoehorn posters into discussing a limited range of topics, posters will leave.
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Oh, and at 11 o'clock on a Friday morning, on itv.com,
"There are 6 of 849,232 member(s) online "
BBC probably have more than six on just ONE thread, at this moment.
Am I turning into your Researcher? (slaps forehead smiley)
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Oh, dear...
Ok, let me get a rant out of the way with first, then I'll try answering a few of the points bought up in the last few posts.
The BBC employee responsible for the POV messageboard wants the opinions of POV users and is attempting to run the discussion on a BLOG (away from POV)!
This is a little like the Prime Minister of Great Britain trying to address the people of Britain on TV by using a French Cable TV channel.
Ruddy silly!
Ok, Rant over... Questions next...
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Nick wrote:
The question I'm trying to explore is about the POV boards specifically.
How are they better or worse than other BBC blogs and message boards and other social media not run by the BBC?
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To take this in sections:
Blogs v Messageboard....
Messageboard wins hands down...
- Threads that don't involve scrolling down a half mile long page
- The ability to quote other peoples quotes
- The ability to centralise and monitor conversations
- The ability to jump to the a specific point in a conversation from your own list of conversations (last place you posted, first message, last message, etc.)
- The ability to build up a community of users, providing a more balanced view of what your users think.
- The ability for users to start their own threads and ask their own questions
- The ability for other users to answer those questions (imagine, you start a blog entitled "Technical Queries", it'd be unusable within a day, someone would ask a question under it, the answer would be half a mile below that with 140 other questions in between... )
I honestly can't think of any advantages of blogs, with the exception of advantages to the original blog owner who has improved control over what subjects are covered.
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BBC Messageboards v other messageboards...
Scale - I've said this before elsewhere, but there aren't any messageboards anywhere else on the net that deal with anything like the quantity of postings or people these boards do... Can the system be improved? Of course it can, but have you got the budget to do it?
To give an idea of traffic levels...
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Niclara Martin said
There were also only 205 new posts in the last 24hours. It would be interesting to know how many posters post to BBC messageboards in 24 hours, and if BBC as EVER only had 4 members online. But, then the way the BBC boards are set up, I would never be able to find those figures.
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Actually, it's pretty easy to find those figures out, (BBC staff could get them straight out of the system, but even we have access to them)...
Number of _registered_ users online across all messageboards
(not including those who are reading but not registered or those that are registered but haven't been active within the last 15 minutes) - currently: 1654 (This figure will be out of date by the time I hit the 'Post Comment' button
http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/h2g2/brunel/online?orderby=none
Number of postings in the last 24 hours...
A bit more difficult, but by comparing the URLs of two posts, made 12 hours apart...
approx. 8000 in 12 hours (call it 12,000 in one day to build in a huge margin for error)
My guesstimate of numbers of posts is just that though ... I could figure out a more accurate figure given half an hour or so playing with various URLs, but some of us have work to do ;)
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That'll do for the time being...
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@ #60
"h2g2 stands for 'The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy'"
Info: http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/h2g2/dontpanic-tour
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(Whisky wrote:
Oh, dear...
Ok, let me get a rant out of the way with first, then I'll try answering a few of the points bought up in the last few posts.
The BBC employee responsible for the POV messageboard wants the opinions of POV users and is attempting to run the discussion on a BLOG (away from POV)!
This is a little like the Prime Minister of Great Britain trying to address the people of Britain on TV by using a French Cable TV channel.
Ruddy silly!)
Whisky quite a few have said this too, but Nick is not familiar with messageboards (though iPlayer has a messageboard???? cannot fathom it out) but instead of him learning about it he decides to put it here out of our territory.
I do not think I am in the good books at the moment and will probably be seen as a rabble rouser......if only!
I much prefer the POV boards (I use them all) to DS. DS is too big and busy though I do post there on the odd occasion (mainly computer bit not even about television, that I leave for here).
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Well said Whisky, not that I've agreed with everything you've ever said on the boards but on your last post, spot on.
There is a lot of talk of people being accused of assuming that the boards will close, and posters are accused of 'reading between the lines'. I would take Nick hardly any time, even on a crowded train or in a library, to say the boards won't be closed and end the speculation - then we can move on and have a proper debate. Vagueness seems to be part of this process.
Why is POV being singled out for such a revamp? I see, so far, Nick, you haven't taken up my suggestion (or replied) to open a blog to ask us what the licence fee should be spent on, online - there are lots of other drains on funds coming in from us that to some may be less important than POV.
Are you "asking questions" of any other boards, and if not, why now?
Merely from a PR point of view, it would look as if some agenda was being used, should POV be the only board affected. It would give rise to those cynical souls (i.e. me) who think POV has been marginalised by the POV Production Team and the changes are being made because POV has become an irritant to the BBC.
Any thoughts on the POV Coverage Board Nick? Did you look into that and many other questions raised?
http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/mbpointsofview/F3886587
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****Well said Whisky, not that I've agreed with everything you've ever said on the boards but on your last post, spot on.
****
Life'd be ever so boring if we all agreed all of the time...
;)
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Nick
Your first question on this blog, re putting a comment to individual posters on a blog - I'm not sure why you would even ask THAT question of messageboarders? We know little about blogs, we have made it clear that WE are messageboarders, NOT, bloggers, and that we don't want to become bloggers. Surely that question should have been put to your blogging community. If you think by offering messageboarders a "Comment to individual" facility, that you are going to lure messageboarders over to blogs, then I would say, you are totally missing the allure of messageboards. Messageboarders DO NOT want to become bloggers.
Question 2 - Search function on messageboards. I am fairly certain that you would get an almost unanimous thumbs up to that one.
Point 3 - "It's blindingly obvious that what many of you like most about the POV boards is the ability to start a conversation about anything you like."
I'm glad that it is "blindingly obvious" - so, if it is "blindingly obvious", you will probably do away with it anyway. (shakesheadsmiley) Your reasoning that it shouldn't happen, because it does not relate to the subject of the board, again fails to understand messageboards (see my posting about itv.com where THEY do allow off-topic areas). It is this lack of an "off-topic" area on POV, which has led to the "chit chat" which you have a problem with. When Askew was running "Television" was far more focused, BECAUSE the chatting took place on Askew. Perhaps an area like itv.com or even a few off-topic threads a week on "Television" would focus minds, when they ARE posting about Television.
Point 4 - BBC only threads. OK if you insist, but that fails to comprehend that posters to BBC POV have built a community, and like to discuss things with THEIR community (including other channels). BBC receive a licence fee which makes it different from most other messageboards, in that it is PAID to provide services - other channels don't receive payment from their viewers/posters, so are probably more entitled to focus on only THEIR programming. BBC should be the "big man" and allow discussion of ALL television on their board, for the simple reason that viewers/posters have paid for THAT board, and it is THEIR wish. I would say that perhaps a wee subforum area within the POV board, where "Other TV Channels programming" could be placed, would probably be beneficial. Also, it would allow BBC to see at a glance IF viewers/posters are enjoying "opposition channels" output more than BBC.
Point 5 - Multiple threads - merge them/they may lessen with search facility.
Point 6 - Moving/closing threads - I don't think you can solve this completely. Newbies in particular, won't know not to keep starting their own new threads/how to search for previous similar threads etc. Posters have NOT been encouraged to stay ON-topic. Perhaps a posting from yourself to re-state YOUR position on OFF topic postings, would be helpful.
Point 7 - "SHOULD WE BE SPENDING LICENCE FEE PAYERS' MONEY ON THIS?" I would say that BBC is beholding to spend licence payers/posters money the way the USERS of their messageboards prefer. If, however, the question is really "Should we be spending money providing messageboards?" then THAT is a different question altogether.
Point 8 - links to external forums about bbc. I think it WOULD be beneficial to have shortcuts/links to these external forums ON each POV messageboard.
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Faye Tsar - I am talking about the POV boards explicitly because:
a) I am new to them and am asking you what you think of them in order to help me understand them
b) I don't have responsibility for any other message boards. (I do have responsibility for h2g2 so your comments about that are also useful as I am thinking about that too)
Nick Reynolds (editor, BBC Internet blog)
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Whisky (thumbs up smiley)
I have never frequented h2g2 too often, and I think a great many posters are the same - I really do not like the layout of that part of the site. As part of my job, I have to drop in on many different websites, and some have wonderful layouts, whilst others, quite frankly are so fussy, that you lose the will to live. h2g2 falls into the second category - far far too fussy, too much writing, without obvious sections. The print is small in some parts, garish in others and all in all, a really unattrative, unuser-friendly place. So, I have NEVER actually bothered to learn where all the info is there. I've seen THAT listing of posters page, but, never actually realised that that is where ALL posters online are listed.
More techy people would be able to say why BBC don't have a simple "X number of members online", "X number guests" etc the same as other messageboards - maybe just the amount of traffic (I don't expect members names to be listed there - too many probably - but a number would be good).
Faye Tsar, I'm with you on this. A simple "we are not looking to close POV messageboards, but, ARE looking to improve them", would allay a lot of fears. I've been in contact with too many official bodies, to realise that when they say nothing, after you ask a question, then, usually that means they are going to cut a swathe through/do away with services. If this is NOT, the case Nick, I think you SHOULD respond to posters questions. As YOU said, "This is a conversation". If you expect US to answer YOUR questions, then it would seem courteous to answer OURS. I've seen lots of questions go unanswered, and I've asked some of those.
I would also say, that having posted during the run-up to the closure of BBC Scotland messageboards en-masse, that the way POV (Television in particular) is being run, does not bode well. The BBC Scotland messageboards were absolutely wonderful. They had people from all over the world posting to them. They were witty/confrontational/informative/entertaining, but managed to stay friendly. UNTIL the final year, when the Hosts more or less disappeared off the boards, and let the WUMs loose on the posters. They allowed Anti-English postings by a few Irish posters to stay (ironically to a lot of English posters reading this, the Scottish posters were ACTUALLY the only ones defending England/English against this onslaught of venom). The end result was, that after a year-long campaign of hate, resulting in a lot of skirmishes (devoid of any Host/modding input), the boards were closed. They had imploded because they were not policed, and we all felt that BBC Scotland were glad to be able to cut back on costs - many even felt that the boards were allowed to deteriorate, on purpose, for cost-cutting reasons. BBC Scotland's idea of messageboards for Scottish viewers is ONE messageboard, on ONE programme (River City) (arghhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhsmiley)
Nick, I know that over the past few months you have been interacting with bloggers in a similar way, and attending seminars on accountability, so why not tell messageboarders that you ARE NOT just homing in on POV?
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Nick, in message 59 (I think), you reply to my question that:
"FiveLive is about news. It is therefore logical to encourage people to link to news stories both from BBC and other sources".
Turn it on it's head and replace 'FiveLive' with 'Points of View' and 'news' with 'television'.
(Apologies if I've misquoted you Nick - I can't seem to copy and paste your quote today for some reason and I've had to scroll up and down the board finding your original message.)
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I don't have responsibility for any other message boards. (I do have responsibility for h2g2 so your comments about that are also useful as I am thinking about that too)
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Ooops - that's probably the most frightening phrase I've ever read on the BBC website...
I'm not sure what you think of the previous postings I've made on this blog and on the equivalent POV thread. But _please_, if you're thinking about doing anything to h2g2 - come and join us, spend some time using the site. Remember that that particular community has roots that go back nearly 10 years and its ethos pre-dates ownership by the BBC.
There are still a few members of the BBC staff around various departments who came across from The Digital Village, ask their opinions... And posting a blog entry asking for opinions on h2g2 is likely to start a virtual, on-line riot.
Those articles on the hub I kept linking to were, in the main, written by the people who created h2g2 in the first place... They know what they're talking about - honestly.
I'm trying not to feel negative about this. I honestly hope I'm actually making a fool of myself here and 'teaching my grandmother to suck eggs' as they say. If I am, I apologise, but h2g2 is a very unique corner of the internet, building itself up into a social networking site years before facebook and myspace came along, and developing an on-line knowledge base years before wikipedia came into being (and it's a lot more accurate and less open to abuse). Treat it gently, please!
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Hi Nick,
thanks for replying to some of my points and questions, as always it's what ISN'T answered which is the most telling.
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I find h2g2 extremely difficult to navigate around.
I'm only usually there to delete threads and I've tried having a look in other areas of it, but I just find it confusing - even the 'help' sections don't actually 'help'.
A couple of questions for you Nick on h2g2. Why do we have to go to there to delete our threads and why can't we delete more than one a time?
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Faye, its starting to piss me off this. Not answering direct questions.
Oh wait, we'll probably get another blog!
(seriously hacked off smiley)
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I've just taken a stroll across the internet and looked at a few blogs.
They seem in the main to be made up of self-important people who think that others care about what they're saying and who pad out the entries by having a huge number of links to *other* blogs on them.
Messageboards are the best way to have a conversation. Blogs are just people writing articles and then commenting on those articles.
Please Nick, keep the messageboards and just police them better. A POV world of only blogs would be a lonely place for you to be as nobody would come and visit.
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And before anybody says "yes, but YOU'RE blogging here now" ... I'm only here because I have to be, not because I want to be.
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Afternoon Angelicweeyin, it's almost reassuring how history repeats itself on the BBC.
606, then this.
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"If they are simply for people to chat about whatever they like, there are plenty of places online for that.
Nick Reynolds (editor, BBC Internet blog).
- With respect, Nick, I think you're being disingenuous. Lots of people have told you on this blog that PoV is far more than that, and gone on to explain the various functions of the forum. (I'd add a thumbs-up smiley if there was one, to soften the apparently po-faced tone.)
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Afternoon Faye
Just thinking that myself.
But you know me, placid thing that I am, I always like to give people the benefit of the doubt but the total avoidance of some of the questions being asked, not once but a few times, makes me think we are getting treated like imbeciles and we aren't.
If Nick doesn't have that specific answer well why not say it, instead of all this speculation.
This has really got me going and its so unlike me. I'm going out shortly, thank goodness, but only to pick up the cherubs and believe me I will be even more crabbit when I get back!
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Just as a quick aside to demonstrate the inflexibility of this style of blog...
Select this webpage, copy and paste it into a Word document - delete the extraneous page header information and all information apart from the postings - and this thread, if you printed it out, would be a 46 page document.
Easy to navigate? I think not!
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FayeTsar - the POV boards are about BBC television not all television. Since the BBC covers (or tries to cover) all significant news then the Five Live boards are about all news.
Whisky - I haven't got involved in the h2g2 community yet, but rest assured I will.
As for not answering direct questions, I've already said that I don't have a plan yet, and that this conversation is part of me thinking about the POV boards.
When I have a plan or made a decision, I will of course tell you about it.
And I intend to write more blog posts exploring the arguments and asking you to join in.
Nick Reynolds (editor, BBC Internet blog)
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Conversation is a two way thing Nick and it appears to me that us posters are doing all the talking.
Fair enough, you don't yet have a plan nor have made a decision, but this is like a job interview, with us posters getting no encouragement or feedback into how it is going!
I'd hate to see your poker face! :)
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I agree with what Quizzimodo said on the messageboard:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/mbpointsofview/F1951566
Message 498, page 25
(this blog won't allow the link to be posted in full)
"The fact that we can't get a straight answer to the question "are these boards closing?" on the blog speaks volumes."
The fact it's not mentioned in replies by Nick Reynolds in answer to several questions means it's an option.
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NippieSweetie - I think it's going quite well.
Some of the comments on this post have been useful and given me some insights.
As Jem said above functionality needs to be improved across the board on the BBC's blogs and message boards.
But there are different questions as well.
For example, where are the best places for BBC employees to talk to/with licence fee payers online?
Nick Reynolds (editor, BBC Internet blog)
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RIGHT NOW, I'M REALLY ON MY HIGH HORSE (AND YES, I'M SHOUTING, AND THERE WILL BE NO SMILEYS IN THIS POSTING NICK).
At the moment we are discussing blogs and messageboards, and up till this little exercise of bringing us over here to YOUR blogs we have happily posted in our ignorance to POV messageboards. Often in that myriad of threads, we have complained that "no-one is listening", and, "wouldn't it be nice if one of the High Heidjins popped their head in the door to join us, or tell us what is going on".
And, so having come over here, and ferreted about (just a wee bit), I find this blog
http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/bbcinternet/2008/10/dogs_on_the_blog.html
On DOGs. Written by Danielle Nagler (Head of HDTV, BBC Vision)
HEAD!!!!!! of something at BBC, and SHE'S talking to bloggers.
And, she says, to her bloggers, in the blog, which I linked from, to the DOGs one, "I'm always grateful to you for making me aware of what's missing - and I do try to follow up. "
Good God, just look at this thread (one of many on DOGs), which I found on page 28 (yes, I really trawled through those pages to find one of the main threads of DOGs/LOGOs),
http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/mbpointsofview/F1951566?thread=5478751
this by the way, is not the BIG thread on this topic, just the first I found, and can you now tell me......
WHY ARE BLOGGERS TREATED SO MUCH MORE FAVOURABLY THAN MESSAGEBOARDERS.
Practically NO-ONE in positions of power at BBC have EVER come on to the boards to quell our anger, or inform us what THEY were going to do, or even that they knew we existed.
This exercise to bring us over here, has just shown me how desperately badly posters to messageboards are treated by BBC, in comparison to the "favoured child" bloggers.
To be perfectly honest, so much resentment has built up on POV, simply BECAUSE we feel that we are just talking amongst ourselves and that no-one in power is paying any attention to us.
WHY ARE LICENSE PAYERS WHO ARE BLOGGERS, TREATED SO MUCH BETTER THAN LICENSE PAYERS WHO ARE MESSAGEBOARDERS??????????????????????
HEADS of Departments at BBC, should get their butts over to the messageboards, and talk to US too.
I can now see, that Weblogs state
" it is a conversation between the author and the audience. "
Not only do bloggers have direct access to Heads of Depts BUT, they also COULD blog and have direct access to journalists/personalities/programme staff
From the session on blogging at the internal Future of Journalism conference organised by the BBC’s College of Journalism.
http://reportr.net/2008/11/26/insights-into-why-bbc-journalists-blog/
Robert Peston states from the above link, regarding blogs.....
"The comments are quite challenging and interesting and often generate ideas about where to go with a story. "
SO, FORGIVE ME IF I FEEL NOTHING BUT ABSOLUTE RESENTMENT, ABOUT THE TENTH RATE TREATMENT OF MESSAGEBOARDERS compared to your beloved bloggers.
I now, absolutely believe 100% that BBC OWES IT TO MESSAGEBOARDERS to get THEIR (BBC's) act together, and stop making out that WE are the problem. The buck stops with BBC, and in this case, with YOU Nick. YOU are now responsible for POV boards, and YOU and BBC owe YOUR messageboarders big-time. So, stop looking for ways to make YOUR life easier, by curtailing/doing away with messageboards/threads, and DELIVER the same DEGREE of interaction for BBC messageboarders, as already exists for Bloggers.
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Niclara (thumbs up smiley)
I am glad I am not the only one who's craw is up!
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Angelic
Must be something in the water in this part of Scotland. (thumbs up smiley)
NICKKKKKKKK
Here's the thread on DOGs I REALLY wanted you to see.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/mbpointsofview/F1951566?thread=5439003
Last posting, 3 weeks ago - it's cyclical - some programme is ruined by a DOG, and so the thread is revived. I believe THAT thread was started as a result of some High Heidjin's comments on POV programme, which, to be perfectly honest were insulting. (Having re-read the first page, in message 12 it states
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"First up was Helen Kellie, head of BBC Marketing, telling us that the DOGs are a really useful tool.",
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so it was INDEED started as a result of POV programme, and NOT, because anyone from BBC spoke to us on the boards!!!!!!!!! )
The point I am making, is that there are (to date) 787 (SEVEN HUNDRED AND EIGHTY SEVEN) postings to THAT thread, but no-one has flagged up to BBC Dept Heads that there is a subject causing major annoyance, being discussed on the messageboards. What then happens, is that, as a direct result of NO input from BBC staff, the posters get really angry, and the thread grows and grows, sometimes getting more and more frustrating. THIS is NOT the way to treat license payers. BBC IS accountable (that's your homework for your next blog, I believe).
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From your blog above......
"In particular I have one in mind about ACCOUNTABILITY which seems to lead naturally on from this one."
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So, I think we posters to POV messageboard, actually have the right to be VERY VERY ANGRY with BBC over the treatment which has been meted out to us. If you decide to withdraw/cut a swathe through POV messageboards, then you will simply be re-enforcing the perception that BBC don't want to hear from the "great unwashed", who are able to express THEIR true feelings on messageboards. BUT, that BBC are more than happy to talk to bloggers, when THEY (BBC) set the Agenda/blog topic.
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Nick, you say
"But the trouble with having a relatively open board is that if people can start threads about anything at all, they will, even if its unrelated to the subject matter of the board."
I've found the BBC's Ask Bruce! webwise site and when asked, "What are messageboards?", this is what Bruce replies
http://www.bbc.co.uk/webwise/askbruce/articles/boards/whatareboards_1.shtml
and on page 2, you'll find his definition of what going off-topic means.
If you then follow the link to "What does it mean if people go 'off topic', this is what Bruce replies
http://www.bbc.co.uk/webwise/askbruce/articles/boards/offtopic_1.shtml
You'll note that he says
"Moderated sites tend to go off-topic less often because the moderator can ask people to get back onto the board topic.
In fact, often sites will even have an off-topic message board. They have these so that if some users start discussing motor sports on a beauty tips board they can tell them to go and post their thread there instead.
Off-topic boards are also useful because it's not that people want to kill off a thread on motor sports, they just want it to happen somewhere else. "
Food for thought perhaps?
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Nippie, well done for finding that (I think Nick has opened a can of worms, as we all go looking around BBC website, when we used to be happy frequenting JUST POV)
I found this bit interesting, and, perhaps Nick, you should chew this over, BEFORE you start fiddling/destroying POV messageboards.
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"Message boards can be a bit like that sometimes. So don't be surprised if you go to a website on cookery and find that everyone is talking about world politics."
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YOU seem to be trying to change the format of messageboards, Nick. THEY do not conform to what YOU would like messageboards to be. BUT, some computer nerds designed messageboards to be what they are. THEY are NOT blogs. If YOU wade in (having admitted that you know less about messageboards than we do), and try to curtail them/form them in the likeness of blogs, then you really have NO concept of messageboarding.
I have NO idea why someone would designate a blogger to re-design/do away with messageboards. As YOU already admit POV messageboards are a BIG area - too much, I think for a Newbie/blogger to come into, and try to mould into what he perceives as "Messageboards". What we definitely do not need is Messageblogs or Blogboards.
It's like saying thirty players should play the first forty five minutes of a game as football, and forty minutes as rugby (can I patent that idea). It wouldn't work on many spheres, mainly the footballers would be looking for stretchers when the nasty rugby player hit them in the chest with a ball from the kick-off. What I am saying is, Blogging is for footballers, messageboarding is for rugby players (much more robust, a bit rowdy at times, but basically a team/community who will support each other in the scrum). Ne'er the twain shall meet.
Embrace what IS a wonderful set of messageboards on POV, get more input from BBC employees (up to Heads of Depts), and police the boards more effectively. Add a search facility, return the quote facility, take away the 3/5minute wait between postings, and take on-board suggestions from messageboarders. Job done. And, I'll let you take the credit.
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Niclaramartin, that is really an excellent post, and I agree with every word.
Nick please take note !
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Nick
I'm not sure if you have popped into read the POV messageboard thread started by Nippie, BUT, the posters over there don't seem to know that there is EVEN a second blog here.
As we have said before, you are trying to ask assistance from messageboarders on POV, and you have taken the discussion to YOUR home patch. They have no idea how to get over here, or indeed to even look to see if there was a follow up blog. People just thought that the link which other posters were putting up, was in fact, your original blog.
This is exceptionally poor dialogue with YOUR community. In THIS area YOU are a BLOGGER. When you wish to have dialogue with messageboarders, you SHOULD put on your MESSAGEBOARDER hat, and conduct your enquiry over on POV Television. I do not know how many times you have to have this spelled out to you. Any decision you come up with regarding messageboards will be tainted by your shambolic interaction with messageboarders.
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Nick
By the time I've got to the bottom of this my eyes are sore. That I don't get with a Message Board.
Why write 1000 words when a few will do.
WE WANT MESSAGEBOARDS NOT A BLOG.
Sorry to be blunt, but I think you'll find that most agree with me.
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I found this ok, from the link clearly at the top right hand side of the first blog page. It was only because I read about a second one that I went looking, though. I had not known of it beforehand.
Nick, you didn't tell us, on our messageboard, that you had done this one.
What are you trying to hide/do/prove?
Ok, so the first one was getting too long, so you opened up another one, well, this also is going to get to be too long, so will we have to look out for the third version?
I'm inclined to think I'm correct on that.
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Nick
In your introduction you state "Our moderators put in a lot of effort to ensure that inappropriate comments are removed from the boards". I have to challenge this statement as it simply is not true any more.
For many months the moderators (such as exist now) have been very inconsistent with their removal of inappropriate comments. Some threads are running at the moment that quite obviously break many of the house rules and yet the mods persistently ignore them. Other, more inoffensive and topical threads have been closed down, with no prior warning. I believe that this is a cynical ploy to discredit the messageboards and thus make it much easier for the BBC to close the POV boards down.
With respect - I'm sorry to say that your cavalier attitude thus far to a subject dear to the hearts of many posters to the messageboards is yet another example of the BBC treating its viewers, listeners, licence fee payers (whatever) like children.
I have copied this over from your previous blog - I only discovered you had opened another blog thanks to posts left on the POV messageboard. This situation is now a complete "dogs dinner"!!
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I'm not a poster on POV, but I do like the idea of the BBC having blogs or discussion areas for stuff that isn't just news and Blue Peter. (I'd gladly reply to a Songs of Praise or Doctor Who blog...)
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Orville you should go over to POV, there are always an ongoing discussion about Dr Who and Songs of Praise. We don't do news there (just how bad it is getting presenter wise) but the occasional Blue Peter thread does turn up.
Beth, that link on the right isn't always there, I usually have to click on to Nick's name to come here or go to my comments in my discussions.
Anyway its been 2 years since we lost Doug - that I cannot believe. (rose smiley)
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My grammar is atrocious!
Blame the cherubs! Getting me distracted whilst editing.
Of course it should have read there IS always blah blah blah..........
Nick, not getting onto you, but you really have to come over to POV (h2g2 is a totally different kettle of fish, that's Whisky's department) - the next time you have put your next blog up about more findings about POV you put a link up. If you don't want people to add to it just close it but who am I to suggest this, I am just a lowly old television licence holder.
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Nick Reynolds said...
"When I have a plan or made a decision, I will of course tell you about it."
Oh boy! How to win friends and influence people...
Personally I'm hoping that was just a dodgy bit of phrasing, unfortunately, what's written on sites like this tends to come back and haunt you for years to come.
As I linked to earlier, there are some wonderful articles on the hub about communications and transparency when interacting with the public via the web.
One of the important bits is to keep your users involved... If you come up with a plan and tell your users what you're going to do as a fait-accompli, then you're asking for trouble needlessly...
As I said earlier, I hope I'm wasting my time here and you think I'm stating the obvious... But, unfortunately, from this side of the screen it doesn't appear that way.
Ok, we all know that the buck stops with you, you have the power to do whatever you like with the sites. But, if you want to keep an existing community and your existing users happy, instead of coming up with a plan and telling us about it, come up with a plan and talk to us about it... We might be able to help you, come up with additional ideas that you can't see from your side of the screen...
On a slightly different note, this blog is becoming, quite frankly, unusable and unreadable in its current format, so I doubt I'll be posting much more.
--------
Possible hints at improving the blog format to make it more useable for high levels of traffic and user comments...
1) Blogger has the sole rights to create an article.
2) Users can start separate conversations under that article
3) The conversations under the article have better functionalities... (20 posts to a page, quote function, etc.)
4) Users have a way of centralising any conversations they are involved in (including better navigation to individual posts)
Now, even if you agree with all four points there and have the budget to develop the blogging software to do all that... Hold your horses. Everything I've just described can be done under DNA and can be fully integrated into existing messageboards across the BBC. Talk to Jim Lynn.
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Morning Angelic.
Doug - Two years (sad smiley). Sorely missed.
Morning Nick
Hope you are enjoying this War and Peace of blogs.
I am NOT shouting this morning, BUT, I do have a few points which I feel I need to spit out, and make you aware of.
1. You SAY you want a "conversation" about your original topic. BUT, as has been pointed out, for a "conversation" to progress and not stagnate, YOU have to come back and talk to us. THAT is just not happening.
2. You might as well have asked us, "What do you like about the transport system in UK", as ask us what we like about messageboards and how WE can improve them for YOU. For the simple reason that it is too wide a discussion. Some people will live in an area with great transport systems (like to post a lot), whilst others live in the country (prefer infrequent posting). Some will have trains/cars/buses/bicycle tracks/underground...... (like to frequent lots of DIFFERENT types of threads), whilst others have to yomp to the nearest bus stop (only like one or two types of thread), YOU seem to want to travel in a tank, in a private lane, with traffic police every ten yards to stop the plebs spoiling YOUR journey. (wink smiley)
3.We have posted many suggestions, and YOU have not come back to acknowledge which bits you have found useful, (shakes head smiley), or to then ask us WHICH areas YOU still have problems with. We are floundering about in the dark with absolutely NO idea of what YOU like about messageboards (probably nothing), and which are the main areas YOU have difficulties with. If you came back and said, "Good point, but from a financial/staffing logistics stand-point, it's not really feasible", we may surprise you and agree (it's been known to happen)
4. WE do not want blogs, so, you will have to accept that. Perhaps from your position it would be easier to have just ONE area, where all postings are made (Blogboards or Messageblogs), BUT, we have clearly demonstrated that bloggers (like yourself) don't really want to messageboard, and messageboarders don't want to blog. You will have to bite the bullet and accept that the Licence payers WANT separate types of communication. I would think the TRUST feel that the Licence payers should have access to the route of communication THEY want.
5. Come back, BEFORE you reach a decision, and highlight the areas YOU have problems with, and let us (the experts) try to resolve some of them for you. You never know, we might actually be reasonable people.
6. I think you have been looking at the messageboards, and thinking "My God, it's absolute chaos out there" Well, you know what, it's not. It's like turning up at the Champs Elysée in a car, and panicking about which lane/exit you should be heading for, but most posters/Parisiennes know exactly where THEY are going, and will let you join in safely. Occasionally there will be the odd accident/offensive posting, but in the volume of traffic that is to be expected (and cannot EVER be done away with). What DOES cause problems at Champs Elysée AND POV, is when there is NO policing, and it's allowed to become a free-for-all.
7.So following on from point 6, you need ENOUGH policing (without becoming a Police State), but allow the posters to decide what THEY find offensive (unless it is something illegal). As has been said, the VASTTTTTT number of a HUGE population of posters to POV are delightful, witty, helpful, challenging, intelligent....... and can be left safely to post inoffensive (if somewhat nutty, and occasionally off-topic postings). As with EVERY gathering there are the odd nutters (and once discovered they SHOULD be asked to leave). I notice when I dropped in on Nick Robinson's blog re the MP who was arrested, that early in the afternoon yesterday, there was a stream of about TWENTY postings, almost one after the other, which were hidden/being checked by moderation, so clearly people get close to the knuckle on blogs too.
8. Come back to THIS blog, and tell us the areas YOU are still having problems with, and THEN, get over to the messageboard and talk to the posters there.
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Nick
I should perhaps have pointed out (in case you didn't know) that the Doug, Angelic and I are talking about, was a BBC Host, who died, and is sorely missed by HIS community.
We grieve when a poster/host dies, and it truly brings the mood of the board down.
That is a strength of messageboarding, the emotional input, as well as the intellectual input.
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Niclaramartin, post 100 was really excellent !
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Morning Niclara (just)
I vote Niclara to be our spokesperson. What curmy (hi curmy) has said, brilliant post.
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Curmy
Thank you (thumbs up smiley)
Nick,
As you won't tell us what YOU are hoping to achieve by this exercise, we have to try to get into your head, and try to decipher the VERY infrequent (and "cards to chest") postings which have appeared under your name.
I THINK what YOU want, is to incorporate blogs AND messageboards into one product, started by, and supervised/modded by the Author.
You realise that if that is the road you are planning on going down, that YOU are actually trying to invent a new concept - as I have already said "Messageblogs" or "Blogboards". Do you have a background in computer software design or conceptual design/web developement? Are you au fait with HOW to design a messageboard, or for that matter a blog? In other words are you a computer geek? If the answer to ANY of the above questions is "NO", then, sorry, YOU should not be designing/re-inventing the wheel.
From THIS exercise, you don't APPEAR to be wanting to know WHAT we like about messageboard, or HOW they can be improved. What you APPEAR to be doing, is trying to work out how you can incorporate the better aspects of messageboards to blogs, to make them better for bloggers. It then APPEARS that you would like to close the messageboards and have us all come over to blogging (but no loss really if we just all disappear, just less work for BBC employees/cost cutting - but only in ONE area - messageboards).
Sorry, but this is definitely the signals you are sending out. I would love to be wrong, but you are not responding to OUR questions at all, so we are left to speculate (not a plus for blogging is it?)
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niclara and curmy.......some really great posts ...well done, and I agree 100% with them!
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OK I seem to be locked out now.
I've tried to post four times now, and I keep being bounced, and NO, there is no comment at the bottom telling me I have offended the HTML code
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I seem to be able to post wee comments but I can't get a larger posting through, and NO, no comments at the bottom telling me that I am offending the HTML code.
Any suggestions as to why my posting is not going through.
Of course I could end up spamming by trying over and over to get the same posting through. (shakes head smiley)
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Niclara, post 104 was a real Stonker !
Deansay, I've said very little really, others have written much longer posts than mine .
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Going to try in 24 postings
Afternoon Angelic,
Thank you.
Nick, me again.
IF you ARE planning on incorporating what you perceive as the best of messageboards into blogs, AND THEN closing/cutting a swathe through the messageboards, I would be careful what you wish for.
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Part 2.
I have a vision of a huge influx of messageboarders on blogs (if you close the messageboards), carrying on as if they were still on messageboards. How on earth would YOU police that?
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Part 3 seems to have got lost into the ether. I'll try again (not spamming)
Messageboarding is very addictive, and although posters are saying they will leave, I have absolutely no doubt that too many for you to handle would actually move over to blogs, and moan and gripe and continue chatting just as if they were still on messageboards. YOU will NEVER be able to police that. You would spend your whole time pulling posts off for being "off-topic". But, I'll tell you this, messageboarders, are nothing if not resilient (remember the rugby player analogy). They will swamp your more genteel blogs, invading like a swarm of bees. I AM NOT trying to mobilise messageboarders to do this. It is a simple fact that that is exactly what will happen.
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Part 4
The result will then be that YOU will be personally responsible for the destruction of BBC messageboards AND quite probably the annihilation of BBC blogs.
I always thought that in big organisations, the secret was to do something high profile to bring yourself to the attention of the Top Dogs, in order to work your way up the chain. The ONE thing you do not do, is bring yourself to the attention of the Top Dogs for the wrong reason (end of promotion prospects). You have been handed the poisoned chalise. "Right Nick, get out there and sort out those messageboards and whilst you're at it try to improve the blogs" (boss runs away cackling hysterically smiley).
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Part 5
It is important to know when NOT to put your neck on the chopping block, by ruining an existing facility (messageboards), and possibly destroying another area of your remit (blogs), through knock-on effect. See the big picture. You could score brownie points, IF you DO take some of the better aspects of messageboarding over to blogs (you should ask bloggers if they want them first), AND, improve but don't destroy messageboards.
The messageboarders HAVE offered some very good suggestions, BUT, basically we are saying the messageboards ARE working the way they are meant to. They would work/and be easier to Host/Mod, IF you reduced the number of multiple threads by introducing a "Search" facility, IF Hosts/Mods were more obviously policing the boards and if you introduced an "off-topic" area (which would probably be the area where you would need most supervision). BUT, realise that BBC POV is a VAST community, and it WORKS well 99.9% of the time, and only becomes a problem when messageboarders are treated like children/ignored by BBC High Heidjins/not policed well enough. They will police themselves too by hitting the "complain" button.
You should accept that "off-topic" is the norm on messageboards. Your mission to tidy the boards, is just that - YOUR obsession with tidying/enforcing YOUR standards/BBC legal jargon rules. NO messageboard adheres to "NO off-topic". It just does not happen, and until you can get to grips with that, you are going to give yourself a lot of grief/extra work. Just go with the flow, BUT, insist that offensive postings/posters are removed (that's really the two major points to pleasant posting)
If HOWEVER, you have not been handed the poisoned chalice of IMPROVING blogs and messageboards, BUT, have in fact been TOLD to close the messageboards, just tell us. No more phaffing about. All you are doing is causing speculation/working posters up/causing upset.
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niclaramartin - I think I've told you at least twice what I'm trying to achieve. Im thinking about the POV boards and having a conversation with you in order to help me think.
I didn't post a link to this post in the POV boards because NippieSweetie had already done so in her thread and I didn't want to start multiple threads.
I am going to write another blog post but I don't want to promise when as the last time I did I missed my own deadline and was insulted for not meeting it.
I certainly don't want to "incorporate" blogs and message boards (not sure what you mean) but as both Jem and I have said we are looking to improve functionality on both.
It's actually easier for me to manage comments on this blog than on a message board, even when there are a lot of them (as I don't have to delete off topic threads as well).
But we're drifting off topic again.
Have you visited any of the other sites I've mentioned and how do they compare with POV?
I like the rugby/football analogy and may use it in my next post.
Nick Reynolds (editor, BBC Internet blog)
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OK so NOW, it is coming up at the bottom telling me that the problem was the use of a Historical word describing Central Asian nomad invaders. (Which I eventually thought might be the problem and changed to "a swarm of bees") (doh smiley)
Why has it taken something like ten attempts to post BEFORE "There has been a problem" and the offending word has appeared on my computer screen (slaps hand to head smiley)
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"niclaramartin - I think I've told you at least twice what I'm trying to achieve. Im thinking about the POV boards and having a conversation with you in order to help me think."
Nick PLEASE pop over to the thread on the messageboard started by Nippie and read the posting by Faye, message 525 (and take it in the good humour it is meant)
(wink smiley)
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"I like the rugby/football analogy and may use it in my next post."
I want writing credit (wink smiley)
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Is this some kind of parallel universe to the forums ?. Why both ?
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"I certainly don't want to "incorporate" blogs and message boards (not sure what you mean) but as both Jem and I have said we are looking to improve functionality on both."
OK, so from THAT position, give us a wee bit more information on what you are actually thinking, because as an exercise in asking advice, this blog has in your words "moved off topic" of us giving advice, to us trying to defend the messageboards from PERCEIVED closure (simply because the above comment has been well and truly lost in the tomes of scribblings on this page).
All YOU had to do, was come back to us MUCH earlier in this blog, and re-state your and Jem's intention of improved functionality on BOTH. Messageboarders tend to be skittery creatures (with just cause) about people in authority at BBC "tweaking" our boards. As I have said BBC Scotland "tweaked" our boards out of existence. If I opened the floodgates other posters could tell you how BBC have "tweaked" THEIR own favourite boards out of existence/unrecognisable/unwieldy/unusable.
So, when a confirmed blogger comes on and tells us that he is starting a "conversation" about our beloved messageboards and then goes AWOL/won't enter into dialogue/won't allay fears/won't highlight a throw-away comment lost in a forrest of words, then we fear the worst.
Just TALK to us. We don't expect decision YET, but dialogue would be good. Again, I ask WHAT do you LIKE about messageboards, and what do you absolutely not understand/Hate? We could then maybe home in on THOSE areas of greatest concern. Is it the budget? Is it staffing numbers? Is it space on the computer network? Is it the size of traffic? Is it the set-up of the boards? Is it "Off-topic"? (I don't think we can resolve this, as that is what messageboards do) Is it the tone of content? Is it the smileys? Is it not being able to get the Heads of Dept to come and talk on our boards (so YOU not being able to deliver)? Is it.........
Just what do YOU have problems with?
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"I like the rugby/football analogy and may use it in my next post."
Didn't like the "tank analogy" then.........(erm smiley) (thumbs up smiley)
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Nick you don't have to start a new thread, just use Nippies and say something on the lines of "I've just added another blog and are posting a link to the so called blog"
We ain't going to bite, as you can see from that thread of Nippies, there is a lot of humour in it, and some grumpiness too but heck, come over!
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Nick, please don't get shirty with us !
Another excellent post Niclara . You didn't use the word Ghengis did you ? !
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Curmy
It was the "H" word, four letters.
Historically correct, and absolutely NOT intended to be offensive, simply descriptive of a horde (should have just used that word).
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I like the tank analogy as well and might use it.
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OK Nick
I'M GOING TO SHOUT BECAUSE YOU SEEM TO BE "BLIND" (winks smiley)(laugh smiley)
(by the way my daughter is partially sighted, so I'm within the community who CAN politically correctly make such statements ) (winks smiley)
"Have you visited any of the other sites I've mentioned and how do they compare with POV?"
Comments 58, 59 and 61, where WE DID discuss outside sites (itv.com). I'm really hurt that you have forgotten our conversation so soon (wink smiley) I have AT LENGTH described other messageboards I frequent (missing in action in the above postings obviously), giving the reasons WHY their set-up wouldn't work on BBC (too big).
Probably the closest to BBC POV is digital spy, and BOY, if you think that POV is chaotic, you really don't want to put your head above the parapet on that site. Enter the Leon Jackson threads on the X Factor forum and the bile and spleen which is vented against him by some Rhydian fans just has to be seen to be believed. Same on Youtube. There seems to be absolutely NO qualms about posting BIGGGGGGGGGG swear words and extemely graphic descriptions on both these sites.
I don't post to either of those sites, but, DO read them (with my tin helmet on, asbestos gloves and disinfectant to hand)
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Nick
Message 124 (thumbs up smiley)
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Nick
Alongside the usual plea for,
1. Search Facility,
2. Better/more consistent Hosting/modding, 3. Separate "Off-topic" area,
4. Removing the 3 minute wait,
5. Direct in-put from BBC Heads of Dept with messageboarders (the way they do with bloggers) etc,
could we have a link on the individual messageboards which takes us to a "Complaints/Response/Compliment form/email so that we can contact the RELEVANT dept without having to look all through the website to find it.
--------------------------------------
Scrolling through the above posts, and found this comment you made.
"For example, where are the best places for BBC employees to talk to/with licence fee payers online?"
--------------------------------------
From a messageboarders point of view (don't know about bloggers or twitters), I would say that posters to POV messageboards would absolutely LOVE Heads of Depts, Producers of programmes, Journalists etc to come onto our boards and talk to us there. That has been an oft-repeated refrain from posters, that no-one wants to speak to us, and that we are just left talking to each other. I am absolutely certain that a lot of heat in long-running, or angry threads could be resolved IF the relevant BBC employees actually talked directly to us, EARLY on. From a personal point of view could you get David Tennant to come and talk to us (wink smiley)(rose smiley)(gift smiley)
I also think that it is important that BBC puts a section on the boards, not hidden in the bumff, which explains succinctly what Host jobs/responsibilities are, and what Mods jobs/responsibilities are, and if they are employed full time by BBC or voluntarily work in spare time. I think there is still confusion/anger about WHO is pulling off comments/threads. It may assist if when a posting is pulled, that a Host/Mod place a posting saying WHO pulled the posting, and if it was instigated by posters pressing the Complain button, or if BBC pulled it themselves. No need to say on the boards WHY it was pulled. I think some Hosts got grief for decisions made by Mods. (maybe not, but it would be better if made clearer)
Also, if the First poster to a thread has their posting pulled, would it be possible to leave the title of the thread. At present it comes up "No Discussion Title". It could be that the thread WAS relevant, BUT, the posting broke House Rules. What then happens is that the thread could continue within House Rules, but, it makes it difficult to find,as when you scroll through the list of threads, you can't find the thread title - just "No Discussion Title".
Thank you.
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On the point of "No Discussion Title", Nick, THAT often leads to duplicate threads, (YOUR bugbear), because posters don't know the "No Discussion Title" thread is about the topic they want to discuss. (thumbs up smiley)
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How to improve message boards.
Put ALL Help/FAQs etc etc in ONE place, CLEARLY marked - in fact don't even call them FAQs because lots of newbies don't know what that means. Label it clearly as a Help Section and puts instructions for posting, links to complaint avenues, explanations of the jobs of hosts and mods etc etc ALL IN ONE PLACE.
On the Archers board the host got together with some regular posters and they created an enormous FAQ section.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/archers/info/
The Archers' FAQs is (IMO) too extensive - all sorts of extra stuff is included - but it'll give you an idea.
If you do that then a lot of posters will inform themselves, and those that slip through the net can be directed easily to the info by other posters.
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If you'd like to help us improve our commenting system Tom is now asking for your suggestions here.
Nick Reynolds (editor, BBC Internet blog)
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Nick
As a Newbie to messageboarding, it may help you to look at threads on messageboards, as sitting down to read the papers. There will be threads which are VERY intellectually stimulating (a bit like the Times newspaper). There are then the equivalents of the Sun (poorer quality, that you may, or may not enjoy), OK/Hello (gossip), Which Magazine (Informative), PC Plus Magazine (specialist topics), and then you have the Beano and Dandy (lighthearted, which serve no purpose, but to lift your spirits)
Now, maybe YOU (as an Editor) are into reading JUST worthy newspapers like The Times, every day, but, personally I prefer a mixture of intellectual (The Times/The News), everyday (local newspaper/Dr Who), Informative (Which Magazine/Anything David Attenborough), specialist (PC Plus/Sky at Night) AND comic (Dandy/off-topic). I DO draw the line at gossip (OK/Hello and reality shows - apart from X Factor). (wink smiley)
A diet of ONE style of reading material will lead to an insular/restrictive knowledge, whereas a well-rounded catholic reading list is to be encouraged.
That is why it is very WORTHY to try to make BBC POV messageboards intellectually stimulating and "ON-topic", all the time, but, we don't all want to be ALWAYS holding intellectual discussions/talking about our restricted reading material. We may want to talk about something we read in a Hairdressing magazine/ITV, and see if we like that better.
Although messageboards are NOT Chatrooms, they DO encourage a form of chatting. You don't debate with the milkman/bus driver/co-workers, you TALK to and with them. That's the strength of messageboards. You build relationships (wishing Happy Birthdays/Good Mornings/Safe journey to fellow posters).
Blogs ARE the area, which is an alien concept. The author places an article, and readers then dissect/debate/pontificate about those words on the page.
Blogs are blogs, and messageboards are NOT blogs.
I think you have to look at blogs as debating chambers, whilst messageboards are the equivalent of chat shows.
Once you grasp that concept, you MAY stop getting into a lather about "Off-topic" threads. (Remember if there ARE any Brand/Ross incidents on the boards you can exile Brand/poster from the boards, or suspend for 12 weeks Ross/put on moderation for a set time, posters. So, you are still allowed to wield the big stick, but, hopefully, only for real transgressions.
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Can I start a discussion here about a BBC programme?
Rick P
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niclaramartin - while I'm sure the analogy you use is correct, the POV message boards are supposed to be about the BBC, not ITV.
Just as the POV programme does not do features about ITV programmes.
You're confusing different genres of programmes (e.g. Eastenders and Newsnight) with who makes them.
I know people here disagree with me but the large amount of non BBC stuff on the POV boards is a real problem.
POV was not set up to be a general discussion board about all television.
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OK, Nick,
------------------------------------------
"You're confusing different genres of programmes (e.g. Eastenders and Newsnight) with who makes them."
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I'm not confusing the different genres with who makes them. I am pointing out that on messageboards there can be very differing threads............
Intellectual threads, the equivalent of The Times in Newspapers, and Newsnight in programming, simply for the QUALITY of the postings on that type of thread.
Most threads, will fall into the category of everyday chat/postings about middle of the road quality programming, equivalent to The Sun newspaper or Eastenders programme.
Going through to the witty, more chatty, colourful and uplifting postings on threads which are the equivalent of The Dandy or (can't think of a funny comedy programme on BBC) (winks smiley), but you get the jist. These threads are the ones which are most likely to go "off-thread", but are also probably the funniest ones, and the ones equivalent to the first page in a newspaper you rush to read.
A point which means quite a lot to the posters on the BBC messageboards, is that WE PAY the BBC to provide services. We DON'T pay ITV, so they are entitled to develop a board ONLY for ITV programmes/chit chat/jokes/off-topic/news.
We pay a Licence fee to BBC to allow us to watch ALL television channels. If we don't pay BBC, we can't watch ANY television. Therefore, to follow that argument through, IF we pay BBC, alone, so we can even watch TELEVISION, why do BBC feel that they can collect monies (which we may be paying to allow us to watch Hallmark, ITV, SciFi, etc when we MIGHT NOT even watch BBC - and this is happening more and more frequently), and then, insist that we MUST only talk about BBC programming.
As a public service provider, (accessing to ALL television), BBC IS in a different position to other channels, and SHOULD allow sections of it's boards to discuss programmes on the other channels (which we pay BBC to view)
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"I know people here disagree with me but the large amount of non BBC stuff on the POV boards is a real problem."
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Can you tell me what you perceive as the real problem regarding the large amount of non BBC stuff? Is it the LEVEL of traffic, or is it just that you feel it shouldn't be there at all?
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POV was not set up to be a general discussion board about all television."
and
"the POV message boards are supposed to be about the BBC, not ITV.
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You say that POV was not set up to be a general discussion board about all television. As you are now reviewing the boards, this might be the time to acknowledge that BBC is in a favoured position (in receipt of our money), and that there should be no barrier to discussing ALL television on boards paid for by the posters (if it is their wish to discuss other channels)
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Just as the POV programme does not do features about ITV programmes."
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I'm afraid that many posters to POV messageboards would add, that POV programme is not a good reflection on BBC. It does not address issues, simply wheeling out "Heads of.....", who talk Meeja talk but resolve nothing (even when they say they will). Many posters to POV messageboard (some of the most vocal/loyal viewers) won't even watch the POV programme, as they feel it is a complete waste of fifteen minutes of their time.
Link to latest thread on POV programme
http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/mbpointsofview/F1951566?thread=6094725
End of another day. Night Night.
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I'm sorry, this is not a good way to exchange views.
Blogs are for putting over your personal point of view on a subject. Okay for a political journo to strut his stuff, tell us his/her view but a silly, slow and cumbersome means of discussing the merits of, say, a messageboard.
I hope you get your thoughts in order and surprise licence payers by making a right decision.
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Having read much of this I certainly don't want to get near POV. I advice to Nick is to commission an off bbc.co.uk site and let them run a "TV /broadcast chat about anything "message board system,,, even let then POVers start their own (like the R3 message board rebels did.) I certainly don't want my license money paying for POv If the poster here are anything to go by. Get offmy lawn and run your chat elsewhere!.
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This may well have been posted, but i can't bring myself to read through the epic wall o'comments.
You make the point about seperate sites having their own boards. The thing with messageboards, is that they develop their own communities, and these communities sometimes like to talk about things outside of the strict remit of the board topic. On a messageboard, you can get to know the other posters and get to know the hosts.. if, for example, you wanted to talk about an ITV program you'd want to discuss it amongst people you know from the board you post on, not with people from a different site who you have no prior correspondeance with.
I guess in a way, messageboards work a bit like village communities. Going to a different domain e.g. itv.co.uk/forum instead of bbc.co.uk/forum is like stepping into a different village. Things are done slightly differently, people are friends with other people etc. While there's some interpolation between sites.. like a few members of the 6music board may also be members of a different forum and post under the same name, the core of the community will still be built around the 6music forum.
I don't think there's anyway to stop this happening, and i don't think the BBC should be trying to stop it, be it through overzealous modding or this blogging malarky. The best way imo to deal with it is to have an off-topic board and a focused board. The pov board has radio and TV subsections, an extra off-topic subsection would mean all those thread could be placed there instead of being locked down.
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Another thing i've been wondering about.. if blogs take over from the messageboard as a means of feedback, how is it decided when the discussion is no longer relevant. For example, this blog was published in two parts, meaning two different comment threads despite them being on the same subject. Are you going to continue to read and respond to the comments on part one? It makes the discussion very disjointed when there's basically two conversations running parrallel. Surely this just creates the same situation as having multiple threads on the same subject on the messageboards?
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"Having read much of this I certainly don't want to get near POV. I advice to Nick is to commission an off bbc.co.uk site and let them run a "TV /broadcast chat about anything "message board system,,, even let then POVers start their own (like the R3 message board rebels did.) I certainly don't want my license money paying for POv If the poster here are anything to go by. Get offmy lawn and run your chat elsewhere!."
"my lawn" - in case you didn't notice cping500 it's our lawn too. It's a bit "me, me, me" of you isn't it?
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Good point Faye, I agree with you !
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My eyesight is getting pretty poor now and I just cannot read this or any other blog with any comfort.I much prefer message boards.
Can I just chip in with a comment about why the BBc are so sensitive to any critisism of some of their so called ' star ' names ?I've seen many a post removed for only a mild criticism.This is a nation of free speech isn't it.......... but not at the BBC I take it ?
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Morning Nick.
kemikade postings 137 and 138 absolutely spot on.
Nick,
PLEASE read Tom's thread over on bbc.co.uk (VERY good)
I HONESTLY feel from your style of posting, that you are really NOT getting to grips with messageboarding.
Blogging is much easier (and YOU have total control over what you will allow)
Messageboarding IS MEANT to be COMMUNITY driven. WE are meant to talk about what WE find worthy of talking about. (I've read blogs - elsewhere on the internet - which are exceedingly frivolous - but a blog non-the-less).
Can I please address YOUR posting on Tom's thread
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"And when Darielle wrote her blog post about DOGS I did put a link to it in a relevant thread on the POV boards (in the Digital section)."
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PLEASE try to think of messageboarding as a little old lady who goes into her local library to keep warm and meet her friends, WHILST reading through the collection of Catherine Cookson novels, which the library has in stock. She will spend weeks, months, nae years reading her way through her favourite author (in this case think of Television board). One day, a delivery van delivers a book on "C++ computer programming", and places it in the "Technical" section of the library (Digital Board). Now, the C++ book has a free coupon for McDonalds, BUT, the book is placed in the "Technical" section of the library. Will our little old lady find/use her free token to McDonalds, or will she in her ignorance continue reading Catherine Cookson? (back away from the sniggers, I LIKE Catherine Cookson) (wink smiley)
In other words Digital is NOT the section to place anything, which is being discussed on Television. A search facility would allow YOU to see if overlapping Techie/Television topics are being discussed on separate boards. Also a quick glance will show you how FEW poster post to DIGITAL compared to TELEVISION.
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Message 141 Leonard Z
I agree, so many of the recent problems have arisen from criticism of the BBC and their programmes on the board.
Bonekickers was, almost, universally decried as a load of poorly made bunkum. When that criticism surfaced on the messageboard the reaction to it by the BBC was extra-ordinary. Many inoffensive but critical posts and posters were unreasonably punished simply for suggesting the BBC had got it wrong.
The board "House Rules" were re-interpreted to include "disruptive behaviour" which meant any poster was modded or banned at the whim of someone who was unaccountable for that action.
As for "free speech" that only applies if it not "disruptive...in the hosts view!!!
Certainly a re-alignment of practices is in order but this blog is not the answer. We can discuss here only on the subjects deemed appropriate by the Blogger in Chief and there seems no redress if posts are removed.
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If post 143, currently referred to the moderators, is subsequently hidden, I wonder what the point is of this blog.
Absolutely nothing wrong with it, just like RP's posts during the Bonekickers Debacle and the posts by many others at that time - some of who still remain banned or on pre-mod from July.
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Nick asks: "For example, where are the best places for BBC employees to talk to/with licence fee payers online?"
From a licence fee payer's point of view, I'd observe from this blog that this format isn't you talking to me, Nick. I'm talking to you, but I have no idea whether you're even reading my posts as you haven't acknowledged any of them at all (even though I've asked at least one direct question).
Now you might reasonably say to me, 'There are just too many people putting responses here for me to deal with' - in which case I think that rather proves the blog format isn't working for this type of discussion. (When people post responses on my blog, I always reply to each one, but then I don't get the numbers you get!)
Or you might say to me, 'I did respond', in which case I'll apologise and look to wherever you point, but I haven't been able to see a response, for all my frantic scrolling up and down.
It's disconcerting when you make a comment and the person asking for it acts as though you never spoke. So for that reason alone, Nick, I'm deeply unhappy with 'blog discussion' (almost an oxymoron, imo). This very post and the replies below it demonstrate the shortfalls of blogs more than any essay on the subject.
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niclaramartin - I posted the link in a thread in the digital section which was precisely about DOGS.
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riverbank - I can reassure you that I have read all your comments. I read all the comments on all posts on the Internet blog. Some of them are interesting and useful. I will address some of them in a future blog post. As I'm still thinking you will forgive me if I don 't respond to them all now.
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This comment was removed because the moderators found it broke the House Rules.
"riverbank - I can reassure you that I have read all your comments"
- Thanks for the reassurance. But can you see why, for me, the blog system isn't working? I see you reply to other posters and not me, and I don't know what to think (other than blogs don't work for a big general discussion).
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Oh No, Nick, I'm really losing the will to live.
Re-read the section of my posting (about the little old lady in the library)
From that you will see that the little old lady reading from the "Fiction" section of the library is exceedingly unlikely to go over to the "Technical" section of the library, and see the free token to McDonalds.
In other words, posters to Television messageboard are UNLIKELY to visit the often VERY Technical board which is DIGITAL, and so, would NEVER see ANY link you care to place there pointing posters to Darielle's blog on DOGs.
YES, there was a thread about DOGs in DIGITAL (and PROBABLY the right place technically for it). However, AT THE SAME TIME, and by posters who are NOT technically mind, and probably have NEVER ventured over to DIGITAL, there were OTHER threads about DOGs. Are posters (most of whom NEVER go to DIGITAL) not entitled to be informed of a link to a relevant blog. All you had to do, was go to Digital/bbc.co.uk/BBC AND Television and open a thread, with a link to Darielle's blog, and then close ALL the threads for poster commenting, simply leaving the link. HONESTLY, it's not spamming, it's informing ALL posters who may have an interest.
What you did was equivalent to placing a promo for Dr Who, ONLY on BBC Wales, (because that is where it is made), BUT not informing BBC viewers UK wide that Dr Who was about to begin a new series.
If you choose, AFTER Darielle had closed her blog, YOU could have then removed YOUR threads to ALL the boards (as they were no longer of relevance).
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Nick, you take every comment very literally.
My daughter and our friend are both Autistic, and I live with THIS trait daily.
Our friend, who is a Venture Capitalist, has all the gear - Blackberry/Outlook Calendar/watch with alarms etc. BUT, he relies on ME to phone him and tell him to get to the airport to catch a plane to Rome/Tokio/Los Angeles, for the simple reason that although he technically puts all the information in the RIGHT place, and it SHOULD work, he loses things/lets batteries run down. He ONLY gets to where he is meant to be, BECAUSE he TELLS me EVERY time he is meant to be somewhere. And, you know how I keep his Calendar straight. A bit of paper stuck to the fridge with a magnet. (laugh smiley)
So, although he does the RIGHT thing, that on it's own doesn't work. He has to involve me.
Much as in the same way as you technically putting links in the RIGHT place, BUT, to get the response you are ACTUALLY looking for (lots of differing opinions), YOU have to INVOLVE the fridge magnet people of the computer world (Television Board)
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Oh, and my hubby is a Senior Lecturer in Computing, and you know how he reminds himself of things. He writes notes to himself on his hand. This works, perfectly, UNLESS he goes to the loo. (rolls eyes smiley)
Sorry to go "off-topic" Nick.
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Reading the original blog thing at the top, I do despair of people who use the term "Web 2.0". It's just the internet and the term is one that's come out of the latest edition of The Big Book of Marketing.
Why can't people just speak English?
I use Digital Spy a lot more as it's tells you when there are new posts to your subscribed threads and it doesn't go to bed halfway through the evening.
The BBC should just leave the board open and let people flag posts/threads to be checked later on. It's not as if anarchy's going to break out.
You'd be better tying the blogs in with the board such that new blogs are linked from there when they're created. Otherwise they're just out there drifting in... (cue another term from The Big Book of Marketing) cyberspace.
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Nick, this whole blog, PLUS the previous one could have been condensed to......
Hi Folks Nick Reynolds here. I've been handed the poisoned chalise of improving blogs/messageboards. BUT, I am a blogger, and know very little about messageboarding, could you give me a wee lesson on WHAT makes messageboarding DIFFERENT from blogging? Thank You (thumbs up smiley) And then, if you could, would you let me know what YOU would like to see in the way of improvements.
------------------------------------
Poster One - Hi Nick, hope you're having a nice day. Sorry about the poisoned chalise mate. Still someone has to do it. (good luck smiley). OK, blogging (from a non-blogger APPEARS to be about CONTROL by the Author of the blog, keeping the thread, as tightly as the Author wants "On-Topic". Better talking to bloggers about blogs though. Messageboarding is a much friendlier environment, where people exchange pleasantries/smileys AND discuss (not debate) topics of interest to them, ranging from "Jeremy Paxman on Newsnight", to "offended by sexual content on Eastenders", to "Why do BBC keep moving good dramas", to "X Factor is a con" to "Who's the sexiest guy on telly at the moment?" (which will invariably move onto "Isn't Brad Pitt looking older now". Hope that's been a help. I'll give it a bit more thought and get back if I think of anything else. (thumbs up smiley)
Poster 2 - Hi Nick, hope you're well today. I think messageboards would be better for having a Search Facility, a Quote button, being able to scroll through the thread WHILST composing your comment, being able to BOLD comments. Can't think of anything at the moment, but I'll come back if I think of anything. Any more information, so we can home in on what you REALLY need. (thumbs up smiley)
Poster 3 - Morning Nick, hope you slept well. Don't worry, WE'LL get your report cobbled together for you mate. Echo the above comments, and I would like a link to blogs of relevance, take away the three minute wait, better policing of boards by Hosts/Mods, Leaving the thread title visible when the first posting is hidden. I'll give it a bit more thought and get back. (smiley smiley)
Poster 4 - Less Meeja jargon, ...............................
Well, you begin to get it Nick. (Hopefully)
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Should have included in the above posting.
Poster 1 - You're not thinking of closing down the message boards are you?
Nick- No mate, never entered my mind. Don't you worry, they're in safe hands with me. Just looking for ways to improve the boards for you wonderful posters.
(laugh smiley)
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You know Nick, a good comedy series could be written around messageboarding , well Daily Mail seem to think so (any comedy writers out there, it's MY idea).
Don't think the same could be said about blogging. (shudders smiley)
Off to eat my St. Andrew's Day lunch. Haggis, Tatties and Neeps (yum yum smiley)
"Off Topic"
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He's ignoring us today Niclara !
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You ask why some people use the POV boards to comment on non-BBC programmes. I agree that it may be inappropriate for BBC boards to host mega-threads about popular programmes which are not on the BBC (such as Big Brother, The X-Factor and I'm A Celebrity - which can cause a glut of multiple posts). But the same is true of certain popular BBC shows which can overwhelm the POV board and could be given their own specific boards - such as Doctor Who.
Personally, I have two main reasons for posting about non-BBC shows on the POV board. The first is that POV users tend to be passionate about TV and I like to "flag up" quality shows - on any channel.
The second reason is a case of "this is what the BBC should be doing". So when ITV3 show a repeat of the excellent 'Wall Of Silence', for example, I like to flag it up for other viewers and to say that this is exactly the kind of drama that the BBC so rarely produces nowadays. It would be absolutely pointless to say this on an ITV board.
It's the same for the recent C4 documentary series 'Catastrophes'. I would point this out as a science documentary which is as good as 'Horizon' used to be. I would start a thread praising this programme and saying that I wish Horizon still aimed this high. I would be disappointed if such a thread were to be deleted.
The BBC does not exist in a bubble and it is perfectly legitimate to compare it to its competitors.
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Nick, someone's following me around here and the boards pressing the complain button (3 today), my posts are no different from any other day. If my posts are subsequently moderated, I'll know things are just as bad as ever, despite the regime change.
Essexbetty's post from 11.39pm last night is still awaiting moderation as is Rick Peters one above mine here - I noticed there was a common theme to them - again, well within house rules - at least the official published ones.
Is it a poster who is trigger happy or maybe someone can't take a joke, criticism, or maybe something else?
Let's hope this post stays, though the odds aren't good based on today's actions.
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Correction - message 159 should have read:
"Essexbetty's post from 11.39pm FRIDAY night is still awaiting moderation"
Not last night.
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Curmy,
"He's ignoring us today Niclara !"
Probably just as well. When he looks in tomorrow, he'll probably cut a swathe through the postings.
Faye,
I think everyone is REALLY trying very hard to help Nick. As I say, this blog and the other could have been much much shorter, IF, Nick had adopted messageboard attitude instead of blogging perceived stand-offishness, AND, CLEARLY answered "Are you closing the messageboards".
THEN, he genuinely would have had GREAT (and useful) input for his project tomorrow.
What I think Nick has to understand, is that with blogging, the original Author's blog is ALL-IMPORTANT, and constantly referred to, to focus the mind on responding DIRECTLY to THAT original post.
Messageboarding, is ABSOLUTELY NOT like that. A poster will open a thread with a title, and post their opinion. The next poster will come along, click on that thread, read the first posting AND THEN, answer it, but MOVE the discussion on a wee bit, by possibly talking about something else of relevance. The third poster will read the first and second postings, and respond to one or both, perhaps moving the discussion a wee bit further from the original posting. Of course, if the thread gets quite long, lots of posters won't read ALL, the postings, but, may just read the last couple and respond to them. Effectively you could have a thread starting "POV programme 30/11/08", and by message 43 it is in fact discussing font size/Jeremy's tie/something which appears in the screens behind Jeremy. In other words messageboarding is a form of CHINESE WHISPERS.
It would be interesting to know how many messageboarders read ALL of Nick's Original posting on THIS blog, (or the other one), and after reading it once, how many actually returned to read it again to focus their thoughts on EXACTLY what Nick was saying, before posting later in the thread. I would think it would be a small percentage, as it is an alien concept to us.
Just as well I was a former shorthand typist with speeds of 120 wpm shorthand and 100 wpm typing (doh smiley)
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Message 161 (doh smiley)
I didn't mean to put "by message 43 it is in fact......." (hubby came in as I was typing and said "I've backed up XXXXXX on CD No. 43")
I meant to say "by message 4".
Only when I read it back, I spotted that.
Good God, by message 43, we'd be discussing the possible Christmas No. 1 song.
(laugh smiley)
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Quoted from Post 159
"Essexbetty's post from 11.39pm Friday night is still awaiting moderation as is Rick Peters one above mine here - I noticed there was a common theme to them - again, well within house rules - at least the official published ones.
Is it a poster who is trigger happy or maybe someone can't take a joke, criticism, or maybe something else?
Let's hope this post stays, though the odds aren't good based on today's actions."
I would like the same answer. My posts were relevant and within the rules...if there are certain things we cannot address declare them and we can decide whether to forget just avoid this blog altogether.
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Nick
I've actually spent some time going around bits of the POV boards that I don't frequent, and I have to say, there is a very obvious improvement which can be made easily.
The BBC board
http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/mbpointsofview/F1951574
seems a completely useless area.
The threads there could quite easily be assimilated into the POV Television/radio/bbc.co.uk etc boards. With perhaps a "The BBC" thread on the relevant board for postings about (The BBC - radio), (The BBC - Television) etc.
That would then free up the board used for "The BBC" to become the "Off-topic" board (Points Askew), or for "Other Television Channels".
There don't seem to be ENOUGH threads which are actually unable to be incorporated within the other boards to warrant THAT board as it stands.
Hope that's of help. Of course, maybe some other posters like The BBC board.
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I vowed not to come back here. But the thread on the POV messageboard seemed to suggest this one was getting juicy, so I thought I'd have another look.
Nick you seem to keep asking us the same questions, and when we give you replies you seem to ignore that, and just re word your questions again.
Let me tell you what I have gleened from these blogs.
What do we like about messageboards over blogs;
better laid out, easier to find a particular point in a thread, quoting, less scrolling, links are easier, we can start a conversation and not have to wait for the BBC to tell us what to talk about, in "my discussions" we can monitor which threads that we are involved in have had responses and go straight to our last post, COMMUNITY, smileys, navigation.
Downsides to messageboards;
multiple links, off topic (some would say this was not a problem), no search facility (although this is not available with blogs as far as I can tell).
Should the BBC be offering a messageboard that discusses non BBC programmes;
Well the answer to that is actually another question. Does the BBC want to learn what the public like and dislike about TV? As I and others have pointed out, if Channel 4 or ITV or any other channel make a programme that messageboarders love, then surely the BBC would be interested to know this. If the BBC are actually going to read and take note of what is written on the messageboards then discussion of ALL programmes would surely be a goldmine of information for broadcasters.
How do the BBC messageboards compare to other such boards;
They are BBC, (some) people trust this brand, and therefore trust that the sites will be well run, monitored, easy to use, and secure (wink smiley). They were (until they became hostless) more organised than other sites. Mention has been made of the sheer rambling size of some other boards, with control of multiple threads the BBC WAS NOT like this. Moderation, the language on some of the other boards is enough to make a sailor blush. The (vain) hope that when posting on the BBC boards that someone from the BBC will read the posting and take note, rather than just posting to other posters.
How can the boards be improved;
Search facility, a host to nudge us back on topic, more transparent and consistent moderation, converging or closing down of multiple threads.
Would Messageboarders prefer to use a blog;
NO.
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Hi Nick, look forward to your replies to the previous posts, but ask in addition:
What input, if any, has the POV Production Team in influencing the future of the POV Boards? Will we be party to their opinions?
Surely as part of this process, we should know why they have recently marginalised the board, despite it's obvious connections to the show.
Is the revamp a technical issue or a PR one? It's not a cost one, if POV is the only board under consideration for change - there's much more frivolous content online than that.
Is the purpose of this revamp for the BBC to have more control over the flow of debate on the POV boards?
They are fair questions, aren't they? An organisation and open and transparent as the BBC should have no trouble answering them.
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Afternoon Nick, hope you had a pleasant weekend.
I came across this link, which might be interesting, as it IS by an Internet Consultant who has worked for BBC.
http://www.currybet.net/cbet_blog/2005/06/bbccouk_message_board_area_at.php
As you see, he seems to think that Points Askew was a "pun-tastic" idea.
I was quite teary-eyed when I opened the link to the now defunct "Points Askew", and read the Goodbyes from the posters, especially the ones from Malc, a former poster who has since died. (rose smiley)
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Liked his use of "on-topic police force", regarding posters who would probably have been more at home being bloggers.
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Faye Tsar - I'm not quite sure what you mean by a "PR" remake. But as Tom has said we are hoping to improve functionality in the BBC's blogs, message boards and social media across the board.
Going to see Points of View (the TV show) is on my list of things to do. If they are happy for me to report our conversation I will (and if they're not, I won't).
As I've said before the POV boards are the only board I have direct responsibility for.
The purpose of this conversation is to help me think about the POV boards, not to "control" the debate on them. But I am asking the questions "What are the POV boards supposed to do? Are they are doing it well?"
Nick Reynolds (editor, BBC Internet blog).
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Nick
I am going to post a quotation from THOSE final threads on Askew, by a poster, who, most of us who know him, can attest to the fact, he is not "soft and fluffy", but, obviously VERY eloquent about how HE felt about Askew.
"Home is where the heart is, and the BBC doesn't realise that over the months and years, people have invested more than man hours posting there, its the ambience, the setting, the getting to know you. Askew is like the sheddy pub we go to.. with the frayed carpets, the rickety tables and the rude landlord.. we invested emotionally in it, we gave that indefinable part of ourselves, most days.. we made our mark on it, it was US.
The sum of Askew is greater than its parts, and its a shame that for those who profess to be the 'guardians' of all they thought it should stand for, such as no defamation, slander and pc, never understood that it was more than just about having to justify itself through hit counts, or other tangible quantifiable factors. Underneath it all, it wasn't rocker science.. it merely mirrored life, warts and all.
I come into contact a lot, with people who talk about.. 'passion', and the need to engineer it, or to build it in to something. You can't do that.. Askew for all its vices, for all its supposed shortcomings was our pub"
"rocker science" (doh smiley)
THAT is what messageboards mean to us. We ARE a community. We don't give out information such as name/address/emails/phone numbers, BUT, we know and care about the other posters (blogging is SO cold in comparison). We DO say if we are ill/celebrating/grieving, and, you know what Nick, it HELPS when the other posters post back supporting you. YOU may see that as "Off-topic", BUT, it is the heart of messageboarding. Other posters may be cyberpals/cyberfamily, BUT, when something like the death of Doug or cybermalcolm happens, WE grieve (real tears), for real people who we happen NEVER to have met, but can call FRIEND.
Please treat our messageboards tenderly.
Niclara
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Sorry, I'm a wee bit emotional at the moment, as Wednesday WOULD HAVE BEEN the 30th Birthday of our son Martin (part of my poster name). I walked out the front door, there is frost everywhere, and not a leaf or flower anywhere to be seen, EXCEPT for ONE rose, which is in full bloom. It is flowering on a cutting we took from the rosebush planted at our son's grave, and it is such a wonderful sight. Words can't convey what THAT rose means to me.
(rose smiley)
Sorry to be off-topic, Nick. I'll try to come back with more constructive postings for you.
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Nick the Points of View boards are in the main supposed to reflect peoples' opinions of TV and radio programmes .
They do it fairly well, apart from not being managed very well !
I'm so sorry Niclara (HUGS)
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Much appreciated Curmy (hugs)
Took myself off to "Television" to cheer my spirits a bit.
Nick
I've just read Seetha's blog
http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/bbcinternet/2008/12/it_is_a_few_months.html
and must admit that (bbc.co.uk) seems to appear everywhere in BBC (of course), but I didn't know what she was speaking about - bbc.co.uk is OUR board (wink smiley)
Are you planning on re-naming the boards?
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"Are you planning on re-naming the boards?"
Now come on Niclara, Nick's already told us "I don't yet have a plan". ;)
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(laugh smiley) ;)
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Oh I am so sorry Niclara (rose and a hug)
I am finding this difficult to read but I am getting the gist just.
Nippie, brilliant!
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niclaramartin - I do intend to change the name of the bbc.co.uk board to "BBC Online", if that's what you mean.
Nick Reynolds (editor, BBC Internet blog)
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Nick
Thanks for that.
Hope these blogs have been of some help, but, still think you would have got more (and probably better) input over on the messageboards.
Still, water under the bridge now. (rose smiley)
Angelic
Thank you so much for the rose and hug, so much appreciated. (hug smiley)
We're snowed in here, honestly, and still snowing with laden skies. Hope you, Bidie-in and Nippie are clear. But, must admit it is absolutely beautiful, and I've been out taking pictures.
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"But I am asking the questions "What are the POV boards supposed to do? Are they are doing it well?""
Obviously that's an editorial decision Nick and I hope our points are assisting you with whatever you decide to do (one way or another).
I certainly agree with a couple of posters who have said that input/threads from production teams of shows would be good. It would allow them to engage more with the viewing public.
I see that the Woman's Hour messageboard is to be closed in a couple of weeks time. I've had a quick look over there and it does seem to be a messageboard where just about any subject matter can be discussed (unlike the POV boards, which, in the main, do actually stick to the subject matter ie television, radio etc.)
Presumably, if those Woman's Hour posters want to discuss the actual Woman's Hour radio programme, then they can come to the Radio messageboard to discuss it. Same goes for The Archers messageboards and probably many more.
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Nippie, I think there's an independant WH board already set by by some ex posters.
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I see a lot of posts endorsing the community aspect of the POV boards but nothing to explain why it should be the BBC's job to provide a platform for that community. While I enjoy nattering about random claptrap as much as the next man (or woman) it's not obvious to me why my neighbours' TV licence fee should be spent on moderators, developers and infrastructure to support my habit.
So: why should the BBC be spending the licence fee on message boards? (I acknowledge that same question could and should be asked of the other online services, but they are presumably not within the scope of this conversation).
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Why not? I don't want my licence fee spent on strictly come dancing or on Johnathon Ross but it is. I'm quite sure they cost more than the system and the developers who put together and keep the system running with nothing much more the sticky tape holding the hardware together.
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Yoohoo Nick!
Any updates or comments? We seem to have ground to a halt at the moment with this conversation.
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Yes Nick, where are you please ? we'd like an update !
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Well I was going to write another post today but I didn't have time so it will have to wait until next week.
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Nick
Your use of the English language is brusque/curt to the point of being quite offensive.
YOU asked US for input to HELP YOU, and yet, YOU have failed to respond in a timely fashion to two blogs. On the first blog you didn't meet your OWN timescale, and on this one, AFTER NINE days of posting (do blogs usually run for weeks), AND 186 postings, (the VAST majority of which have been from posters trying to give as much information about, and flavour of OUR messageboards, YOU put....
"Well I was going to write another post today but I didn't have time so it will have to wait until next week."
Not nice.
I would have to say that if a poster came onto the messageboards, and posted threads asking for help, AND, then, either ignored/did not respond to posters, AND posted using the tone YOU do, then one of two things would happen. They would be ignored and shunned for any future threads they may post, OR, they would be reported to the moderators as WUMs.
(shakes head smiley)
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niclaramartin - since the last time I gave myself a deadline I missed it through no fault of my own (and was insulted for it) you'll have to forgive me for being more cautious this time.
I don't want to promise something that I may not be able to keep to (particularly bearing in mind the state of my diary, my brain and my home).
I'm afraid you will have to be patient.
Nick Reynolds (editor, BBC Internet blog)
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Morning Nick (just)
I'm afraid that YOU have clearly shown us the failings of blogs.
Firstly, YOU, authored the first blog, and, it has taken concerted effort to get ANY feedback from you. You sidestep almost every question we ask you, and when you do post, you do it in such shorthand postings that they come over very curt.
OK, so you don't want to commit decisions to paper yet, but all you had to do was....
pop in occasionally, and say "Sorry folks, still mulling things over, please be patient" (no need for a smiley to soften THAT sentence), or, "I'm finding XXXXX VERY helpful, could I ask a wee bit more on that topic". We would have backed off. BUT, the situation is that, with THIS blog, at least, what has happened is that you posted and ran. You have stirred up a lot of confusion/anger/worry (perhaps needlessly, or perhaps because you know the bigger picture). We know NOTHING more at the end of this blog, than we did at the beginning. This is an exceptionally one sided "conversation", where ONE party scoops up comments, BUT, does not feel they have to give any feedback, AS THE CONVERSATION TAKES PLACE.
I'm afraid that this "conversation" has shown how little input an author has to have. You have now moved on to your next blog, but haven't tidied up THIS one. Can you picture if you insist on blogs, and you get three/four/five blogs of this length one after the other. How would you manage to control/read/keep up to date with them all?
I have to say, if posters to POV Television feel that they are being ignored by BBC, and almost invited to chat amongst ourselves, then THESE two blogs, ACTUALLY show, how little BBC (and it's employees) have to interact.
We have asked you on more than one occasion not to be so prickly, and yet you still came back with
"Well I was going to write another post today but I didn't have time so it will have to wait until next week."
(doh smiley)
I fear you may be talking to yourself in any forthcoming blogs.
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Your message 187
I'm afraid that the problem lies at your own door.
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YOU said "Watch for a new post from me on Friday." (21st Nov)
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THEN on Friday 21st Nov, you put
"While I was planning to write a follow up post today about the POV message boards, I have to publish another one about Strictly message boards so I haven't started writing the POV one yet.
So the POV one won't be published today. I promise to put it up on Monday."
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ON MONDAY 24th NOVEMBER, you put
At 10:20am on 25 Nov 2008, Nick_iPlayer_Host wrote:
My next post is being put in the system now by Dave and will be published later today. "
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ON TUESDAY 25th NOVEMBER you put
"At 7:19pm on 25 Nov 2008, NickReynolds wrote:
Actually Alec Mac rather than lounging around I have been spending the past four hours plugging and unplugging cables in a so far vain attempt to discover why all my internet connections do not work.
I am writing this from my local library.
The blog post still needs to be finished off "
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I was half expecting "our dog ate my homework" to be the next reason.
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ON WEDNESDAY 26th NOVEMBER you say
"At 4:23pm on 26 Nov 2008, Nick_iPlayer_Host wrote:
My follow up post is published."
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MESSAGE 172 of the first blog
"I will talk about what I see as the advantages of blogs but not in the post I will publish today."
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Re-read THIS blog, and tell me where you tell US the ADVANTAGES of blogs.
You tell us what you will do to IMPROVE blogs, but NOT, what you perceive as the ADVANTAGES of blogs.
I'm afraid the state of your diary or home is not actually any reason NOT to engage with posters. If I missed deadlines/didn't communicate well with clients, then I would be in deep doo-doo.
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niclaramartin - If you don't believe me when I explained why my previous post was late then there's not a lot I can do about that.
I want to write blog posts of a reasonably high quality and that means I need:
1. time to think and write
2. a fully functioning broadband connection
Neither of which I have had much of recently. It's difficult (not to say impossible) to engage with posters if your internet connection is not working.
I did not promise that in this post I would talk about the advantages of blogs. I may do in the next post I write. I may not. There's a lot to think about and write about.
And I think I will be writing more than one follow up post.
And I have given some feedback to some of your comments. With other comments I'm thinking about them before I comment or post, not simply ignoring them.
In any conversation people surely have the right to respond as and when they choose.
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Nick
I would say, that, as you have asked us what WE LIKE about messageboards, and REPEATEDLY asked us how you could improve blogs (so that we WILL use them????), you could very easily have tried to give us more information about HOW blogs work, WHAT you perceive as the best aspects of them, and WHY you think we would like them? You have scattered little bits throughout nearly 400 postings, without actually coming right out with a definitive posting giving us the plusses of blogs.
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MESSAGE 46 First blog
"I'd be interested to know more about why you don't like the blogs format, why you find them hard to navigate and why you prefer the message board.
The only difference between a blog and a message board is that on a blog only the blog owner(s)can start a conversation, while on the POV boards any registered user can."
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MESSAGE 90 First blog
"Why do you dread a blog run by the Host?
Most blogs in general (and some BBC ones) are run by one person."
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THE ABOVE TWO COMMENTS PROBABLY SPELL OUT QUITE SUCCINCTLY WHY WE DON'T LIKE BLOGS, but still........
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MESSAGE 143 First blog - (sounding a bit desperate)
"So I don't think I've promised you a blog.
Would you like one? Would you prefer it?"
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MESSAGE 168 First blog
"How could a blog be turned into more of a dialogue?"
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Chosun MESSAGE 169 first blog
"Adding to niclaramartin's question above, can you please let us know why you like blogging - or rather prefer blogging to messageboards?"
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MESSAGE 17 THIS BLOG
"Chosun - if I put an open thread/post on the BBC Internet blog, would you use it? Would others?"
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MESSAGE 25 THIS BLOG
"And to be clear, would an "open" post on a blog where you could raise any subject you liked in a comment, be something you would use?"
Same message
Ugelicweeyin
"Nor am I ignoring questions. I think I've been very clear in what I've said."
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(That would be that YOU like blogs.)
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MESSAGE 82 THIS blog
"Whisky - .......
As for not answering direct questions, I've already said that I don't have a plan yet,"
and
"And I intend to write more blog posts exploring the arguments and asking you to join in."
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We're contributing lots, but........
Not sure where YOU are joining in, though.
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MESSAGE 114 THIS blog
"It's actually easier for me to manage comments on this blog than on a message board, even when there are a lot of them (as I don't have to delete off topic threads as well)."
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All that AFTER, all bar less than a handful of posters, made it very clear that they didn't want anything to do with blogs. Why are you continually asking us to IMPROVE/make blogs more appealing to us?
MESSAGE 190 THIS blog
"I did not promise that in this post I would talk about the advantages of blogs. I may do in the next post I write. I may not."
-------------------------------
Just so that we are clear "I MAY NOT", means that you could keep us hanging on for blog after blog after blog BEFORE YOU decide to tell us what YOU LIKE about blogs (doh smiley)
May I just point out the folly of this? If you had (at a reasonably early stage in this process) actually taken time out to point out the PLUSSES of blogging, you MAY have converted/opened the eyes of messageboarders. BUT, you have chosen to pose questions, without answering too many of our very really concerns.
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"In any conversation people surely have the right to respond as and when they choose. "
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QUITE RIGHT NICK, AND THAT WORKS BOTH WAYS. I FEAR YOU WILL HAVE AN UPHILL STRUGGLE TRYING TO GET MESSAGEBOARDERS TO RESPOND TO ANY FUTURE BLOGS YOU CHOOSE TO PUT UP, FOR THE SIMPLE REASON, THAT WE FEEL THAT YOU HAVE NOT MET US ANYWHERE NEAR HALF-WAY WITH THIS "CONVERSATION"
I know that I am thinking it is crazy to continue this one-way dialogue, (on YOUR blog, and not OUR messageboard), where WE post empassioned defenses of OUR messageboards, and YOU keep PROMISING, YOUR thoughts - (what like Chairman Mao)?
(locking door behind me smiley)
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How many times to we need to say that we don't like or want blogs??
H
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Hi Nick, I'm interested in your thoughts about off-topic threads.
A couple of weeks ago this thread about Bonekickers was closed for being 'off-topic':
http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/mbpointsofview/F1951566?thread=5614222
And I noticed the thread's (below) opening post was referred to hosts by moderators (after a few days) and subsequently 'passed', presumably by you:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/mbpointsofview/F1951566?thread=6095929
I'm not going to do a 'Ronaldo' and wave an imaginary yellow card at it, but the Bonekickers thread was about the programme, a BBC one in fact, it is certainly no more off topic than the other.
It's enough to make you scratch your head isn't it? Are threads being allowed to go off topic to illustrate the point to us in a later blog, or are you currently less dogmatic about the subject?
If you think threads are only meant to be about the BBC, do you realise you are disagreeing with the previous hosts who were more flexible.
I think there's room for a few slightly off topic threads (I have a suggestion), otherwise what a regimented, clinical place POV would be.
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This comment was removed because the moderators found it broke the House Rules.
Do you think this has gone well then, Nick?
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Well it's not finished yet. But it's going well so far. I'm learning something.
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Hi Nick
Just popped back to ask for a definitive answer from yourself re, whether you are now (putting it very bluntly so that there is no room for misunderstanding) BOSS of POV messageboards, or "just" one of the Hosts there.
From your latest blog you are saying
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"Just to be clear.
I am editor of the Internet blog and am hosting three areas of the POV message boards ("The BBC", "Digital" and "bbc.co.uk"). I am not hosting the Television part of the POV boards.
I am not the editor of all message boards and all blogs."
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BUT....... at the top of THIS blog you say......
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"Some of you have asked what exactly I'm doing. As I explained before I'm now in charge of the POV boards. So I'm thinking about them (and doing some hosting as well)."
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Which followed on from your FIRST blog regarding the Messageboards where you state that you and Tom had taken over some of the responsibilities Jem used to have.
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"Which means that some of the things he used to have responsibility for have fallen to Tom Van Aardt (Communities Editor, FM&T) and to me.
One of these is the Points of View message board."
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SO, are you in CHARGE of the POV boards? Or, are you Editor of blogs, who just does some Hosting on bbc.co.uk/Digital/The BBC?
In other words, are you the BOSS (the man at the top), who is looking at, and deciding on changes to the messageboards? Or, are you "simply" a Host on (now you say 3) messageboards, who wants to tighten up/improve aspects of YOUR boards.
And, following on from that, do you have ANY power over TELEVISION/RADIO messageboards at all?
I asked Rowan on the messageboards, BUT, I'm still not clear the strength of your power.
Thank you.
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I must admit to be totally lost. I hope there is an erudite answer to the previous post to clear up so much misunderstanding.
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"198. At 8:02pm on 18 Dec 2008, Ri?k P?t?rs (U69) wrote:
I must admit to be totally lost. I hope there is an erudite answer to the previous post to clear up so much misunderstanding."
Is there going to be a funeral for this blog?
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Thank you.. http://www.gelsesli.com/ sesli sohbet
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