
I spent the 15th and 16th of this month over at BBC Northern Ireland working with some great young people making animations for a film. To find out about the project, read about it over here.


I spent the 15th and 16th of this month over at BBC Northern Ireland working with some great young people making animations for a film. To find out about the project, read about it over here.

This afternoon I signed up (only) to have a sniff around Yuwie, a new social networking website which claims to pay people who use its service, by giving users a cut of the advertising revenue depending on how many times their ’stuff’ gets looked at.
I’m an avid user of facebook to keep in touch and share stuff with friends and family. Prior to facebook I had a playaround with myspace but prefered Facebook for its ease of use and third party product integration. Then, of course, there is bebo, which, like myspace, is very popular in schools. So with people already in ‘facebook’, ‘myspace’ and ‘bebo’ …. why would they then join Yuwie and encourage all their friends and family to abandon the social site they already belong to and join them at Yuwie? Money.
But….I think Yuwie is too late to the table when it comes to the social networking sites. The site seems to be
swamped with people who are intent on making money from it, piling in as much content as they can to get ‘views’. Now when (for example) I upload images and video’s to facebook, I’ll upload the ones I consider ‘the best ones’, knowing my friends and family will not want to wade through massive photo albums……. In Yuwie users seem to be uploading as much as possible, so along come the massive albums and very very short video clips, therefore encouraging lots and lots of views on their stuff. How can that be good? As a user I’ll be wading though tons of images friends have uploaded, wasting time looking at the blury ones and the ones with peoples heads missing knowing that the person the image belongs to is being paid for me to look at their quite frankly shoddy images….. because the more ‘hits’ they get on their stuff, the more they get paid.
Pages of content take quite some time to load, which can mean one of two things:
To be honest, I’m not convinced by it, but go and have a look yourself. I think two things:
UPDATE: Friday 22 March
Today I deleted the test Yuwie account I had set up to play with. These are the reasons:
After sniffing about looking at ‘upline’ I see he is obsessed with getting as many people into Yuwie as possible, no matter if he knows them or not purely to increase his income. He shares his Yuwie finance figures in a blog post and is praised by other Yuwie members for his successes ($12 total in January, $7 total in December) ?????? Is it really worth all the effort?
I’m appauled with my brief experience with Yuwie. My experience with it was a place where people are simply there to make money, rather than ’social network’ for social reasons. What I can’t believe is just how little money these people are making for sending out messages and encouraging more and more complete strangers to join their networks. How could this model ever be successful?
I’ve been up and down the train line to Norwich this past three months. Last Friday I attended the launch of a project my company (Cleveratom Ltd) have been working hard on.

After seeing the news item on tv, reading the documentation and then watching the video I’ve signed the petition to save Chetwood Primary School from closure.
I’m still amazed we’re closing schools that are providing a good sound education for young people. The factor here is number on roll at Chetwood is ultimately not ‘big enough’ and there are other schools locally that can increase their roll through the impact of Chetwood’s closure. Chetwood is almost on par with schools nationally, and is apparently doing very well with Maths so why close it? Some ’smaller’ schools share Headteachers to reduce costs….. others close un-needed teaching spaces and reduce teaching and support staff.
Chetwood is clearly fighting to stay open (watch the video) and consider signing the petition to support a well resourced, community centred good performing school to stay open.