Seb's Open Research
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Saturday, October 25, 2003
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Robert Paterson
I want to talk about blogging non-technically. It represents a
breakthrough in tools that will radically change the world that we live
in. I'll talk about politics, health, education, and business.
I want to talk first about how in history there are points when all comes together and shift happens.
Royal navy in the 19th century. Risks of being successful. End of
Napoleonic war. British are happy. In 1860, HMS Inflexible looks a
modern ship, but nothing like HMS Victory. But it lacks two things.
one, if you're not running the ship, you're nobody. The history of the
navy was about bullfights, not expertise.
HMS was running on a culture that had been successful.
FFWD to 1890s and you have a problem. The invention of the torpedo
meant a cheap ship could not sink a battleship. Fisher is a visionary,
head of the navy. He sees (1) that this technology must be implemented
and used well. Hierarchy must no longer determine things. Culture must
be changed first. (2) War is no longer face-to-face. You'll be no less
than 8 miles away. Small guns become pointless.
Then a ship came out with the new culture. It was so disruptive it
could sink the whole German navy by itself. Fisher had made his own
navy obsolete.
The whole thing has become a race.
Blogging might be the new torpedo, which forces a change in the way people deal with one another.
100 years ago this year the Ford automobile company was born. The
production line was imported from the meat packing industry.
(Cross-pollination) Ford fully implemented the metaphor that we live in
a mechanical universe and that we have machine relationships with
people. It was so terrible working on the line that the turnover rate
was 300%. Farm boys would rather die than do this. They were bribed and
encultured progressively.
This is how things run now in business. We don't have natural
relationships with one another. Government, health care, education.. In
education: do you know that 70% of the intake at UPEI is women. Boys
can't take it. We construe it as attention deficit - we drug them just
as we drugged suburban housewives. We're at a point where
I spent two days with my clients in government. It's clear that no one among them is in a natural relationship.
There's a group now - 30 to 50 million people - who can't take it
anymore. They can barely make a living as they won't enter that
industrial-age world. Silverorange boys wouldn't last two weeks working
as an employee in these systems.
Where does it get together? The examplar of the new model is
eBay. Ebay doesn't sell anything. It reestablishes reputation, which is
what business in the past million years ran on. I worked in Saudi
Arabia for a while. They would take a year to form an opinion on me
before they would do business with me.
eBay is not directive, it is connective; it does not presume what you
want. Amazon's value is in creating and supporting a reviewer community
who works hard. These people get status and identity, not money. This
is what we want.
The machine model treats us so badly, all we've got left is money and stuff.
At the bank I worked for we gave Christmas bonuses. We gave $9M and $7M
bonuses to two execs. The guy who got seven resigned in disgust. Has
anyone worked on a production line? (a few hands raise) It's hell.
(nods)
Another exemplar. Southwest Airlines was started in Texas serving real
people paying out of their own money. The other airlines built their
business on serving businesspeople. The others were cattle. In bad
times, execs took the hit. Unions were happy. Trust was built.
In organizations like this the staff is having a good time.
We're through the efficiency-based methodology. We need to unlock the humans.
This is not consultant psychobabble. It's a new Renaissance. In the
renaissance people living in a dogma-dominated era started looking at
classics with fresh eyes.
We have ancient knowledge in us that says how to take care of a child, how to share a meal, etc. I
Paul Hawking came to speak at the University [of PEI]. He's funding a
guy who makes pumps. Turbulence always goes one way, hurricanes and
galaxies the same. Why don't I try to replicate the pattern that nature
sets? His pump is 10 times more efficient than previous technology.
Why don't we reengineer our social institutions based on natural patterns?
Blogging creates real human relationships. When you've read Dave for a
couple years, you know he's not the easiest guy to deal with, but you
sense that he couldn't fabricate his persona.
I've been doing this for a year or so. What'll happen when those new links deepen in ten years' time?
At first I blogged stiffly. The more I got informal, wrote about sleeping with my dogs, etc., the better the site got.
Blogging is unbelievably cheap.
We had an election here on the Island. A few of us launched an election
blog. We got away from soundbites, from inanity. I've talked to
politicians; they're aware of the real issues but know they must
produce the right soundbites.
Within a month we were getting 3,000 hits a day. One brave candidate,
Jean Tingley, who instead of ranting, ran his own weblog. "God I'm
exhausted. Today I saw this and this person". Mostly written around
3AM. She didn't get elected, by the way. But this is fantastically
powerful.
We got more hits than the CBC. We aggregated all the conversation in one place.
Comment: I personally think it
was a huge success. We were the first to cover a provincial election on
a website. The premier was asked why he didn't write his own weblog.
(He said he's too busy.)
Comment: The CBC did a really good 7-min TV piece on this experiment.
Comment: The most frustating
thing for me was, being involved in the election process, I couldn't
talk about it. Now I can. I wonder if the blog didn't reflect a
complete misunderstanding of how island politics works. (now. -SP)
Response: I think it's going to be disruptive and change the political process.
Q: What did Jean think about her blogging?
A: She gave everything she had. She feels terrible, but not about blogging. She's exhausted and no longer blogs.
---
Healthcare. I'm 53. In 10 years time half Islanders will be old. We're
in a trajectory towards complete meltdown in healthcare. PEI has the
fattest children, the most diabetes, the most smoking. We beat
Mississipi - it's that bad. Conventional methods won't solve that.
What do we do? There's interesting research out about self-help groups.
They help with diabetes. Doctors are good at diagnosis. They tell you
to change your lifestyle and wish you good luck; after that you're on
your own. Self-help groups help with technical issues. My wife has
breast cancer. She's so far ahead of her doctor, you wouldn't believe
it. She's not on the Net - her friends group filters info. Her doctor
can't cope. There's no healing relationship between him and her.
There's no relationship at all in the healthcare delivery system.
----
Parenting. Best researchers on what's really happening with young
children and link them with parents. Doug Williams is on the web only
through my parenting blog. Save for a few pdfs, there's a complete
disconnect between research world and people. We want to link people to
researchers, not research.
-----
Business
The "Buzz" paper is the bible of Island artists. The whole Island reads
it. But it's one-way. How can we make the Buzz more dynamic and involve
the community? (when eBay started off, they were three guys. They
didn't have to hire trainers - people trained one another without pay.
It gave them identity, status, meaning.
It's about intimacy and trust. If you do that, the community will
defend you. I think there's a huge money there. It's possible to be
human and rich.
Where does blogging fit in corporate life? It's the torpedo boat of
corporate life. The firewall guys don't want this at all. It's about
having an opinion that is public. It is terrifying to normal
organizations. It will change relationships inside organizations and
across borders. It may force corporate life from going from "apart" and
"close"
Last thing about education. Who teaches whom? If you took auto
mechanics 25 years ago, you could still repair cars. But for hybrids,
who's going to teach you? Are you going to take a course? The field
keeps moving. Keeping current is impossible. Technique is changing so
fast, it no longer makes sense to teach technique. We'll have to go
back to teach the system, the technique you'll have to get and update
by yourself. It's accelerating.
Industrial, curriculum design-based, education is outdated.
Universities are like Wile E. coyote, still running off the cliff, in mid-air.
When I was at Oxford, it was very much self-directed.
How can you call yourself a professor and teach from textbooks?
University students are treated like 12-year olds; it gets them
worthless jobs and student debts.
Learning will happen in the workplace. Support will be online.
Schools will have to become brokers. Give up developing the content, help people find it.
The church once owned and controlled everything. In 200 years that was killed, largely by pamphleteers.
The current setup is brittle. Concentrated power is vulnerable. Look at
the airlines not coping with the discounts. Competing with Wal-mart is
impossible. eBay is the largest automobile retailer today. Gigamedia,
so concentrated, is so vulnerable.
5:39:40 PM
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John Muir
Trent Radio - we play stuff from the Web. No worry. It's not going to hurt the music.
[Dave Winer] They didn't say that at that other conference I was in just before.
Our budget is $50,000. We're a nonprofit. The job of a nonprofit is to make zero. Not negative, not positive - which is harder!
Radio is not like in-person performance. You're not at physical risk.
People can tune out and you won't see them. The act of being a citizen
puts you at physical risk.
The competition is programmed, cable radio. What have we got? 150 local people.
Equipment is inexpensive. Most people under 40 understand visual
representations of audio. It's easy to piece shows together. Our
archive room has about 26,000 recordings. We get more CDs every day.
Why is our real estate devoted to Warner Bros.? We've ripped the CDs
and put them on a server.
Q. Can we stream that?
A. Not enough bandwidth.
Q. Graphics designers don't like that album art is thrown away.
A. Right. We knew what we're doing it wrong. Holding the artifact is an
important experience. We experience preemptive stealing of physical CDs
- people figure someone else will steal them.
Q. What about backups?
A. We have a hot spare. We'll have an offsite backup soon.
We encode in variable bitrate Ogg Vorbis format - slightly more than a
megabyte a minute on average. It's a wonderful open format. Comparisons
always ended up with Ogg on top
We're amateur archivists. When cool dudes who know computers ask us
what we need, we don't know how to answer in technical terms. We can
describe tasks from a user's point of view.
1.2 terabytes cost us US$7,000. The space savings make room for a live band and a discussion table.
We write documentation for ourselves and others.
Q. Do you plan to rip your vinyl records?
A. Yes. It does take longer.
Q. Have the other stations asked for access to your servers?
A. Not yet. But most of the info on how the station runs (meeting minutes, etc.) is transparent.
Q. Reencoding the same recordings in different places is a waste of time.
A. We might get into "You bring your server, I'll bring mine and we'll share" agreements.
We're below the radar. By playing without paying, am I ripping you off
because you're famous, or am I helping you because you aren't?
3:22:24 PM
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Lisa Sloniowski and Mita Sen-Roy
Working at an academic library at U Windsor, launched an initiative of inventorying sources of news relating to the war in Iraq. The site became rather well-known; right now they're the first Google hit for the query "alternative news Iraq".
When the war broke out many students started searching for information
on the first Iraq war - but they had a hard time finding the dissenting
voices.
Right away the directory draws a distinction between mainstream sources
and non-mainstream sources - which already makes a point, because it is
an unusual mode of classification.
Special coverage divided according to country - notice how headlines are differently crafted in different parts of the world e.g., compare CBC and Fox/Faux titles.
Q: CNN's coverage is in between the extremes. How credible is it?
A: If you rely on a single source of news you'll probably get in trouble.
Comment [Rob Paterson]: There's a
continuum from Hitler to Steve [audience member]. Thanks to weblogs,
you can choose your gatekeepers. In my aggregator I skim the mainstream
sources and thoroughly read individuals.
Comment [Steve]: People don't have time to digest. Cramming things in 5-minute bites is unrealistic.
Comment: it's astounding how often the same story is repeated.
[Because of the political bias of our classification] We wondered if
the library administration would let us run the site. We turned out to
be congratulated on the day after the site went live. That's the last
we heard.
Question from Mita to the audience: how much do you expect libraries to be neutral?
The library does not collect non-mainstream sources. We carry the NYT.
We don't carry alternative sources. There's a bias in what we carry
that outright prevents us from being neutral.
Comment [Steve]:
neutrality/objectivity is an illusion. We need to acknowledge that and
be clear on what our conclusions are based on.
Q: Who's your user community?
A: We design for the local community, but recently most users are from outside.
A discussion follows:
Wikipedia, Indymedia, etc. don't have a subscription model, but they ask for donations. Ought we to pay for them?
Re: keeping records. Memory Hole, Internet Archive (Wayback Machine),
Google cache, permalinked blog archives mentioned. They generally
remove content when authors demand it. This is a problem.
[Rob] Real knowledge is inside people. Maybe we should give up on the
illusion that all knowledge lies in documents. "Dewey's dead?" "Dewey's
dead."
[Seb Fiedler] preservation (formats, artifacts) is a problem.
[Mita] We store archives. But we don't store computers. Long now.
[?] I collect ephemera. I printed out Netscape's first on hi-quality
acid-free paper. Library are throwing stuff away. I collect some of it.
[?] Storing stuff in closed formats (e.g. M$ Outlook for email) can be self-defeating. (though open formats are not a panacea - they sometimes fall into disuse too - SP)
[?] Chomsky often says "The things I'm talking about are not secrets. I just give context." (see Ming on that)
[?] The danger in not preserving is that we might throw Rosetta stones away.
Wrapping up...
Lisa: I'm heartened to see that librarians aren't the only ones concerned with archiving.
[SebF]: We all become creators. Amateur photographic output far larger than professional. The librarian question is coming home.
Applause
3:02:12 PM
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Friday, October 24, 2003
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Could it be that the ineffable Ron Lusk has returned?
8:17:16 PM
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Beginner's mind
"I have learned the novice can often see things that the expert
overlooks. All that is necessary is not to be afraid of making mistakes
or of appearing naive."
3:36:14 PM
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Tuesday, October 21, 2003
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Help needed in Montreal
I'm posting this because I know I have readers who live in Montreal.
Fellow blogger Mark Carey needs help in retrieving misplaced passports. I
know I'd be really grateful to get help if I were in such a situation...
Are you from Montreal? I need your help!. I really need the help of someone who lives in Montreal. In preparation
for my upcoming honeymoon in Egypt, I mailed our passports and travel
visa applications to the General Consulate of Egypt in Montreal - or so
I thought. It turns out that the address on the Egyptian Embassy
website is wrong - and has been for some time. Canada Post was no help
- all they could tell was that they delivered the package to the wrong
address. They didn't even get a signature as I requested. The Consulate
in Montreal has had this problem before, but they don't have a phone
number for the person or business at the wrong address (they think it
might actually be a residence). The package was delivered October 1,
and it has not been returned.
I need someone in Montreal to help me find out what person or business
is at 3754 Côte-des-Neiges. A telephone number for that address would
be very helpful. Also, if anyone happens to live or work near this
address, it would be extremely nice if you could knock on the door and
ask about the package that was delivered on October 1st - addressed to
"The General Consulate of Egypt" from "Mark Carey". Please email me at
webdawn@markcarey.com if you can help. Thank you so much in advance.
Si tu ne parle pas anglais, je peut lire et communiquer en francais, mais pas tres bien. Merci si tu peut m'aider.... [ Channel 'montreal_quebec_canada']
Yup, outdated info on the Web sucks. Especially when you're shipping passports.
Update: this just in from Kate:
I went today and spoke to the guy who lives at that address on Cote-des-Neiges
where the Egyptian consulate was. He knows about the address issue because he
gets mail there all the time, but he always writes the consulate's real address
on things and throws them back into the mailbox. He hasn't got Mark Carey's
package. He's pretty tired of hearing about the consulate - although he was
perfectly civil with me - so please don't send someone there to ask him again.
10:57:14 AM
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McGee's Musings: "The power of RSS is that the news comes to me filtered by all of those
bright minds, who are themselves feeding off of other bright minds."
10:43:24 AM
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Communication is content
Richard
MacManus is not resigned to describing C-list blogging (i.e.,
one-to-few, by far
the most
prevalent mode in the blogosphere) as mere
"communication":
I
think
there is a comparison between some C-List bloggers and student radio
stations, or pirate radio stations. We have a limited audience, perhaps
even no audience. But we're broadcasting because we believe that our ideas
have some inherent value. Which is more reminiscent of the attitude of 19th-century
pamphleteers than of that of a bunch of teens in the food
court.
There
is indeed a qualitative difference between blogging and conversing
among friends as we are used to doing it: the conversation is
persistent and strangers
may peek in,
sometimes in the middle of the conversation, sometimes months later,
following some obscure link or a lucky Google query. Linkable
conversations enable new interested parties to connect the way
ordinary conversation simply doesn't.
So how should we frame
the activity? By considering the audience, or the author? If we take
the intent of the author as the starting point, "broadcast" may be the
appropriate term - even given a nano-audience.
9:36:00 AM
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Mob outsmarts expert
Many2Many: The Critics Are The First To Go. Brilliant. A manifestation of what many of us have been believing for a long time.
[...] the most important restaurant reviewer in the country was called to
revisit an opinion because his earlier work was so at odds with the
judgment of an anonymous and distributed group; he had to admit that
yes, on sober reflection “The Grocery deserves a nearly perfect score”;
and having made that admission, it is obvious to anyone who cares about
food that the NY Times is now an also-ran compared to Zagat’s in terms of tracking quality over time.
JD Lasica sums it up thusly: "the professional elite no longer has a monopoly on cultural criticism."
As the tools of collective intelligence improve and spread out,
individual critics on matters of popular appeal - food, movies, music,
websites, games, etc., will find it increasingly hard to hold a candle
to the aggregated opinion of mobs. (Another post on M2M illustrates how
collective intelligence impacts the ability to solve puzzles.)
It seems likely that the monopoly of expertise will progressively be
relegated to those topics that few people care about. As soon as
something gets big enough, opinion aggregators will be more reliable
than J. Random Expert. (With the exception of cases where you have
enough prior personal experience with the expert to know you agree with
him most of the time.)
9:03:13 AM
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Fame vs. fortune, again
Greg Gershman on full-content RSS feeds
brings up an interesting point: having a full syndication feed might
decrease your HTML page views while increasing your readership. For an
ad-less blog this is great; however if you get paid by the page you
might lose out - unless you throw ads into your feed. But then you'll
lose subscribers. Sorry, my attention is too precious!
8:28:49 AM
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Monday, October 20, 2003
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"A good listener is not only popular everywhere, but after a while he gets to know something."
-Wilson Mizner
(The additional quotes at the other end of the link are also terrific.)
11:56:17 AM
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Translation scarcity
MSNBC (via Blogalization): "The Feds listen in on terrorists every day. Too often they can’t understand a word they hear."
And on Karl's
(French) blog I learned that out of the 134,000 books that are
published yearly in the US, only 300 are translations of literary
works. The French language is the one that is most commonly translated into English. (This is out of a Libération.fr article.)
11:49:16 AM
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Like minds
Well said, Euan. I still wish like-mind finding were a little easier,
but weblogs offer a significantly useful new way of getting to know
people.
Can I just say ..... ....
that I am very, very lucky. Through this blog I have got to know and
meet some wonderful people. Doc Searls, David Weinberger, Chris Locke,
Gary Turner, Peter Kaminski, Marc Canter, and many, many more . Those
who criticize the web for replacing face to face or normal conversation
have no
idea. I have got to meet all of these people in the flesh and have had
immediate rapport with them as a result of our shared experiences
through blogging. We have "hit the ground running" and have bypassed so
much of the randomness of so many of our "normal" relationships
Over the past year or so Jon Husband
and I have swapped blog posts, comments and e-mails and have clearly
got a lot in common with many shared ideals and aspirations. I have
just had a phone call with Jon from Vancouver and it was such a
pleasure to hear his gentle Canadian accent and feel that, again, we
had "hit the ground running". It felt more like a conversation with an
old and dear friend than a conversation with someone I have never "met"
before.
If nothing else gives me a sense of optimism about the web and the
future of mankind it is this. The ability to establish relationships
and get close to people unconstrained by geography or twists of fate,
to select from the myriad of voices in the blogging world those who we
most resonate with and want to relate to and to be able to do so in
such a powerful and meaningful way. [The Obvious?]
5:55:14 AM
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Copyleft
2006
Sebastien Paquet.
Last update:
4/22/2006; 12:13:24 PM.
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