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Video Card

Video Card

While waiting for a co-worker of mine to get off the phone, I saw a video card box on his desk. While reading the back of the box, I noticed a typo and took this screenshot with my iPhone.
I apologize for the quality. My iPhone doesn’t take the best pictures.

Right before posting this I realized this video card description box actually had TWO typos! Can you spot them?

Spot that typo!

Posted by brandon_kim on April 17, 2011 2 Comments
Education Reform

Education Reform

Look, I understand you need to fight for education, but come on!

ACES 2011

ACES 2011

Last year we attended the annual American Copy Editors Society (ACES) conference in Philadelphia as mere spectators.  This year we were invited to ACES 2011 in Phoenix as presenters.  The event was held at the Arizona State University – Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication. Our session was called “Crowdsourcing Errors.

With a disclaimer at the onset, giving us license to have typos on our slides (we’re engineers by training not editors), we kicked off to a group of about 30 people comprised of newspaper copy editors, freelance editors and students.  And yes, a couple of folks among this clever bunch playfully pointed out two typos in our presentation.

After breaking the ice with an Andy Rooney clip on finding mistakes in books, we began discussing the site’s origins, current state and overall product offering.  We explain how it was designed and developed by four friends working remotely who were looking for a side venture on top of their day jobs.

The core of our session is where we highlight the keys to crowdsourcing errors: Our belief is that you must first create a conduit to the crowd.  Then bring awareness to your cause.  Finally, you need to incentivize or reward the crowd for being the supplier of information.  We explain how these keys fit into designing, developing and promoting a website aimed at people who have a knack for finding errors in print and want to make it known.

The end result is the Typoze model:

  • Users report typos
  • Users validate each other’s submissions
  • Publishers incorporate findings into subsequent additions
  • Users’ findings become immortalized in books
  • Quality of books continuously improves

Lastly, we dive into some graphs and trend analysis and talk about our aspirations to expand both the Typoze model and the definition of a “user.”  The hope is that Typoze.com will become a central clearinghouse for errors in books and a platform for the interaction and collaboration of readers, authors and publishers.

If you have a few moments to spare (approximately 90 mins), please view some or all of the 10 minute video segments of our presentation posted on YouTube.   Click here – http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=526B41F7D5CED113

 

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