Business - Written by Anthony D. Williams on Sunday, January 28, 2007 21:45 - 4 Comments
Toronto bloggers swarm to redesign TTC website
Wikinomics readers in Toronto may be interested in the following BarCamp get together this coming Sunday February 4, 2007. It’s organized by a network of Toronto bloggers who are keen to help the local transit authority improve many aspects of its operations, starting with its dismal web site. If you’ve lived in Toronto most of your life (like I have) and depended on the TTC to get around (like I have), you’ll probably appreciate what this is all about.
An ad-hoc gathering at the Gladstone Hotel of designers, transit geeks, bloggers, visual artists, tech geeks and cultural creators passionate about transit in Toronto and the TTC. It is a platform for Toronto’s talented design community and enthusiastic transit users and fans to demonstrate their creativity and contribute to a better way for Toronto’s transit system. The content and ideas generated in this open unconference will be delivered to the TTC for their consideration in their work.
Also note what the event is not about:
We will not be changing bus schedules, talking about stop locations, complaining about creaky infrastructure or otherwise telling the TTC how to do its core business. The organizers respect that there are many hard-working, dedicated and experienced professionals in the TTC who have been able to accomplish remarkable things for this city’s transit infrastructure over the years under very difficult resource constraints.
Thanks Mark!
4 Comments
Glad to see Toronto is doing this. We’re building similar, digital-grass-roots programs with our ‘community’ blog.
Janice Ashby
I started a TTC Environmental Citizen’s Group on Facebook.com, just search the group name, or my name – it’s the solutions I’ve been telling Adam about since mid-August 2007 but they fail to see how simple these idea’s are.
And I can’t stand the fact that Transit riders can’t read a paper on what the TTC and Adam Giambrone is doing to make the TTC better for the people, if people knew they would maybe care more.
I’am telling people, it’s up to us to change the system, and to teach the government workers and politicans how to run things.!
Website Redesign as a Public Service at EdTechPost
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Excellent idea. More of this sort of behaviour should be encouraged – our public facilities (which includes their web presence) are generally in dismal shape and need all the help they can get. Not to mention that citizen-designers are likely to come closer to the level of inspiration that the London Underground map hit than what a bureaucratic corporate approval process is likely to put forward.