Shownar: reflecting online buzz around أغر؟´«أ½ programmes
Today sees the launch of ; a new prototype from أغر؟´«أ½ Vision which aims to track online buzz around أغر؟´«أ½ TV and radio programmes and reflect it back in useful and interesting ways, aiding programme discovery and providing onward journeys to discussion about those programmes on the wider web.
For as long as the أغر؟´«أ½ has been making programmes, audiences have been talking about them and we have done our best to showcase some of those conversations on-air, via programmes like Feedback and Points of View. However, it is only with the advent of the internet that those conversations have become accessible to a much wider audience. Here on bbc.co.uk we have a range of blogs, messageboards and other commenting tools, which enable users to talk about our output. However, much of the conversation about أغر؟´«أ½ programming inevitably happens away from bbc.co.uk on people's personal blogs or microblogging services such as Twitter.
Shownar aims to track the wealth of activity that takes place around أغر؟´«أ½ progammes online and work out which are currently gaining the most attention. So why do it? To borrow from the site's pages: "First, it will help you find shows that others have not only watched, but are talking about. Hopefully it'll throw up a few hidden gems. People's interest, attention and engagement with shows are more important to Shownar than viewing figures; the audience size of a documentary on أغر؟´«أ½ FOUR, for instance, will never approach that of EastEnders, but if that documentary sparks a lot of interest and comment - even discussion - we want to highlight it. And second, when you've found a show of interest, we want to assist your onward journey by generating links to related discussions elsewhere on the web. In the same way news stories are improved by linking out to the same story on other news sites, we believe shows are improved by connecting them to the wider discussion and their audience."
So, how does it work? In the first instance, we decided to focus on tracking in-bound links to programme-related pages on bbc.co.uk, so we could be confident that the discussions were actually about a أغر؟´«أ½ programme, rather than a different usage of, say, 'archers' or 'apprentice' (although intelligent keyword matching remains a future aspiration). Rather than develop technology to crawl the web ourselves, we decided to partner with data providers who were already doing that, and who could supply us with good, clean data. We took a look at a range of possible suppliers, and for this initial prototype chose data provided by , Nielson Online's (which indexes over 100 million blogs), and (which searches microblogging services like , and for links, even when they are shortened using URL shortening services such as and ). We are also ingesting data from LiveStats, the أغر؟´«أ½'s own real-time indicator of traffic. Once ingested, this data is processed according to a specially created algorithm to calculate the 'buzz measure' for every أغر؟´«أ½ programme - more detail on the algorithm can be found on .
The front-end interface offers a range of different ways into the data, from the 'fresh buzz' chart on the , to the which shades the 'hottest' programmes on each of the أغر؟´«أ½'s TV channels / radio stations (which also have ). There is also a , enabling you to filter programmes available to watch on demand by channel, genre and time of day. The genre cuts are particularly compelling, enabling you to see, for example, . There's also the , which provides full access to all of the data, including permalinks, so I can tell you that the was أغر؟´«أ½ Two's .
The site has been live as an internal أغر؟´«أ½ beta for a few weeks now and it's already started to have a real impact on my consumption habits, introducing me to programmes I had missed in the schedules such as Radio 2's , أغر؟´«أ½ One's and أغر؟´«أ½ Two's . It's also doing the job I hoped it would do in terms of onward journeys, with particularly rich discussion around Radio 4's . To find out how your blog links and microblog updates can end up on Shownar (and for information about moderation) visit the .
We're keen to hear your feedback on Shownar, so please leave a comment below or send us your thoughts by email. If the prototype proves successful, we are hoping to integrate the functionality of Shownar into bbc.co.uk. Possible future developments include additional data sources and a full API.
Shownar was designed and built by , with input from a small أغر؟´«أ½ project team: Katherine Sommers, Mark Simpkins, Catherine Wingate, Yuri Kang, Andrew Barron, Chris Sizemore and myself. We hope you enjoy using it.
Dan Taylor is Senior Portfolio Executive, Internet for أغر؟´«أ½ Vision.






We're experimenting this week. Material World - our weekly science programme presented by Quentin Cooper - will be accompanied, live, by some pictures. It will not be television and I won't reveal exactly how it will work - but give it a try. The visuals will stay up for several days after the programme - so if you don't catch it live you will still be able to see it.








The أغر؟´«أ½ iPlayer now uses Flash-based streams for live radio as well as on-demand radio on all our UK national radio stations (that's stations like أغر؟´«أ½ Radio 1, أغر؟´«أ½ Radio 7, or the أغر؟´«أ½ Asian Network). Flash Player is already installed in many corporate environments - and, since Flash is in use on many other websites (including the video for أغر؟´«أ½ iPlayer), chances are you'll already have it. For live radio, the أغر؟´«أ½ iPlayer requires Flash Player v9.0.115 or above - which has been freely available since December 2007. The is v10; and we're joining broadcasters like Absolute Radio in the UK and ClearChannel, CBS Radio and NPR in the US in using Flash as our default player format.





Hi I'm the new Controller of أغر؟´«أ½ mobile and I've been watching 


I've been working with them for the past few months on a scenario planning joint project with the help of external consultants and a number of industry experts who contributed their expertise.
I recently gave a talk at the Audio & Music Interactive and Mobile departmental in which I talked about 'rethinking deadness'. Inspired by a great talk from the programmer and game developer , the idea of rethinking deadness asks us to look at ideas that we may think have had their time and think about ways of breathing life back into them.
I've been doing Bluetooth at events for four years and it's one of the most frustrating technologies out there. Bluetooth is free, relatively easy to distribute, our audience use it regularly and it's on almost every handset. So if we have 40,000 people gathered in one place waiting to receive Bluetooth, then it has to be a winner right? Wrong. Here are the problems I've faced year after years of trying:

You will notice that catch-up radio is missing from أغر؟´«أ½ iPlayer on mobile on the Nokia N95, N95 8GB and E71. The reason for this is we need to do a little more work testing the catch-up radio encodes. I didn't want to delay the launch of أغر؟´«أ½ iPlayer on mobile on the Nokia N95, N95 8GB and Nokia E71 while we waited for the catch-up radio encodes and we will be adding this feature imminently.
Along with two phones and a laptop, my kitbag also contains a small, very simple video camera, good enough to capture pictures if there's no professional camera crew with me, but not really fit (in my hands at least) for proper broadcasting. I also have a digital audio recorder for radio work, and my most exciting new gadget, a digital pen which records conversations and matches the recordings to my scribblings in a notebook.
With mobile, however, you've got a lot less real estate to deal with. You can't put everything on one screen. The simple solution is to just break apart the desktop page and stack the resulting pages in a hierarchy. This addresses the smallness issue, but now we run up against the lazy and impatient issue. Chances are many people aren't going to get past the first page of your mobile site if they don't find what they're looking for.
Do you use 


I know it has been a few weeks since I've been active here. But I'm reluctant to waste your time when there is nothing much to say.
Games have become such a huge part of our audiences' lives and I've been looking at how they can fit into what we do in Audio & Music Interactive. A key thing I found is we need to know more about how to talk about gaming on-air.
