| wikinomics |
| Written by Ben Sheppard | |
| Thursday, 01 May 2008 | |
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I was given the book Wikinomics for Christmas and have been enjoying the good practical concepts spelled out within its pages over the past few months. This inspired me to create a new category for this blog: "emergent paradigms". Here is the first installment...
Well its abut time to start up a wiki
project on the Global
ICT Systems web site. I don't mean a test wiki
to evaluate whether a particular piece of software would be good for a
client, but rather jump right in and launch a grass roots
egalitarian wiki project and let it go to see what happens... I have
contributed bits and pieces to other wikis around the net over the
years, but have not actually taken on the task of
starting one on my own turf, and also basing it on a category that is
very dear to my heart. (more about that in another article)
This year is the year to unwrap and launch many creative ideas that
have been on the back burner for way too long! BTW, if you are
not familiar with the book Wikinomics, which deals with a much broader
subject than wikis alone... you need to get it now and do some serious
catch up! Wikis
are only part and symptom of a much larger social economic paradigm
that has been going on for quite many years already but beginning to
shift well
into high gear in the current season... and as you too will discover
while
you read that book and start fitting concepts and terms to what you see
happening all around you! The authors, Don Tapscott, and Anthony D. Williams, (kudos to you guys!) have actually put their money where their mouth is (ha ha thats a funny concept in light of what the book is all about) and created a wiki themselves... here is a link to their wiki or as they call it: "the unwritten chapter of their book" where we are all the authors. As I add more installments to this blog I will summarize some so the key things I have learned from the book.
Before I do that, a personal historical prologue is needed to add to
the perspective... I would like to state today for the record however
that for the first
time in my life, I have finally found within the pages of one book, a
place where real concrete terms
have been defined for something I have been dreaming about since I was
a child! These are no longer fuzzy concepts that are hard to explain
in a world where everything seems backwards to what I and many of my
peers from the 60's generation have dreamed
about... Its like Alice coming out of the looking glass, rubbing her
eyes and seeing that the rest of the world is finally getting it
without all the stereotypical clichés and misused concepts in the way
to hide the real truth!
Back in the mid 70's after doing time in the Navy as an electronics
technician, I studied music composition formally, at the New England
Conservatory in Boston, not computer science, as you would probably
guess here... I was very attracted to a buzz going on across the river
and ended up spending a whole lot of my college years hanging around
Kendal
Square, Cambridge Massachusetts, both on line, in the basements of old
dusty MIT buildings, (now, sadly torn down, sniff sniff) and
occasionally in the physical at local Chinese Restaurants with folks
like Richard Stallman,
Linus Torvalds and other long haired dudes hailing from Berkeley
California who had radically different dreams about our future than
folks like Bill Gates, (a Harvard dropout at the time) did.
Back then we used a very asynchronous communications system called
BITNET, cause many of us could not afford expensive networks at home
and only used the expensive ones while at work (for work only)... Later
however the USENET (the early discussion forum system from which all
others have been patterned after) had become so popular that our bosses
began allowing us to communicate on it during working hours, since it
could possibly help us with our jobs :)
Around that time, (mid 80's) I was working at MIT Lincoln Labs, and we had the largest Vax cluster
on the east cost at the time! Although it was locked in a vault so it
was completely useless for communicating with the outside world. So to
communicate with the rest of the world I went down stairs and hung out
on unix based Apollo machines (clumsy but early graphical based
workstations that we geeks of the day thought were pretty cool)
These machines were connected to the ARPANET, that double edged
sword specified by our own US Defense system and built by long haired
dudes, (us) to become today's Internet, the beginning of the end of
corporate America as we know it today...
Anyway back to the subject... At the time our humble text based
communications systems were connecting intelligent minds at
universities all around the globe and a fury of highly creative grass
roots dialog
slowly began to take shape... All of the initial baby step text based
communication applications eventually evolved into more versatile
applications like PLATO Notes, DEC Notes (developed for the VAX/VMS
networks) and finally the famous Lotus Notes, developed by Ray Ozzy at
Lotus Corp (soon to be
bought by the giant IBM because of it) Lotus developed Notes into a
fantastic programmable communications environment (coined groupware)
which ran on generic desktop windows based PCs or Macintosh computers
and used other generic PC based servers capable of replicating
everything you had on your local machine so that it could be
synchronized, duplicated, and shared over vast networks around the
world over the Internet! Around that same time the World Wide Web came along and also the Internet, (our dear brain child), became "commercialized" and many of my peers became very alarmed, heart broken, and disillusioned at the thought of loosing our FREE (as in freedom, not as in free beer) communications network!!! The emergence of the WWW firestorm popularity eclipsed the way cool many to many collaboration capabilities that Lotus Notes initially promised. IBM was smart however and saw the potential of Notes. That's why they bought Lotus. Unfortunately, the emergence of the web and its later adolescent bubble burst close to its 10 year birthday messed up IBM's ability to cash in on the Lotus promise. All of the above events seemed initially sad but they were all most likely blessings in disguise for the following reasons:
In the next blog: wikinomics II, I will talk about key points learned from the Book Wikinomics... - dbs |
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| Last Updated ( Thursday, 22 May 2008 ) |