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More Hydra Collaborative Annotations

I think when you’re born you maybe get a discreet amount of mental storage and then maybe when you’ve used up that amount of storage then maybe it all seeps out of your ears or something. This is a really good way to prove that we’re not all living in a huge simulation – no computer system could hold all the information and resonance that’s being jammed into my brain at the moment. I need someone fat to sit on my head so that I can keep the lid down.

  • Hydra notes on Social Software and Social Capital
    James Cronin’s and Matt Jones’ talk was slightly compromised by an initial clunkiness with the projector. I think they think it threw the whole thing off balance, but it was really involving and interesting…

  • Hydra notes on What Groups Will Be
    A fascinating afternoon’s lecture by David Weinberger touched on some apparently slight but actually pretty profound questions about how social interactions work and/or don’t work online and what we can do about it (if anything). Good notes here as well on uses of Hydra…
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The Emotional History of the World…

The difference in atmosphere in the keynotes between the guy from Google and the guy from Microsoft is tangible. When the guy from Microsoft talks, there’s scepticism – hostility even. There’s a sense of outrage when he doesn’t know what a GPL is, frustration when mentions that he things ‘things built by committee’ are messy. The only clap he gets is for mentioning that he hates the PowerPoint paperclip… The guy from Google gets a clap within the first ten minutes for mentioning that he likes the way that his site does search-query spell-correcting. It’s immensely satisfying, but it makes you wonder what impact gut emotional reactions have had on the history even of the most ostensibly rational industries, technology and computing – …

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The motherships have landed…

Driving around Santa Clara is like being inside an episode of Stargate – it’s like there’s a flat desolate alien landscape all around us that’s being used as a massive landing strip for these huge monstrous mother-ship style buildings. Each building has a brand that’s sharp and occasionally scarily authoritarian in appearance – like the flags for an alien regime. I keep thinking that there are lizard creatures inside that have come to dominate the earth. Around the monstrous motherships (our hotel is one), all these smaller buildings are littered around – like cleaner fish around a whale, or like the tents and mud-structures that surround the huge architectural beasts of pyramid-like tombs. They’re subservient buildings, housing creatures with no other purpose than to serve the whatever-the-fuck-it-is that is living its domineering life in the bowels of Network Solutions or Globix or…

When I see them in our rare trips outside the building, I never feel certain that there won’t be a terrible rumbling and shaking with smoke and dust everywhere and they won’t just lift off to find a new world to colonise and destroy. It’s kind of arcane and beautiful in a ‘beauty of the bush-fire” kind of way. I love it here.

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Random

More Hydra transcripts…

It’s like the Unkle track says, “We had access to too many, uh, too much money. Too much equipment, and little by little we went insane”. Here are two more text-transcripts done collaboratively over Hydra from this afternoon’s sessions:

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Conference Notes Location Social Software

"UpMyStreet Conversations: Mapping Cyber to Space"

So. A bit delayed. Sorry to all concerned. I’ll post later about the experience of delivering a paper at Emerging Tech later, when I’ve had a chance to assimilate the whole experience, but if you’re looking for the PowerPoint presentation then here it is: UpMyStreet Conversations: Mapping Cyber to Space (5.7Mb). The paper was cowritten by myself, Stefan Magdalinski and Matt Webb.

“Mad props” to Webb by the way, who somehow managed to keep me sane through the whole thing and forced me to finish writing the thing by suggesting he might cause me physical pain – I’m a bit euphoric so I’m going to say that he’s one of my favourite people in the world at the moment. If people notice any hideous typos or mistakes through it, then let me know and I’ll amend it straightaway.

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Conference Notes

Vignette from ETCon…

So I’m hiding in the Speaker’s Room with Vee McMillan – trying to get my stuff printed out for my paper (T minus one hour, fifteen minutes) and this woman comes into the room saying that she thinks she really wants to see Clay Shirky and she doesn’t know where to go to see him. And Vee says that she thinks it’s almost over and the woman looks a bit flustered and says that actually it doesn’t matter, she just really wants to see his face. Vee tells her where to go. She leaves. Excited. Groupie? Fan? Mother? The world needs to know…

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Social Software

Hydra, Biological Computing and Eric†Bonabeau

Right. I’m going to keep amending this post as I think of things to say and get other things done. I’m in the middle of a talk with Tim O’Reilly at the moment (how cool is my life), but I reckon I can concentrate on two things at once and talk a little bit about the last presentation I was at (Eric Bonabeau on Biological Computing). Or in fact – rather than talk about Eric Bonabeau’s talk, I’m going to talk a little about playing with Hydra and how around ten separate geeks collaborated to try and annotate and comment upon a discussion in real time… But first things first – the incredibly messy (and extremely entertaining to write) set of notes on the talk in question:

Right. What you can’t see on this document is which pieces were written by which people – and that’s a terrible shame because all that extra information that could be of use just vanishes when you save it to a disk. More to the point, it makes it really hard to demonstrate when it’s worked really well and when it’s fallen apart. So in this particular case I’ve done a set of screen-caps to illustrate what’s been going on:

More later (hopefully) on the experience of writing (messily and collaboratively) with Hydra. Addendum: Here’s a screen-cap of the participants all colour-coded as of the end of the eventhydra_tray.gif

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Random

New Blogger & New Movable Type…

Ok. Finally it looks like Blogger is going to start catching up with the rest of the weblogging applications that have been developed or have been enhanced over the last couple of years. You can read all about Dano at new.blogger.com. First things first – they’ve been working on the interface. Here are a couple of (presumably rough – some low-fi) interfaces for the new system – which clearly aren’t designed to look their best on a Mac. Still – never mind, it’s early days:

While we’re at it – perhaps with less mass-appeal (but I guess we’ll see), keep an eye out for TypePad – the new Six Apart venture that’s supposed to be a turnkey version of Movable Type – kind of like Blogger, but more powerful. [Typepad stuff via kottke.]

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Net Culture

Is industry evil? A response to Rheingold…

Howard Rheingold – who is speaking at this very moment on stage in Santa Clara – just said that companies would like the get us back into the role of “Consumers” rather than “Users”. He says:

“Consumers passively recieve what is broadcast by a few. Radio, TV, movies, recorded music. Users actively shape media, create as well as consume, link together for collective action: PC, Internet, Web.”

I’m not sure I buy this. I don’t think companies have any interest whatsoever in specifically trying to define people’s relationships with media, they’re simply trying to protect their businesses. Defining the relationship is simply a means-to-an-end. This negative spin sounds too much like conspiracy theory to me. I think we have to find a way of convincing companies that their financial interest is in being at the forefront of some of these technologies – and I think (to an extent) some of the technologies we are trying to get into the common sphere will be lost or banned along the way. Yes – it’s a combative matter – it’s like in a court or in the political process – it’s important that both sides are able to put their opinions and debate and extend their arguments – but it’s not a black & white, “Good vs. Evil” thing. Ignorance versus Knowledge maybe (other people might say that it’s Business versus Communism, of course)…

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Conference Notes Social Software

Emerging Tech 2003

125x125.gif So on Thursday I’ll be delivering a paper at O’Reilly Emerging Tech called “UpMyStreet Conversations: Mapping Cyber to Space”. The paper, which I have co-written with Matt Webb and Stefan Magdalinski, will be mostly about the basics of how Conversations works but will also include a more rigorous investigation of three areas where geocoded communities present new challenges to developers of social software.