This post rounds up information and links on law MOOCs and MOOCery – thanks to @richards1000 for his help. It’s seems it’s still pretty early days, but we’ll keep this page updated (see below) with any further information we find – leave a comment or tweet @annindk if you can help, and in particular if [...]
Haven’t done a plain links post for ages. I’m trying to get away from lists, but perhaps a few annotated links can be a good way of tracking current interests. Or a nice Sunday displacement activity. Events…many are still completely unamplified or curated, but for this seminar on the power of social media to support [...]

It’s law conference season! I’m digital curator for #bileta13, so it merits a separate post. Here are the basics: website - programme (5 page PDF) available from conference proceedings page, together with yay! 44 pages of abstracts (PDF warning) and nine other docs Twitter - @bileta | #bileta13 (not on site) – see the searchable archive | network and statistics pre-conference buzz – [...]
The snow may still be falling on both sides of the North Sea but Easter is approaching, which means it’s law conference season. Following the Society of Legal Scholars 2012 conference I took a first look at the law teacher Twitter tribe and drew attention to some dirty laundry! In 2012 there was an average of 400 [...]
More updates: 21 Mar: #longform on WordPress.com, highlighting suitable themes, followed up with some longposts…13 Mar: Danish journalist Line Holm Nielsen won a prize for championing #longform, although paraphrasing one tweeter “woman publishes book online, what’s the big deal?” See also the long (obs) article on designing for longform…2 Feb: Oliver Burkeman on longform – “we [...]
Update, 12 March 2013: round-up lists on ReInvent Law Silicon Valley from @richards1000 and tada! @computational, one of the organisers. ReInvent LawLondon is on 14 June. While 2012 may have seen a wider take up of event amplification approaches in some contexts, finding out about what went on an event is still not trivial, in [...]

Busy! Four new posts on this blog in October – reviews of (Danish) events on news filtering and open data, plus an update on my relationship with video, with links to advice for event organisers. The final post introduces my second MOOC - weekly updates on progress on #dataviz and #sna on my CPD blog, together with a post on quantitative methods [...]
I worked in legal education in the UK for many years, and, as I state in my Twitter bio, I am fascinated by law teachers. I’ve written several posts already about law teachers’ use of social media and used legaled events to try out various event tools – I’ve now pulled these together in my [...]
Denmark shuts down in July, but the rest of the world carries on, in fact it was a hectic month. I’ve set up a second blog to record my explorations into the world of social media research and experiments with WordPress. Danegeld is now running in on Suffusion, and I’m getting more into post formats and series, [...]
Explanation: I have worked with UK law teachers for several years and have vague ideas about examining their use of social media as a test case for a range of research techniques, hence I tend to haunt legal events to gather some data. See my Law Teacher 2.0 series (and list of related posts to the [...]