Wednesday, 30 April 2003
Emergent Aristocracy
Cromwell's rebellion against Charles I is not often portrayed as democratic, though the accession of William & Mary in 1688 after James's restoration was notable for the English Bill of Rights which further constrained the King's power and in effect made Parliament sovereign.
The history of democracy can be seen as successive (and expanding) answers to the questions:
Who gets to vote?
Who gets to speak?
Who gets to set the topic?
With a single sovereign, or a single parliament, control of the latter two is still tricky; legislative agendas, though longer than historically, are still constrained, and the introduction of legislation is more often reserved to government or elected legislators, and more rarely allowed by referendum.
In a deliberative body, elaborate rules are adopted to ensure only one person speaks at a time.
There is an inherent funneling of debate because of these procedures.
Conversely, online there are millions of conversations happening in parallel, topics are introduced daily, and votes are largely spurious.
The challenge is help these conversations to focus, converge and produce action.
Tuesday, 29 April 2003
Faces and names help
One thing that struck me about the ETCon experience was that Rendezvous iChat had benefits even if you didn't use it to chat - you could see who was in the same room as you, and match faces to names with it without having to peer at badges.
I wonder how the school districts that have an iBook per pupil are using these tools.
Blogs, Wikis, mailing-lists and linguistic forms
I don't agree with Kevin Marks when he says that conversation is diluted and washed away with wikis.
Signal to noise is increased after discussion over a period of time by distilling it to its main points. To get the data to the reader in the best possible way. (sometimes conversations can get heated, and often conversations are over many months.)
Wikis often act like Weblogs, example is thread mode, one post after another. But the benefit with wiki is that later some one can refractor the conversation to the important information.
He's missing my point a bit. You can do wiki-like things in blogs, and blog-like things in wikis, but you have to work at it. Blogs don't make subsequent editing easy; Wiki's don't make attribution and temporal order obvious. (Did I just refactor his comment? hmm.)
This reminds me of the cross-blog Sapir-Whorf discussion going on.
Language does not limit thought, but different languages do affect how the thoughts end up being expressed and communicated. Some things are easier to say in one language than another - English doesn't have a (formal) third person imperative, for example, which makes translating the Lords Prayer from Greek hard.
It is not inevitable that blogs become personal, wikis become consensual, and mailing lists become confrontational, but that is the tendency of each form, much as Frayn shows the tendency for formal writing to concatenate cliche in a Markovian manner.
Orwell's tastes better
Jonathan Sanderson did buy it and found it disappointing. Score one for George.
Social Software again
I've posted belated Hydra notes from the Social Software Alliance Birds of a Feather and the Journalism Birds of a Feather from Emerging Tech last week. Taking notes using Hydra was an intersting experience, with 3 or 4 other people taking them too, correcting my spelling and so on.
The SSA meeting was fairly chaotic - perhaps reflecting the diverse meanings of 'Social'. Clay Shirky did not show up (or if he did, did not speak up); Dave Winer later poured scorn on the efforts, implying it was all about social climbing.
Friedrich Hayek famously said that the word 'social' empties the noun it is applied to of their meaning. Hayek goes on:
…it has in fact become the most harmful instance of what, after Shakespeare's 'I can suck melancholy out of a song, as a weasel sucks eggs' ( As You Like It , II, 5), some Americans call a 'weasel word'. As a weasel is alleged to be able to empty an egg without leaving a visible sign, so can these words deprive of content any term to which they are prefixed while seemingly leaving them untouched. A weasel word is used to draw the teeth from a concept one is obliged to employ, but from which one wishes to eliminate all implications that challenge one's ideological premises.
At one point in the meeting, writers of social software were likened to scientists at Los Alamos building the bomb, which is certainly hyperbolic, not to say bollocks.
The subsequent Journalism BoF was less hectic, and more measured. One of the most interesting things for me was the various Blogger/Journalist hybrids like Dan, Glenn, Scott and Doc talking about the difference of voice between a blog and a newspaper, where you would have an editor pushing you into the house style. This reminded me of both Boris Johnson's NYT experience and the lamented Tish Williams, who left 'Upside' for 'TheStreet.com' in early 2000, and went from a sparkling original voice to yet another tech journalist. (I wanted to link to some of her stellar pieces at upside, but they are all gone - not even google or the wayback machine can find them)
I think this conflict, rather than layout issues is behind the blog/wiki divide that Joi mentions.
Blogs amplify individual voices. Unlike mailing lists, they don't get lost in the hubbub. Wikis are different - they blur authorship, and drive towards a consensual style. Blogs' temporal flow creates an affordance for conversation that is diluted and washed away in Wikis.
Thursday, 24 April 2003
Wednesday, 23 April 2003
long-haired troll
Is he a secret mole of the bloggers' conspiracy, sent to discredit journalists by association?
Blogging gets sturdier
They've used the money to set up a blogger-like hosting service called TypePad
Missing the point completely
Right now, there's a lot of finger pointing when you buy and try to configure a Wi-Fi adapter. Most of the time, it works. When it doesn't, who do you complain to or even get tech support from? When Linksys and Orinoco cards I purchased didn't work in a Sony laptop, I sent email to five different companies and received 15 to 20 suggestions. Fortunately, the last of these, which trickled in, had the solution (Wireless Zero Configuration was turned off).
This does beg the question 'which part of Zero Configuration didn't they understand?'
If it can be turned off, it's not Zero configuration, is it.
Sapir, Whorf, Pinker, Wonderchicken and Thrash
I would agree is that previously heard or read language shapes subsequent utterances. Philip Hensher talks of the long linguistic shadow cast by the King James Bible.
Coincidentally, today I was called upon to interpret a conversation between 'John' and 'Thrash', a member of the popular beat combo 'The Orb' for the benefit of the Pho list:
John:
hear me now.
wot is yous banging on about?
Excuse me old chap, I don't quite follow your drift.
judge me wiv me bits not me mula.
Consider what I have to say, not my worldly goods.
got speed garage in da house. it's the most bestest, innit?
I am listening to an uptempo musical style that was popular 5 years
ago, and enjoying it.
i fink i will be going westside to go to me julie.
so gimme a shout next time yous is going down to the boozer.
I may be visiting the expensive part of London, so let me know if you
fancy a potation.
Thrash responds
Big it up!
I say!
Ease in the manor respec
Look mate check it I is fer real bwoyyy
Quieten down - I speak sooth.
Ali g is a pussy bwoy
Alistair is fey and effete.
And if the staines massive come darn tooting boy
Dey get dare nose bus up
If his chums visit my demesnes they'll get a jolly good hiding.
Believe boy I invented the bowl
When I was about 15 man
Yeah right I used to drive 80 mph the wrong way up charring cross road
Old bill giving it large behind
We just didn?t give a monkeys flying whatever you know
The constabulary never apprehended me for my carefree youthful
indiscretions.
Speed garage ?? that for ninny boyz
Arvo parte much better innit
My musical compositions have more subtlety than up-tempo industrial.
It was behind these bins that me first bang me julie
Ahem sorry
It does not do to bandy about a ladies name.
As fer wot I is banging about
You better read it again innit
The subtler shades of meaning in my prose may require further perusal
for enlightenment to dawn.
Emerging Bloggers
Allen & I had a good long chat about epistemology, Physics and Wolfram's ideas.
Steve and I spoke about the difference between wikis and blogs. I think the main difference is one of voice. A blog has one person's voice, but a wiki is written by committee, and ends up striving for a consensual tone.
Doc, Steve & I talked about how Rendezvous and RSS need to get together for presence-based blogging.
Tuesday, 22 April 2003
Alienaid - sweets and snacks - London, UK to San Francisco CA, USA
Realising that all the tiny things about America that I've seen in films, comic strips and so on aren't enormous cultural symbols or meaningful things at all. People skateboarding down the street, wearing baggy trousers, Twinkies et al: they're normal, like Hula Hoops (the crisps).
Sweets and snack foods are very local, and obviously emotionally important in a Proust's madeleines kind of way.
There are several shops in the Bay Area that make a tidy living by importing English/Australian etc packaged junk food and selling it to ex-pats at a huge mark-up. Similarly, there are specialists selling Indian condensed-milk sweets and nibbles (though these are genreally made fresh) and lots of Chinese/Japanese supermarkets full of endless variations on pot noodles.
I remember Dan pining for Oreos in London too...
Wednesday, 16 April 2003
Toothpaste Tube
Tuesday, 15 April 2003
Opposites react
I can see that may sound less than enticing, but it may help explain a widely noted phenomenon:
[...] this is not another story about how Berkeley is better than Knoxville.� Most of the ways it is (and of course it is) are obvious, and the last thing the� people reading this essay need is the sense of this superiority reinforced, as though the very real struggles of the UT students who I fell in love with year after year are somehow less significant because Knoxville has fewer cultural and political resources than Berkeley.� Rather, this is the story of the forms of disengagement that structure academic departments in general.� Certainly at the top of the profession, in places like Berkeley, scholars are far more likely than at UT to be engaged in national conversations. Yet at every level of the academic institution, a variety of individuals find that the best or easiest way to keep themselves going is by staying out of the way of department life.� At prestigious schools, where people actually have the money to do so, this results in the incessant flying around the world making connections, and the consequent political overvaluation of the so-called global over working in local institutions.� This itself is a form of disengagement.� At the University of Tennessee -- which is nowhere near the "bottom" as these things are assessed -- most faculty members are involved in neither national or local conversations, and as a result become altogether disengaged.
[...] I went from being a participant in specific, local, political movements to being� "global," or at least travelling all the time.� Because there weren't enough people in Knoxville who shared my interests.� [...]� Some academics build genuinely useful networks; others simply avoid responsibility for what needs to be done where they are.