Alongside the main Shift-Time Festival we're running a project to get Shrewsbury and the surrounding area blogging. We want people to use the festival to experiment with all sorts of "social media" services be they weblogs, photo and video sharing sites like Flickr and YouTube or Twitter. The end result, we hope, is to give Shrewsbury the tools to talk to itself about things that matter, whatever they may be.

This blog will act as a hub, collecting and linking to online activity that is either relevant to the festival or Shrewsbury in general, and posting things to to help and inspire you to blog about Shift-Time.

So get involved by setting up a blog or sharing your photos and videos online and let us know what you're up to so we can mention it on the blog.

Twittering on site

While the festival is happening Anna and Rebecca will be posting news to the Shift-Time Twitter account so if you’re somehow at a loose end you can see what’s going on there. They’ll also be posting photos of photo-worthy things.

Other Twitters on site that I’m aware of are Trisha and Martin.

If you’re posting to Twitter about the festival make sure you include the word “shifttime” in your tweets so we can find them.

Shropshire Tweetups

Tweetup is the rather cringeworthy name for a meeting of Twitter users in a local area. Twitter, like most social networking services, brings people together who would otherwise not have met. And being people there’s often a desire to meet up offline. (See also the Shropshire Flickr Community who meet up regularly to take photos together.)

The Shropshire Tweetup started in June and plans to meet every month. The next one will be in Telford and the date is currently being finalised with the 18th looking popular.

You can get a snapshot of Twitter usage in Shropshire by looking at this search for activity in the area but it won’t make much, if any, sense. A better snapshot might be the Shropshire Twibe (again, excuse the terminology) which lists people who have explicitly declared themselves to be from Shropshire.

Like most social environments, the best way to get involved with Twitter is to follow people you already know and take it from there. But if you don’t know anyone casting the net wide with the above might help.

Just remember, at first glance Twitter doesn’t make any sense whatsoever. It’s rather like recording random 10 second snippets of conversation in a crowded pub, editing them together and expecting coherence. The trick is to hang out in the pub.