Check out Front Porch Forum’s website… it’s all new! Thanks to the work and support of many, we launched our newly rebuilt site on the 4th of July, 2011! Great day for a birthday.
We’re blown away with the craftsmanship of our development partners, The Working Group. Using Ruby on Rails, they’ve constructed a fantastic platform on which FPF can build for years to come.
From an FPF member perspective, functionality has not changed much… yet. But with this new foundation under our feet, we look forward to all sorts of future improvements (we’d love to hear your suggestions). So stay tuned!
P.S. Our blog is being overhauled as well. Please note that it has a new URL (http://blog.frontporchforum.com/), so your RSS feed must be re-done.
Mutual of Omaha came to town recently and asked me to share Front Porch Forum‘s story for their Aha Moment project.
My wife and I found it tough to meet the neighbors. Our aha moment happened when we decided to create Front Porch Forum. Now half of our city subscribes and connects with their neighbors, and beautiful neighbor-help-neighbor stories overflow from our site. gDQiJfaa2oE
Lots of great stories from other Vermonters too. Take a look!
Champlain College Publishing Initiative ran an interesting piece about local online news recently. Writer Melinda Grey ends with…
As a foretaste of things to come, check out this remarkable link. It’s an item that was recently posted on our Front Porch Forum (speaking of hyperlocal) after yet another day of heavy rain and flooding in Burlington.
Is this the future of local news? And does this suggest that Front Porch Forum may be one model for the hyperlocal news medium of the future?
Her colleague Tim Brookes added…
… events have shown how prophetic Melinda’s observations were. One of the photos of the Booth Street flood we recommended (originally posted as a link on Front Porch Forum) showed up on the front cover of this week’s Seven Days.
This raises some fascinating questions. If a newsweekly picks up a photo from Front Porch Forum, doesn’t that identify the original item as being news, and thus, by implication, identify Front Porch Forum as a hyperlocal online news entity, at least in part? Does this imply that the world is full of sources of what might be called “raw” news, in the sense that reality TV uses security camera feeds as raw footage? It also suggests that this kind of reader-driven content is the print medium’s equivalent of “open source” material–but only up to a point…
Indeed, this kind of thing happens with Front Porch Forum nearly every week. A local citizen posts something on FPF to share with nearby neighbors and then one or more traditional media outlets pick it up and builds a story. We appreciate when the news outlets give proper attribution so their audience knows where they got the lead… but that occurs less than half the time.
As a 2010 Knight News Challenge award winner, FPF is increasingly seen as a new part of the local news and community conversation ecosystem… a quickly evolving environment.
Ghost of Midnight is an online journal about fostering community within neighborhoods, with a special focus on Front Porch Forum (FPF). My wife, Valerie, and I founded FPF in 2006... read more