Monday, 9 June 2003
AlienAid - expats - UK to Spain
Bar�ablog talks about the expat life in Spain. Much the same is true in the US, but the fact that you can communicate in English reasonably well makes it less obvious.
Blogrepping
Dave Sifry's new Technorati search is cool enough to need a verb, like 'googling'. I propose 'blogrepping' - from 'blog' and 'grep'.
Wednesday, 4 June 2003
Social software readings
Liz has a good reading list
I'd say don't forget those game designers:
Richard Bartle's classic paper on the kinds of players you need in MUDs
Stuart Cheshire on the Monopoly effect
Some other good sources I gathered for mediAgora
I'd say don't forget those game designers:
Richard Bartle's classic paper on the kinds of players you need in MUDs
Stuart Cheshire on the Monopoly effect
Some other good sources I gathered for mediAgora
Tuesday, 27 May 2003
Make your customers your partners
Dave writes an essay worrying about who will pay for software. This is a hard problem, and the bundling model whereby Microsoft or Apple include the software in the cost of the hardware does not scale well to all kinds of software, attractive as it is when it works for you.
My answer to this is the same as my answer to the media issue. The way to win is to make your customers your partners. Give them an incentive to generate sales for you, and they dynamic changes. mediAgora's Promoter model would work very well for shareware, and the derivative works model could work well for software libraries, with applications that incorporate the libraries being rewarded for incremental sales.
My answer to this is the same as my answer to the media issue. The way to win is to make your customers your partners. Give them an incentive to generate sales for you, and they dynamic changes. mediAgora's Promoter model would work very well for shareware, and the derivative works model could work well for software libraries, with applications that incorporate the libraries being rewarded for incremental sales.
Gibson on media
William Gibson's speech to the Directors Guild of America should be read in full, so I won't excerpt it here.
He expresses the same sense of awe that I did in 'I can read people's thoughts', but extends it to film and music too.
He also eloquently points to the need for a new model for media once it becomes malleable by any viewer, which is what I have proposed over at mediAgora .
He expresses the same sense of awe that I did in 'I can read people's thoughts', but extends it to film and music too.
He also eloquently points to the need for a new model for media once it becomes malleable by any viewer, which is what I have proposed over at mediAgora .
Saturday, 17 May 2003
Music I remember
Excellent program on 80s Electronic music hosted by Phil Oakey on Radio One. Shame it's only up in low bitrate Real8
Why isn't all this on the iTunes Store? I'd buy it.
Why isn't all this on the iTunes Store? I'd buy it.
Wait 50 years, then pay
Larry Lessig is trying to pass a law that will require copyright registration, as $1/year after the 50th year:
A step in the right direction. Even better if the fee doubles every year thereafter, but that can come as an amendment later.
The idea is a simple one: Fifty years after a work has been published, the copyright owner must pay a $1 comment maintanence fee. If the copyright owner pays the fee, then the copyright continues. If the owner fails to pay the fee, the work passes into the public domain. Based on historical precedent, we expect 98% of copyrighted works would pass into the public domain after just 50 years. They could keep Mickey for as long as Congress lets them. But we would get a public domain.
A step in the right direction. Even better if the fee doubles every year thereafter, but that can come as an amendment later.
Tuesday, 13 May 2003
DRM as crime
David Weinberger explains clearly why using computers to enforce laws is foolish and dangerous.
In reality, our legal system usually leaves us wiggle room. What's fair in one case won't be in another - and only human judgment can discern the difference. As we write the rules of use into software and hardware, we are also rewriting the rules we live by as a society, without anyone first bothering to ask if that's OK.
In reality, our legal system usually leaves us wiggle room. What's fair in one case won't be in another - and only human judgment can discern the difference. As we write the rules of use into software and hardware, we are also rewriting the rules we live by as a society, without anyone first bothering to ask if that's OK.
Wednesday, 7 May 2003
Potemkin DRM
The iTunes Music store has the same approach to DRM as the original iTunes did.
Don't annoy customers too much. Make it very easy to do the desired, legitimate thing, and awkward to do the undesired thing, but don't waste too much effort trying to make it impossible, as leeway is important.
Don't annoy customers too much. Make it very easy to do the desired, legitimate thing, and awkward to do the undesired thing, but don't waste too much effort trying to make it impossible, as leeway is important.
Rebuilding Iraq
There are a couple of people who should be persuaded to help rebuild Iraq. The first is Hernando de Soto, who should be put in charge of creating a land registry.
The second is Mohammad Yunus, founder of the Grameen Bank. He should be give the task fo setting up the Iraqi Oil trust.
The second is Mohammad Yunus, founder of the Grameen Bank. He should be give the task fo setting up the Iraqi Oil trust.
Thursday, 1 May 2003
Maf Awakes
Nearly a year ago, I told Maf he should start a blog, and made one for him, which he resolutely ignored. Now he's started posting to it, and it's helpful stuff too, about Curry and how to make DVD players useful.
So go and read Maf's blog
So go and read Maf's blog
Wednesday, 30 April 2003
Emergent Aristocracy
The history of democracies is usually told as a rebellion against an overweening King - George III for America, Louis XVI for France. In England it is King John, in 1215, and the rebellion gave rise to the Magna Carta which constrained the powers of a king, and providing for a separate body (of barons) to enforce it.
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.
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
Over on the Corante Social Software blog (Aside - you'd think with all those SSA gurus there they'd have managed to get an RSS feed for this one, but no) Liz writes about Friendster and Hydra.
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.
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
Zak picked up on the discussion at Joi's, and Mark commented:
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.
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.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)