Archive for December, 2007

Yet another "tabs dump"

LiveSearch ”discourse”: academic | feeds

* Micah L. Sifry’s blog at PersonalDemocracy.com
    * Sifry’s “It’s Time to Wikify Government” at TechPresident.com
* Powerset – “next-generation [natural language] search engine”; Powerset blog; Lorenzo Thione’s blog
* Amazon Web Services’ Elastic Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2); see AWS Simple Monthly Calculator
* think pieces: Language Log, the blog
* “Best of 2007” by technosailor aka Aaron Brazell; see also his The Pervasive Web
    * gleaned from comments there: “10 ways to improve web 2.0 and move into an era of true interaction“; “Computing Is A Liberal Art, Part 3: Strategies for Reinforcing Loops and the Hive Mind“; “Why Verizon Went Open & What It Means
* fresh off the press at ReadWriteWeb: “2007: The Year in RSS
* http://www.spock.com for people search and http://aiderss.com for feeds analysis
* New for me at Codex.WordPress: References and external resources about “The Loop”


I'll see your conundrum and raise you a paradox

Give 1000 people 100 communications channels and everybody may have a whole lotta fun but, really, you aren’t goint to get anything done. That ain’t rocket science.

Blogspot (multiple blogs), WordPress (multiple blogs), LiveJournal (2 accounts), FaceBook, MySpace (also 2 accounts), LinkedIn, ITtoolbox, and of course Twitter … I’m registered at more but those are the systems I used most often. What I see is a cloud of activity, 95% of which is buzz … fun, perhaps, and entertaining, to some degree, but basically it’s mostly dissipation.

How many blog comments are some variation on “That’s really good?” and nothing more. I’m bothered by this chaos not because it’s meaningless (It’s chaotic, not random, i.e. it truly is “information rich” rather than being just noise.) but precisely because it’s straining to be meaningful. The success of sites like Digg shows how folk really want to contribute something even if it’s only a vote.

A lovely little post by Charles Arthur at The Guardian presents some very interesting data: “What is the 1% rule?” reads in part,

“It’s an emerging rule of thumb that suggests that if you get a group of 100 people online then one will create content, 10 will “interact” with it (commenting or offering improvements) and the other 89 will just view it.

[In stats from WikiPedia] 50% of all Wikipedia article edits are done by 0.7% of users, and more than 70% of all articles have been written by just 1.8% of all users.

Bradley Horowitz of Yahoo [in “Creators, Synthesizers, and Consumers”] points out that [in Yahoo Groups] the discussion lists, “1% of the user population might start a group; 10% of the user population might participate actively”.

Arthur ends on what I think a key point: Not just “you shouldn’t expect too much online.” but more: “to echo Field of Dreams, if you build it, they will come. The trouble, as in real life, is finding the builders.”

Dynamically stable systems go through chaotic phases after having been perturbed beyond their limits. In my own words, when a system loses its ordering principle then it will come apart and the information it contains will become indecipherable.

Hundreds of millions of people active in tens of thousands of forums and mail lists and blogs … millions of hours of creative time … producing blinding clouds of data and information.

How to order all this without driving out the vitality that makes it valuable? *shrug* I talk about discourse. Maybe someone will actually hear.

My bottom line? If you bring a group of people together and sit them down in a clump, likely you’ll need something like a facilitator to get something going. As Robertson puts it:

“Left unmanaged, this will inevitably lead to the proliferation of hundreds or thousands of collaboration spaces each containing a small subset of corporate content. […] This fragmentation makes it hard to find information published by other areas.”

But take that same group and sit them down around a camp-fire and (Caveman TV rulz!) things seem to sort themselves out.

See also Wisdom of Crowds is Cowardice” at CentralDesktop; “Collaboration Tools – Are Information Silos a Problem?” and “Enterprise 2.0 Letting Hypertext out of its Box” at Traction Software; a think piece by Danah Boyd: “Choose Your Own Ethnography: In Search of (Un)Mediated Life“; “Social Media Meets the Corporation” at ConferenzaBlog; “Collaboration tools are anti knowledge sharing?” by James Robertson; “Putting Enterprise 2.0 In Perspective” by Mike Gotta; Ross Mayfield’s blog

An afterthought: perhaps the web’s churn would be more evident except for the fact that so much of the contents is actually in-formed along a single vector: sales and marketing. If you want to see how it’s running on the IT equivalent of flat tires, try to use it for problem solving!


I'll see your connundrum and raise you a paradox

*X-posted to Many2Many and MozDawg on DAV and Docs*

Context: I yesterday post a near-rant in my MozDawg blog; “Silo by any other name would be as …

Give 1000 people 100 communications channels and everybody may have a whole lotta fun but, really, you aren’t goint to get anything done. That ain’t rocket science.

Blogspot (multiple blogs), WordPress (multiple blogs), LiveJournal (2 accounts), FaceBook, MySpace (also 2 accounts), LinkedIn, ITtoolbox, and of course Twitter … I’m registered at more but those are the systems I used most often. What I see is a cloud of activity, 95% of which is buzz … fun, perhaps, and entertaining, to some degree, but basically it’s mostly dissipation.

How many blog comments are some variation on “That’s really good?” and nothing more …


"Mind mapping" at work with blogging

This seems to be in the air! I was following a post over at ProBlogger and just now, looking for that link, found he’s posted another on this topic.

And now there’s also “On Mindmeister, XMIND and Mind Mapping” at CircleSixDesign.

I’ve seen a lot of folk wrestling with maps for large project or concepts and, well, their experience has tempered my enthusiasm … but for blogging? Seems that this “restricted case” is a real good fit.

For the record: FreeMind (an OpenSource project), Mindomo, MindMeister, and XMind.
Also, The Mindmapping Toolbox: 100+ Tools, Resources, and Tutorials from BootStrapping.

I didn’t find the site I really wanted to post. I recall that it’s from early 2006 … wudda been good for context. *shrug*


Fabulous Concept: "Edit In Place"

*X-posted from MozDawg on DAV and Docs*

I came across Joseph Scott’s “EditInPlace, New Version, New Home” and checked out the new site … which left me totally in the dark, it’s new and spartan to the point of being cryptic.
But have no fear! A set of back-links to earlier blog posts (18APR07 and 7JUNE07) and a well implemented tag system makes everything clear.
Also, Drew McLellan at 24Ways covers the topic nicely with his “Edit in Place With AJAX“.

J. Scott’s ”example” page shows what it’s all about … shows how elegant the method is, too.
Now, let’s make it accept HTML so we can really edit!


What's old is new again? Bedouin co-working

*X-posted from ”Gnodal” at LiveJournal*

Thinking about OpenSource and crowd-sourcing and all of that I found myself coming back again and again to the idea of “going Bedouin“. (Now I happen to really admire Bedouin culture and traditions, but that’s another essay.) I’m talking about foundational co-working.

Just now I realized with some shock that the concepts that are central to Bedouin-style co-working are exactly the same as what I envisioned with my first startup. (Alas, it succumbed to infant mortality.)

Back-story: in the late 80s Texas Instrument’s new generation of video chips gave rise to an awesome breakthrough in capabilities, the best example being the Amiga 2500 and the VideoToaster. Combined, video production costs were 1/10th what they had been previously. I saw that as a massive (if only transient) business opportunity.

My idea was this: provide people who were already working in video with turn-key video studios using those systems … they would rapidbly find themselves independent. But key to the franchise concept was networking: small shops off-loading cumbersome tasks or repetitive chores to one another … a sort of load-leveling. Bonus would be that projects would become networked, so contracts that might be far too large and complex for any one studio could be shared.

That was 1988.

In 2007? That, basically, is co-working … and “going Bedouin” fits perfectly with that business model.
Feeling manic? Pumped for consecutive 14 hour days? Just fine.
Distracted by some aspect of personal life? NP … 2 or 4 hours of maintenance (email and such) keeps things ticking over for a little while.


Addendum, from MozDawg comments:

Interesting that you brought up InnoCentive here … it continues the thread I’ve been working today i.e. alternative business models.
Context: looking through material on Alfresco I find that, while it promotes itself as seriously OpenSource, it is far more closed than the dev communities in, say, SalesForce or FaceBook or NetVibes. I felt like I needed a battering ram to access documentation. (Registering as a developer will do the trick, but still … odd to see their reticence.)
On the other hand, by way of contrast, I came across Automattic, who specializes in WordPress … it seems that they’re entirely distributed i.e. no bricks&mortar head office, but everybody draws against revenue.
Then reading about a new Drupal support startup, Acquia, I can’t help thinking that a lot of hours are spent doing what others are doing, and wondering if there isn’t a way of producing better results while reducing over-work.
So many people were so very busy, and pondered why collaboration wasn’t lightening the load or leading to economies of scale.

I really have come full circle, back to 1989!


What's old is new again? Bedouin co-working

*X-posted from MozDawg on DAV and Docs*

Thinking about OpenSource and crowd-sourcing and all of that I found myself coming back again and again to the idea of “going Bedouin“. (Now I happen to really admire Bedouin culture and traditions, but that’s another essay.) I’m talking about foundational co-working.

Just now I realized with some shock that the concepts that are central to Bedouin-style co-working are exactly the same as what I envisioned with my first startup. (Alas, it succumbed to infant mortality.)

Back-story: in the late 80s Texas Instrument’s new generation of video chips gave rise to an awesome breakthrough in capabilities, the best example being the Amiga 2500 and the VideoToaster. Combined, video production costs were 1/10th what they had been previously. I saw that as a massive (if only transient) business opportunity.

My idea was this: provide people who were already working in video with turn-key video studios using those systems … they would rapidbly find themselves independent. But key to the franchise concept was networking: small shops off-loading cumbersome tasks or repetitive chores to one another … a sort of load-leveling. Bonus would be that projects would become networked, so contracts that might be far too large and complex for any one studio could be shared.

That was 1988.

In 2007? That, basically, is co-working … and “going Bedouin” fits perfectly with that business model.
Feeling manic? Pumped for consecutive 14 hour days? Just fine.
Distracted by some aspect of personal life? NP … 2 or 4 hours of maintenance (email and such) keeps things ticking over for a little while.


Addendum, from MozDawg comments:

Interesting that you brought up InnoCentive here … it continues the thread I’ve been working today i.e. alternative business models.

Context: looking through material on Alfresco I find that, while it promotes itself as seriously OpenSource, it is far more closed than the dev communities in, say, SalesForce or FaceBook or NetVibes. I felt like I needed a battering ram to access documentation. (Registering as a developer will do the trick, but still … odd to see their reticence.)

On the other hand, by way of contrast, I came across Automatic, who specializes in WordPress … it seems that they’re entirely distributed i.e. no bricks&mortar head office, but everybody draws against revenue.

Then reading about a new Drupal support startup, Acquia, I can’t help thinking that a lot of hours are spent doing what others are doing, and wondering if there isn’t a way of producing better results while reducing over-work.

So many people were so very busy, and pondered why collaboration wasn’t lightening the load or leading to economies of scale.


I really have come full circle, back to 1989!

p.s. some things really don’t change; I just posted to the Alfresco forum about how as soon as I registered on the site I immediately banged my head on their sense of ergonomics.

On the other hand … and this is in case my comment about Alfresco being “reticent” seemed like mere petulance on my part … here’s the documentation that was presented /immediately/ after I registered, on the “My Alfresco” page:
Documentation

Webinar Slides

Technical Tips

White Papers

Community User Groups

Book Chapter Sample

WCM 2_1 Product Evaluation Guide.pdf

Alfresco White Paper – Really Simple Search.pdf

Alfresco White Paper – Really Simple DM.pdf

Rivet Logic and Alfresco14Aug07.wmv – Recording of the webinar covering best practices and lessons learned from customer deployments.

Easypress ADP and AlfrescoPartial31Jul07.wmv – Recording of the Easypress and Alfresco webinar.

RivetLogicCollaborativeCommunities.pdf

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