Archive for Social Bookmarking

Caledon Immersion, Stories, Bonding & Identity

Posted in 3D Social Networks, Future Shock, Gaming, Second Life, Social Bookmarking, Video Games by wayne.porter on February 21st, 2008

The quick recap of one of my usual winding posts that go on and on….but really worth thinking about. The short version Chev summed up in an insult , yes it is true but the mnemonic is far more succinct. (For those late to the game- we are one and the same, only the avatar version does not always behave as predicted and generally denies I exist.)

- Chev, our rogue knight, wonders out loud in twitter after viewing a Caledonian island covenant.

- Helpful Pfanderson steps up to guide the knight with some information.

- I follow-up via e-mail and ask three questions of Mr. Drinkwater, esteemed and humble resident of Caledon. Carried to him via the helpful Lady Anderson.

- Later this pm, after many e-mails, Tweets, Skypes, etc from folks, and judging by unique visitors on my steampunk’o'meter I find it thrilling to say Caledonians enjoy reading long windy posts. That does not excuse my poor writing, only that I believe that Caledonians will read anything with a vigor that is not quite human.

I received a letter from Mr. JJ Drinkwater. I have not replied back to Mr. Drinkwater, although I shall, and it is not for being at a loss for words, but because after reading it…I felt intruding would be like- well- interrupting a very nice play.

Upon Mr. Porter’s Questions on Caledon, its history, and boons.

These were brokered to Mr. Drinkwater through the quill of Ms. Anderson and I report below. Enjoy and savor fair reader, to use a word from Mr. Drinkwater, the “zest” in this reply. I have made small edits to links for purpose of aesthetics and other slight changes, otherwise this is the text as sent from the good fellow. I shall attempt commentary later, for now my hope is that more Caledonians send me letters so that I may digest them first, then share them. It is rather selfish, but I am a rogue and it is a stingy pleasure.

My Dear Sir.

You raise some extraordinarily interesting questions, indeed….some of which I cannot even presented to answer, but can query in their turn. Before I begin, however, I should like to say that, devoted as the Caledon Library is to our fair nation, we cannot pretend to stand in for Caledon’s sundry Founders, Historians, and Pundits, many of whom, I am entirely convinced, will make themselves heard on ths matter, either at this estimable table, or from their own Podia.

1) Does the Caledonian citizen’s interests in literature influence how well curated the history of the build seems to be?

That is a dangerous question to ask a Librarian, sir, as we are apt to place literature at the centre of all things, and to see all things by its light. However, since you have asked…

Caledon was created to be a 19th-century environment—but Caledon is very far from being a historical re-creation. I like to say that when one comes to Caledon, rather than entering the 19th century, one enters the 19th century imagination. The world of Caledon has as much in it of Ivanhoe and 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea as it does of *The Mayor of Casterbridge*, *Hard Times*, or even *The Pickwick Papers*. This means that Caledon draws on a very large body of literature and history, instead of (like many other RP regions) a single created world, or body of mythology. Moreover, although it is nowhere stated, the implicit story is (arguably) that Caledon is British, or is Britain, as seen through some appropriate looking-glass.This means that the flourishing of the English-language novel in the 19th century gives Caledon—and its library—a rich source of material to draw on.

During a most edifying conversation, on Orange, this week, the following was said (with much edited out inbetween)

[12:40] Sin Trenton: When “pure” Victorians meet “pure” Steampunkers. In other groups in the past, there is alienation.. In Caledon forums, people promptly decided they wanted to learn more about the other side
(snip)
[12:40] Ordinal Malaprop: Yes, actually, I did want to mention stylistic divisions - not in terms of drama necessarily
(snip)
[12:42] JJ Drinkwater has it categorized into the imaginary 19th century of….. Dickens/Hardy/Thackeray, Verne/Wells, and Scott/Rackham

I suppose I should have said the Imaginary 19th *centuries*, for each of those groups of authors deals in a particular genre of imagination. In Caledon, indeed, the Masters of Technology are not on Mars, they are flying overhead in something brass-riveted and steam-powered, and Fairies are not at the bottom of the garden, they are next door throwing a rout and waltzing for dear life. But what *is* a literature, if it is not how a group of persons…a community, a nation, or what have you…conceives of itself and its surrounds, and pases that conception between themselves, and so on to the larger world, and perhaps to the world that is removed from what they limn, in time as well as space?

I must confess my brain (known for its inelasticity, it is true) will not stretch to encompass the idea of Caledon as a build, unless you are using “build” as a shorthand for “the constructed evidence of a community”? In which case, there is indeed a great consonance between the sundry literacies of Caledon-the-c0mmunity (and how Caledonians read such literatures as inspire them) and manner in which they have depicted, and commemorated, what has struck them about Caledon-the-place

2) Are there any specialized tools or processes that a community can use to “keep its identity”. Regain its identity?

Here I am beyond my depth, as I am but poorly acquainted with the thinking of Archivists, who ( if I am not mistaken, which I may well be) ask us to conceive that what a culture creates, and preserves, is the stuff it will use to understand its own nature, or identity, or, if you like, its geist or spirit or soul.

However, from my own little experience, I can say that what Caledon seems to use are tools that are scarcely specializied, but to use them in a manner which is informed by the will and desire to be a community, indeed, perhapse even to be a People.

The Caledon Forums, and the Caledon Aethero-blogo-sphere, to which Sir Edward has graciously pointed us, uses blogs and wikis and discussion threads and suchlike, it seems to me, to instantiate the vast fluctuating wonder that is the identity of Caledon. They do this by sustaining, and making available, over time, a conversation posessing a thousand topics, but through which runs a submerged thread of “Is this Caledon?” “How is this Caledon” “How is this important to Caledon?” “How is this useful to Caledon?” &c. We speak of many matters, but they are all, somehow, matters of Caledon, and it is through this long and multfaceted conversation that the identity of Caledon comes forward to meet the eye.

I consulted long-time Caledon Steward Serra Anansi on this point, and she put in neatly into the following nutshell: “Every joy, trial, cause or flame war links us all for better or worse…”
I would add that it is not only Caledon’s numerous accomplished builders, but also its cultural institutions….its galleries and theatre and musical venues, perhaps even its library…that feed the delight we all take in this. Every time Radio Riel gives us another day of music from Miss Austen’s era or dances us gaily through a Burns Night Supper (http://radioriel.blogspot.com/2008/01/robbie-burns-and-music-of-scotland.html), every time we see our own images reflected in an exhibit of portraits we enrich our sense of community, and its pleasures.

3) How has having a “history” helped the overall community at Caledon?

This, I believe, is a question for the Historians of Caledon, among which honoured company I dare not place myself.

However, I will speculate that it is as something in the nature of a shared narrative, a set of stories we may tell and retell one another, and by our actions extend indefinitely, that Caledon’s “history” has helped us bond into a community.

We are, of course, making it up as we go along, when we perform the daily duties and pleasures that make up the life of Caledon….only, we are not making it up out of whole cloth. Rather, we are elaborating, each of us in our own way, the stories we already know. We have, as it were, a body of images and devices and motifs, and therefore both our stock of Caledon Characters and our skeleton bits of business ready to hand, and, like the players in the Commedia dell’arte, with their Lazzi and Scenarios, we are ready to charge onto the stage and improvise for all we are worth, and to the enjoyment of all concerned.

That we needn’t guess, or rely on our own fallible memories, for what has made up Caledon, but may rather contemplate the evidence of Caledon’s Caledonian-ness in a variety of places, I would think, only serves to facilitate the zest with which we go about the thing.

I am, sir, your most humble etc etc

JJ Drinkwater

It is I who must thank you Mr. Drinkwater and other Caledonians that I am sure debated the issue in some chamber far away. It is rare to get a response that is not only entertaining and humble and yet so courteous I am want to give up being a wandering knight, a long story really how that occured, and sit still in my classroom chair and read proper. Then again, who would Caledonians make merry over? I can serve, if anything, as a bad example of knighthood and will continue to poorly question any Caledonian who would waste time with this Chevalier.

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Popularity: 5% [?]

Why The Education System Doesn’t Get Immersive Education

I am not saying educators do not! The system does not get it and when I see this

The Immersive Education Initiative is an international collaboration of universities, colleges, research institutes, consortia and companies that are working together to define and develop open standards, best practices, platforms, and communities of support for virtual reality and game-based learning and training systems.

Immersive Education combines 3D and virtual reality (VR) technology with digital media to bring distance learning and self-directed learning to a new level. Unlike traditional distance learning, Immersive Education is designed to immerse and engage students in the same way that today’s best video games grab and keep the attention of players. Immersive Education combines interactive virtual reality and sophisticated digital media (voice chat, game-based learning modules, audio/video, and so forth) with collaborative online course environments and classrooms. Immersive Education gives students a sense of “being there” even when attending class in person isn’t possible, practical, or desirable, which in turn provides faculty and remote students with the ability to connect and communicate in a way that greatly enhances the learning experience.

Immersive Education and the Media Grid public compute utility on which it is built were recently recognized with a national award by Computerworld as “…innovative, promising technologies which hold the potential to significantly affect society in the near future.”

A) No kidding. Second Lifers have known this for a long time.

B) I do not need pixels to get immersion…(they are fun though)

SOME LOWER TECH EXAMPLES:

PLAYING WITH MUD

SNORKELING FRESHWATER PONDS

WALKING IN THE WOODS TO GATHER HERBS

TEARING SHIT APART FOR FUN (just got my blog censored for that- maybe this is why the system doesn’t get it- protecting ourselves from ourselves?)

MAKING STUFF OUT OF ODDS AND ENDS TO SOLVE A PROBLEM OR SEE HOW IT WORKS

LISTENING TO STORIES AROUND A CAMP FIRE

Which is why I try not to ever get to immersed in some mechanical “college marketing books”.

Why? FORWARD THINKING FICTION or ADVENTURE IS GREAT FOR IMMERSION and EDUCATION….and where I get my blue prints.

Phillip Jose Farmer
The World of Tiers: Volume One (World of Tiers)

In the World of Tiers we meet earthlings Robert Wolff and Paul Janus Finnigan (alias Kickaha) who through strange circumstances are “gated” into a parallel pocket universe. These pocket universes are maintained by mostly insane “Lords” who are paranoid and spend most of their time trying to kill each other to stave off ennui. The World of Tiers is just that, a multi-tiered world that spans a virtual garden of Eden and changes each level until we come to a deadly palace at the top. I won’t spoil it, but the first three are really good, old-fashioned rip roaring reads.

Farmer’s books went on to inspire the late Roger Zelazny who wrote The Chronicles of Amber. He was so inspired by The World of Tiers Zelanzy actually dedicated one of the books in the series to the main characters Jadawin and Kickaha. I have found Amber to be an incredibly accurate metaphor for Second Life. (Matter of fact you might find the quixotic Chevaliers names and behavior to be quite similar to those of Amberites at times.). In the Amber stories, Amber and the Courts of Chaos are the only two “true” worlds. Everything else, even Earth, are called or simply the byproducts of “shadows”. The royal family of Amber that negotiates the Pattern, and the equivalent Chaos nobility who have walked the Logrus, can freely travel through the shadows and alter them at will. The obvious metaphor for Second Life being that of some arbitrary static reality and the existence of an infinite number of “negotiated realities”. Furthermore we have the metaphor of a scripter or builder who can literally “create” whatever they choose- it is nothing but Shadow and really quite malleable- even the physics.

The books are narrated by Corwin who suffers from amnesia, escapes, tracks down his sister Florimel, and discovers that he is a prince of Amber. He is taken by his brother Random to walk the Pattern. The Pattern is the construct which gives the multiverse its order. Walking the Pattern restores Corwin’s memory and his powers to travel through shadow…I won’t spoil the rest and since it is late I will let the Wikipedia hammer at the metaverse concepts within.

Amber and Second Life Parallels

The series is based on the concept of parallel worlds, domination over them being fought between the kingdoms at the extreme ends of Shadow—Amber, the one true world of Order, and the Courts of Chaos. Amberites of royal blood—those descended from Oberon (and ultimately his parents, Dworkin, formerly of the Courts of Chaos, and the Unicorn of Order herself) —are able to “walk in Shadow”, mentally willing changes to occur around them. These changes are, in effect, representative of the Shadow-walker passing through different realities. There are apparently infinite realities, either found by the Shadow-walker locating such worlds or by creating them (we the readers are never sure; neither are the characters).

Within this multiverse, Zelazny deals with some interesting philosophical concepts about the nature of existence, compares and contrasts the ideas of Order and Chaos, and plays with the laws of physics—they can differ from Shadow to Shadow; for instance, gunpowder does not ignite in Amber, which is why the characters all carry swords. Other Shadows have green skies and blue suns, cities of glass and Kentucki Fried Lizzard Partes, and worlds out of our own fiction can come to life.

In short, as I have maintained, reality is what we mutually negotiate- like modems we will find a common protocol. A game is what we choose to make out of it and if left idle humans will create their own rules and games to satisfy their needs.

Pixels, Mud, Time and Collaboration…oh yeah and Permission to break the pattern. Oh yes and teaching us how to think…

3D social networking attention education fun future immersive education junk Language & Sound Language Sound learning MUD Online Education open source play Reading & Literature Reading Literature Recreation Science Second Life Social Bookmarking Social Networks thinking

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Attention Profiling Mark-Up Language ACHTUNG BABY!

Posted in 3D Social Networks, Attention, Security, Social Bookmarking, Social Networks, Web 2.0 by wayne.porter on January 13th, 2008

Are you paying attention?

Fleep has been. In via Google Reader. Too intriguing not to just rehash with bolds. (Mine)

For those of you concerned that some of the time you spend on the web is a complete waste of time, you may now sleep at night. It turns out that the countless hours we devote to browsing the web and using web-hosted applications will benefit us in a new way—every minute we invest in using the internet will pay off in an increasingly relevant experience.

Programmers are leveraging APML (Attention Profiling Mark-Up Language) to allow users to share their “attention profile”—a compressed file of Attention Data such as browsing history, shared photos, blog posts, tweets, social bookmarks, and more—to reveal their ranked interests in order that they may receive more relevant information from content providers. Put simply, Attention Data tells content providers what we pay attention to the most so that they can align their efforts with our exact tastes.

Sounds brilliant? It is. Attention profiling has the potential to revolutionize an individual’s browsing experience. Currently, we are in an age of hyper-saturation in which searching for relevant content is a burdensome task. The APML standard will give you greater control over your Attention Data, allowing you to choose what is recorded in your attention profile—favorite websites, frequently used search terms, content you link to—and share it with your favorite websites and online services.

APML will provide marketers with a highly coveted wealth of information and users with a better web experience and control over their personal information in order to prevent exploitative data mining. The benefits are clear, which is why many new and existing sites, including many popular social media and networking sites that collect a magnitude of information, are on board. For a good example of how powerful it can be, check out Idiomag, the beautifully designed, highly interactive music magazine that shows you music news and media relevant to your favorite musicians.

Here’s a couple of links with more details about APML and other revolutionary open standards to appease the inner geek in you.

Miles Lennon is an entrepreneur and innovation enthusiast.

Remember this blogs title from the simple equation. Attention = Revenue.

(Attention Profiling Mark Up Language) 3D social networking attention attention profile Attention Profiling Mark Up Language attention revenue blog posts browsing history privacy Security shared photos Social Bookmarking social bookmarks Social Networks tweets web2.0

Popularity: 3% [?]

Moving from X,Y to X,Y and Z. Z is the magic variable for Performance Marketing.

Just tuned into Jeff Doak and Sam Harrelson who cranked out the Jeff and Sam Talk about Marketing, Tech, TeH Internets and Other Stuff (Beta) Show primarily on Facebook and validating what we all knew was going to happen to search with odd twists like Mahalo. I think this was discussed months ago on a Molander guy’s cast.

Great podcast guys- one hour seems to be a sweet spot. A few thoughts and ideas.

- Rumor has it the ill-conceived, worst app ever, 3d Mailboxes is out of West Virginia…/me laughs at irony.

- 3dMailbox is an incredibly horrible implementation of an incredibly great idea and still follows the attention = revenue formula. Allow it change your thinking from an X,Y World (Flat Web Pages) to an X,Y,Z world (Simulated 3D). Much like Second Life and actually building and vending products in the 3D world…when you throw in that Z coordinate suddenly things like Engagement, Curiosity, Influence, etc can be measured. :) I am ashamed to say it took me months to puzzle that out, but it is a reality and why it still holds my fascination- among other reasons…e.g. acceleration of relationship formation, the impact of the lack of accountability, Avatar as proxy, etc, etc. The issues are multi-fold and momentous and only way to get a grasp on them is to participate. Easy to get into but a steep learning curve to gain mastery.

- Performance marketing companies don’t and won’t get it because they are classically too focused on product improvements instead of pure R&D and rewarding change agents. Rather than improve a system it is about gaming the system…although I argue some gaming is healthy and a little entropy is good because it destabilizes the system. Sidenote: If you cannot control the entropical forces acting on your system you join them or buy them.

- Jeff D. I can totally see how 3D Mailboxes being so bad one would wonder if it weren’t some sleek sleight of hand Brian Clarkian style of faux social media.

- I feel Facebook’s success is predicated on their wise choice to attack the weird angle of a delicate time- renegotiation of college social networks…and their almost incredible illusion of an extension of privacy. Zero privacy, read the TOS…background etc- not a secret- just cleverly wrapped. (Sam please quit messing with my social AI- hanging out in the desert does not mean we lived together).

- Couple that wise choice with control of mass and the velocity at which this mass moves. It has to be somewhat “safe”. Something that MySpace has failed to do, as Chris Boyd points out time and time again, and why they are trapped in this impression/click world of defectors. Once again let’s philosophically call it the Z variable- it lacks “depth”. Facebook offering up an API let’s the community give it all kinds of depth, but they do contain the aesthetic to where you can operate without getting knifed by malware and if you leave the system they are sure to reinforce the fact you are leaving the system! Very astute.

So while everyone chucks bad food at applications like Second Life (primarily due to the ridiculous amounts of perceived freedom, in some ways a low barrier to entry, poor protection for content creators against system gamers, a hideously steep learning curve coupled with complex GUI) the parallels are very similar and valuable. Whether it fails it or not may be largely predicated on LL’s ability to nurture trust, making it secure, reformation of their GUI, and making it more pragmatic and perhaps the rate of adoption of post-humanism among society. I know there are many trans-humanists in Second Life which is even further evolved or devolved depending on your POV.

- Thought or question for the day. Does so-called social media, let’s call it influence, scale? I think so.

It takes a lot of force to move the needle, but once it gets past the sound barrier…the plane stops jumping, going crazy and you break the mythical sound barrier…Chuck Yeager like. Also rumored he is out of West Virginia…

Lastly and yes Mr. Doak I agree- A.I. has a long way to go before it replaces wetware in one the critical aspects brands like to examine- TONE. …which is even more complex if you map posited tone against a quadrant that looks at number of visits (”interest”), and time spent on site (”engagement”). Very exciting world out there…I’ll think about it while on vacation and let Jason’s Mahaloians puzzle out those SERPs.

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Vinny Lingham’s Synthasite and Facebook Funds, Widgets and Social Relevance

Biz Partner and business visionary Vinny Lingham has launched Synthasite into alpha. I know Vinny, I know he is damn smart (Yeah ok… Kwisatz Haderach smart), and I have high hopes for Synthasite…and while this news is a bit late on my blog- I am looking forward to the beta version.

Synthasite, an AJAX based Web Publishing Platform, emerged today from stealth mode. The 6-person startup based in Cape Town, South Africa was recently spun out from the incuBeta group as a separate stand-alone company that will focus on delivering a world class web based software platform for web publishing, focusing specifically on Widgets & Mashups. Synthasite looks and feels like desktop software, but remains firmly rooted in the browser with no reliance on client side technology.

Facebook Tangent Alert

I wonder if Vinny will tap into Facebook?…of course one might read the TOS behind Facebook, because it really is just that- your face, your life, your friends- like a book. Not that Web 2.0 hasn’t made it one already- think of it is more a Bible. But funds setup and earmarked to monetize Facebook? The value is in the data if you ask me. Time to go see I guess.

I mean imagine Google’s Grand Central fused with Facebook, caramelized with Google Analytics…uber social network. Ripe for engineers like Brian Clark and ripe for others…

Things are changing from widgetry to Nielson sobering up over pageviews (think engagement), and while some call it insanity…these dozens of fast-tracked, micro-investments are a pittance compared to what really sits in the value of Facebook- it is not insanity too me.

Check out this Video from Google and a talk from Fred from UNC Chapel Hill and his research into “The Facebook”. Yes according to Fred- Facebook owns your campus. Zoho has tapped in, LinkedIn and StumbleUpon (ebay) has tapped in, even colleague Steve Rosenbaum has tapped Magnify into FaceBook. (Steve- yes people taking JPGs of JPGs!)….

One takeaway from the research talk Fred finds that friends in Facebook “are not real”, they are not quite like the friendships we form off line. I see the SAME type of behaviors in Second Life- friendship formation is not the same as face-to-face friendship formation- even with an avatar as proxy. People are hanging out and learning about each other. Second Life is different though, in the Facebook you are identity sharing, in Second Life the identity you share is not quite the same…

Also pay close attention to the concept of situational relevance. IN particular freshman who must renegotiate their “social network” and identity formulation and reformulation. This is the hinge pin of Facebook’s success. Again similar principles with Second Life where people can “try on” different identities…in a “walled garden”…

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Popularity: 9% [?]

Paperghost and RSA Photos…To Tweet, Pownce, or Micro What?

Paperghost serves up photos (nostalgia) behind our RSA 2007 trek…this post was short enough it should have been a “tweet”. I am beginning to think most communications could be tweets. Instead it got Pownced. Now I am fool enough to accept Sam Harrelson’s test of Grand Central and Spock…Facebook I resist- for now. I look for Google to sweep that up…

ADDENDUM- Why would Google sweep it up? Vinny Lingham’s take is pretty telling.

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Popularity: 7% [?]

Second Life, MySpace, Twitter and Wings of the Sounds of Thunder

Have I been in torpor? No. I have been resting up after my near fatal crash, or at least detaching from the net enough to clear thoughts and mull over the vast amount of information, theory and news that keeps flying my way. At times shutting off the spigot so I can listen. Not easy to do, but needed.

Still for those wondering- I have a pulse despite a publishing hiatus. I have been (and remain) deeply immersed in:

- unified communications
- Web 2.0
- “Security 3.0″, and, of course

- Metaverses and culture….which continue to totally fascinate me, or more the revolutions I find happening inside of them. I have went into deep immersion into the ether in the wee hours- in this case Second Life.

My AV has hot air balloned over empty sims, horse galloped through deserted suburbia, bought up slums, swept into griefer zones to trade tech, visited goth pits, coffin camping, entered places that were majestic and others that were too offensive for even my Indiana avatar to handle. I even jumped off the WSE (World Stock Exchange) with a parachute. The best way to know terrain is to get ones hands dirty. I do believe that. In this case, pixels are elusive.

I felt I (or my avatar who thinks he “controls me”) needed to go “Indiana Jones style” to find out what is/was really happening- good and bad.. A report soon…far too much to tell and like any story- you can’t tell it all, but it gets pretty intriguing. I have even contemplated keeping an AV journal…but then that shard of synthetic being might get more bold.

But metaverses, unified communications, web 2.0 and security are ALL related.

A side note on: “Twitter and Social Media Chain Reactions” that I wrote on March 18th, 2007. In that post I looked at how Twitter (it could be any nano blogging platform…) can forge new paths. Small sentences, mixed media, and memes propogate.

Noted this gem from Fleep. (Love the 30 prim cottage btw- if you read this Fleep.)

Fleep finds it and….this twit emerges three months or so later.

Responding to WPorter asynchronously: http://tinyurl.com/2xekaa

02:12 PM June 10, 2007 from im

If you have read Ray Bradbury’s 1952 short story “Sounds of Thunder” you will recall the plight of Eckels who “blew it” and history too.

A short summary: This well-known story about time travel revolved around a business called Time Safari, Inc. Time Safari promises to take people back in time so they can hunt prehistoric animals even the grand Tyrannosaurus rex.

In order to avoid a “time paradox”, Time Safari is careful to leave history undisturbed on the principle that even a minute change can cause major changes in the future. Travellers are only allowed to shoot animals that are already about to die, and they are required to stay on a path which hovers slightly above the ground. Hunting trophies are not taken; no souvenir is allowed except a photograph of the hunter standing next to the dead, and I think they even removed bullets. This was possible because T.S. knew when the animal was about to die of natural causes or by accident- like a tree falling on it. It was for the “thrill of it all”. I won’t spoil it- it is worth reading, but the story is a fictional exploration of what later came to be called the “Butterfly Effect”.

The butterfly effect is a phrase that encapsulates the more technical notion of sensitive dependence on initial conditions in chaos theory. Small variations of the initial condition of a nonlinear dynamical system may produce large variations in the long term behavior of the system. So this is sometimes presented as esoteric behavior, but can be exhibited by very simple systems: for example, a ball placed at the crest of a hill might roll into any of several valleys depending on slight differences in initial position.

The phrase refers to the idea that a butterfly’s wings might create tiny changes in the atmosphere that ultimately cause a tornado to appear (or prevent a tornado from appearing). The flapping wing represents a small change in the initial condition of the system, which causes a chain of events leading to large-scale phenomena. Had the butterfly not flapped its wings, the trajectory of the system might have been vastly different.

Recurrence, the approximate return of a system towards its initial conditions, together with sensitive dependence on initial conditions are the two main ingredients for chaotic motion. They have the practical consequence of making complex systems, such as the weather, difficult to predict past a certain time range (approximately a week in the case of weather).

How do I tie this in? I have read lately a few pundits predicting the “demise” of certain companies namely Second Life, MySpace, and Twitter. I say- so what? Even if Second Life where to implode tomorrow more metaverses are lining up to explode into existence. Even if MySpace were to blow apart from critical mass and the abuse of that mass, the vertical vultures are prepared to swoop in and fill in. Even if Twitter, bless its soul, were to flatline tomorrow, the clones are in wait. I still maintain Twitter should be adopted for the Enterprise as a cultural and a tool to desilo. Throw out power points and Evan- get an Enterprise version of Twitter behind the firewall. Actually most of these technologies are UNDERUTILIZED.

Still the efforts are pioneering and the concepts are sound, provocative, useful- the future- ask ANY kid. They might not Second Life, but four million Club Penguin. If they are on Club Penguin they are not watching T.V. They are not doing alot of things traditional media powers might believe.

The firms might die, but the effect, the “concept” is out of the bottle and transfiguring the landscape.

MySpace

- MySpace has become a basic badge for the “digital self” and the destruction of the common aesthetic. Yes it is clunky and ugly, but it has mass- which is good and bad. The larger the system the more prone to errors, breakdowns, problems, gaming and mischief.

Twitter

- Twitter- Microchunked information simply makes sense and more sense to canonize thought in “blogs”. Much like contemporary mass IM, now a decade old, Twitter continues to impact our language as we seek to squeeze in information. Sadly much of what we write may be in danger of getting lost on media we won’t be able to read so keep your paper (or rock tablet) handy.

Second Life

- Second Life is effecting behavior and an early sign of the rise of nascent posthumanism. The injection of a robust economic system is causing mass change. For example, new exchanges exist to trade equities in firms that produce goods and products that simply do not exist beyond the purpose of creating goods for “Avatars” or digital representations for the self. You get dividends in currency that has no value beyond a EULA and the survival of a company. Big deal? I have talked to dozens of traders (due to my vantage point) from all walks of life fully prepared to wager on the virtual exchange, but when the NASDAQ says something to the effect of- “Yes we would consider trading in a virtual world”- people need to wake up.

All of these so called “doomed” companies are not failures- they are pioneers. It is the concept that matters. These are only a few examples of “social media or socializing around media and chain reactions.”.

These are conversations that never would, could or might have existed.

Each word from an individual is on par with a flap of a butterfly’s wings.

3D social networking Blogging E Commerce future Gaming microblogging Online Education Social Bookmarking Social Networks twitter web2.0 widgets

Popularity: 8% [?]

Dodgeball knocked out By Twitter? Google Snacks on DCLK- Is Twitter Next?

Per Mashable

Dodgeball, the text-message based social networking service, seems to have been left for dead.

Dennis Crowley, the founder of Dodgeball, and Alex Rainert have both left the sinking Dodgeball ship. Acquired by Google in 2005, Crowley insists that Google is not providing the resources necessary to innovate their service, let alone keep up with recently popular Twitter and newcomer Jaiku. Crowley and Rainert have decided to quit Google, leaving Dodgeball to fend for itself. An announcement from Crowley says that the whole experience at Google was frustrating, “especially as we couldn’t convince them that Dodgeball was worth engineering resources, leaving us to watch as other startups got to innovate in the mobile + social space.”

In the end, that leaves Twitter the reigning chief. Not that their dominance was in question as of late, but Dodgeball is sure to meet its end very soon. It’s a shame that Google never built up Dodgeball, considering the current and future mobile market, but then again, Google has $3.1 billion deals to tend to.

Much is going on, but here we hear Dodgeballers are leaving…why? In my opinion you might have Google who has developed more of a sweetspot for Twitter…(not to mention the smack down on Double Click granted MSFT doesn’t throw in a legal tackle with anti-trust- huh?)…ok I am not counting out Jaiku (now hatching an API), but I dunno…at least the banner might come backback!

Ha! Steve Rubel and I agree…if you cannot see the value in Twitter or Oxbow lakes- if you cannot see the massive changes that “micro-chunking” will bring. Well…You cannot be helped…really you are doomed. Rumor is that all your Facebook might be curling up with Twitter features???

Then you do you have to wonder…AOL….MSFT, Yahoo, or Google? Who is going to acquire America Online- because you can “feel it”. My money was on MSFT, but after this, I think it might be Google might- who knows…hint to Microsoft- a war chest is not a war chest- unless you use it to go to war- damnit! Makes you wonder about Valueclick and CJ?

Popularity: 9% [?]

The One Really Useful Aspect about MySpace

Posted in Social Bookmarking, Social Networks, Web 2.0 by wayne.porter on March 29th, 2007

I am still not a huge fan of MySpace, although I maintain a page out of experimenters habit, but there is absolutely one thing it is great for, truly excels at- reconnections from ages long forgotten. I have had so many people contact me from my old stomping grounds and the distant ages it still surprises me. It usually goes-

“Is this THE Wayne Porter that…” (Insert whatever I did)

“yeah that’s me- e-mail me here” (Insert e-mail)

Really-people from as far back as grade school- you know the people who you stopped thinking about where they might possibly be. At any rate- MySpace has MASS and when that mass starts rolling it will gather alot of moss.

Honestly I get far more “reconnections” even though you can Google me and find me all over the place. Granted I didn’t have grey hair then- still. Interesting.

google long forgotten myspace reconnect school mates social networks stomping grounds wayne porter

Popularity: 4% [?]

Sermo - MySpace for Physicians? Why not Twitter Enterprise

Sermo bills itself as the “MySpace for physicians”.

Here, physicians aggregate observations from their daily practice and then - rapidly and in large numbers - challenge or corroborate each others opinions, accelerating the emergence of trends and new insights on medications, devices and treatments. You can then apply the collective knowledge to achieve better outcomes for your patients.

O.K. I am skeptical- I have not seen it but I am still skeptical. This is based on my experience as a nurse of several years ago so I might be out of date. While it was some time ago, and I know more docs have adopted PDAs, etc. The one thing a physician (and a nurse) lacks is time…TIME. Seriously. Never, ever enough time.

I recall doing many late night and early morning rounds with doctors I learned very quickly that time was the most valuable thing they have or didn’t have. Don’t waste it, be efficient, and know your stuff. Now I am not saying Sermo is a time waster- I think it would be great if more physicians tuned into the Net. I still think most would do it to get a date first- they just don’t have time.

Nascent thoughts on where and how I would use the “Twitter Concept” in an enterprise. This is inspired after (caveat- haven’t practiced in ten years)

a) Having worked in various hospitals
b) Having to have been hospitalized
c) More than once, due to weather, having to work back-to-back triple shifts, sleep for eight, and get up and do it again. Man talk about the intercom being surreal.

The Problem: The hospital intercom. Nothing more annoying than that squak box. There is a reason we had:

Code Blue- cardiac arrest, resuscitation needed stat.
Code Whites- Hostile patient- back up needed.
Code Reds- Fire- we have a fire.

We didn’t want to alarm patients, never mind we interrupted them all the time.

Scenario: This could use more thought. This is just a five-minute brain dump…to get thinking aligned.

The hospital would employ an enterprise version of the twitter structure- yes I know some work would be needed for HIPPA compliance- but usually a room number will do. I am sure it can be done with more thought. Each nurse call station could easily send a short message that would go to the phone of the charge nurse, one particular charge nurse, or the med nurse, or to a Doc on call, broadcast all over, etc. Short, fast, quiet, use SSL and posts to the intranet too. You could color code the message for priority, have pre-made messages to save time,and/ or a program on the PDA could sort, rate, prioritize, etc.

By viewing the intranet trend data one could see problems that needed correcting, trends, shortages, surpluses, staffing and any abuse of course. I am sure modern Pixus machines already do this for pharmacists- they can look at a nurses’s PRN dosing patterns to spot abuse by comparing it to the standard deviation from the mean. Still simple problems solved can have real savings.

I remember coming up with the simple idea to use the antiquated dumb waiters in one hospital to do routine after-pharmacy-hour medication restocks. Doesn’t sound like much, but imagine 14 units, a nurse having to go up to the pharmacy and gather meds, (say on average 30 minutes off unit.), and three shifts 365 a year. Average wage of ~ $15.00 hour back then. That is a savings of about $115,000.00 a year, not counting increase in patient care with time spent on unit and maybe nurses could get a REAL break.

Twitter- Short Codes - SMS- etc-think short chunks of vital information that must be relayed and read quickly, quietly, and the ability to trend the information by type. Yes the whole micro-blogging concept has many uses yet untapped.

aggregate collective knowledge corroborate medications medicine myspace Myspace for doctors nurse pdas pharmacy twitter physicians short code sms tweets twitter twitter for doctors

Popularity: 10% [?]

Blogging Will Have Its Role

Posted in Blogging, Social Bookmarking, Social Networks, Web 2.0 by wayne.porter on March 29th, 2007

Sam Harrelson, and I think with a rhetorical bent, asks if blogging works anymore and offers this up:

“Blogging will act as sort of the standard print edition of collected thoughts rather than the only medium that the thoughts are expressed within.”

Exactly. If you think of the Bible as being a collection of “books” or “writings”, or at the very least a collection that has been “canonized”. One can see how the standard blog can become a sort of “canon” for all the information, thoughts, new forms of media, pictures, sounds, IMs, video, etc that are whizzing by us everyday. The velocity will only increase and standard blogging cannot pace this velocity.

Blogs may act to “canonize” some of these thoughts…and that leaves me wondering what happens to the print edition? I love reading fiction from an old book. I would never part from it…but what of non-fiction, reference, and business? How can it keep pace?

Blogging microblogging Social Bookmarking Social Networks web2.0

Popularity: 5% [?]

Twitter Mania- Slowing But Strong- Trends and Regions

Posted in Google Trends, Second Life, Social Bookmarking, Social Networks, Twitter, Web 2.0 by wayne.porter on March 25th, 2007

Thanks to a Twitter from Steve Rubel who did some probing at Technorati on “Twitter”. (I know- not a perfect process either- no data source is near it.)

Technorati

Any Authority
Posts that contain Twitter per day for the last 30 days.
Technorati Chart

A Lot of Authority

Posts that contain Twitter per day for the last 30 days.
Technorati Chart

Some Authority

Posts that contain Twitter per day for the last 30 days.
Technorati Chart

A Little Authority

Posts that contain Twitter per day for the last 30 days.
Technorati Chart

Looking at Google Trends for the term Twitter over all time, and perhaps more fascinating the term Twitter for just 2007 you see a steep slope. (No notable traffic for misspellings or twitter.com). A caveat, of course, about Google Trends- “Google Trends aims to provide insights into broad search patterns. As a Google Labs product, it is still in the early stages of development. Also, it is based upon just a portion of our searches, and several approximations are used when computing your results. Please keep this in mind when using it.”

Milan, Italy and London, UK are runaways according to the chart, as it stands now, in terms of type-in traffic.

1. Milan, Italy

2. London, United Kingdom

3. Phoenix, AZ, USA

4. Irvine, CA, USA

5. Austin, TX, USA

6. Helsinki, Finland

7. Montreal, Canada

8. Auckland, New Zealand

9. Bologna, Italy

10. Brentford, United Kingdom

By region- Italy, USA, UK and Canada show strong volume.

1. Italy

2. United States

3. United Kingdom

4. Canada

5. Romania

6. Hong Kong

7. Russia

8. Turkey

9. Israel

10. Argentina

Italy? I wonder if twitter means something else in Italian. I don’t think so.

Technorati, CNN, BBC Video and Google News all have Twitter channels. I find that remarkable on its own given the lack of authentication. At any rate it is worthy to note this entry The Asymptotic Twitter Curve while we are on graphs and trends…

The interesting thing about Twitter-it is conceptually barely touched at all. Last night I spent some time helping a friend work on a metaverse (Second Life- yes of course.) to “Real World” relay service. One or two exist, but not to our liking. It uses the Twitter API, and twitter as an optional and ultimate destination. During testing I could easily so how Twitter, again as a CONCEPT, can be extended to be a whole lot more. The nice thing about Twitter is that you can set your limits. I don’t want SMS, or IMs at all- too disruptive. I am just fine interacting via the web. If there is someone I don’t want to follow- I can leave. Vice versa.

User Control. Experimental Communication. Micro-production. Micro-intake. Niche. Amateur creation. Monetization. Syndication…it is an interesting future- with silly service names and it will be dominated by everyday people- people with a passion.

BBC Video CNN Google News Second Life SLTwitter technorati twitter twitter.com twitter trends twitter volume

Popularity: 5% [?]

Cisco and Five Across More Social Media

Posted in Social Bookmarking, Social Networks, Technology, Web 2.0 by wayne.porter on March 21st, 2007

Somehow I missed this acquisition of Five Across by (NASDAQ: CSCO) Cisco Systems for an undisclosed sum.

The company only employed eleven people, but they had the NHL on their client roster.

According to VentureBeat.com


The move is understandable, though. Based on conversations with three or four different Cisco executives in recent months, it is clear Cisco sees social networking and the wider Web 2.0 phenomenon as ways to drive Internet traffic, and thus traffic over their routers and other networking gear — and, it follows, more revenue for Cisco.

Five Across offers the features you expect in a social networking company: Individual profiles, chat, video and photo uploading, RSS and more. Cisco looked at several companies, and settled on Five Across because its technology and management team. Cisco wants technology that can handle large amounts of traffic, because it wants to sell the technology to its big corporate customers (Five Across has already signed up the NHL). Whether consumer electronics companies or large media companies, these customers may use Five Across to identify more closely with their customers. All that communication can be facilitated through technology, benefiting Cisco because it will presumably go over its Internet pipes, said Danielle Levitas, analyst at IDC in San Mateo.

Sorry for the slip- chalk that one up on the dart board of social media snacks.

Social Bookmarking Social Networks technology web2.0

Popularity: 5% [?]

Ubuntu Convert- My Second Life- ThinkPad Gets an Ubuntu Upgrade

Sam Harrelson (Pastor Sam?) has converted another to the ranks of the “will not be undead soon”….

early this a.m. I said:

I am already looking at converting my Ibm X40 (backup lap) to Ubuntu now…still thinking on it. I know I have to spend some up front time, but I have to wonder if the long term pay off is worth it….Learn more about Ubuntu.

Late this P.M. after a long day of security research…

It is DONE- the dirty deed is done dirt cheap andquite complete, Thanks to Eric G. for assisting! Ubunta advocates are everywhere. I have been absorbed into the world of Ubuntu…

My old IBM Thinkpad X40 (story below) now sports this O/S and it screams like a bat out of hell (you might try Ubuntu 6.06 if your PC is rather dated)….so far so good…. I feel like I have been unplugged from the matrix and spat out into a giant toilet bowel of jelly slime…now I wonder if it can push Second Life? Doubt it. I do feel some machinima widgets coming on though.

BTW this is filed under deals and steals too- no coupons needed, no discount codes- Ubuntu is FREE…Grab the .iso and burn it to CD or order it if you wish…or if you like getting stuff in the mail or want to send a gift…here are some Ubuntu things that are DIRT CHEAP. Burn it or buy it for your friends, your mother-in-law, man it beats MonkeyPhoneCalls even…well close.

Seriously- Do you want a cheaper laptop? Start with a different O/S and different office tools- and your laptop is already far cheaper and more for the price- think about! Open Source is like a giant raging coupon on steroids. Plus- you can actually work with it- you know- like the cars we used to own that didn’t require a Cray to analyze and fix an oil leak.

Burn it or get it…or start your own production outfit and become an evangelist. Just don’t go all Conservapedia on me (sounds like Briticanna propaganda to me.)

Kubuntu 6.10 (64-bit PC Edition)

Ubuntu 6.10 (64-bit PC Edition)

Ubuntu 6.06 LTS DVD (PC Edition) (Jewel Case)

Kubuntu 6.10 (PC Edition)

Ubuntu 6.10 (PC Edition)

While we are on innovation- I just watched and reviewed two great pieces on learning in the Second Life Metaverse on learning and plasticity while surfing YouTube (widgets coming)…here’s your guide.

Second Life: The Official Guide

Sam writes…

Wayne and Jon … install Ubuntu so that we can start a Guild. Forget Second Life, this is where the action is (literally!)…

Yeah Sam-I know, I will get around to WoW- one day. It has kickass machinima too at a huge adoption rate, but I don’t need any more games and I am more into social diving. Anyway Innovation Island needs to be built. Let’s start that Guild. Jon???

Also check out:

Thinkpad: A Different Shade of Blue

Book Description (Spotted use for as low as $0.74 in Aftermarket)
ThinkPad: A Different Shade of Blue tells the exciting inside story behind the creation of one of the most successful brand names in computing. Through interviews with the ThinkPad Team and IBM executives, and access to internal documents and memoranda, the book provides a rare inside view into the workings of an IBM brand team. Here is the inside scoop on the cultural and personality differences that almost killed one of the most significant development efforts in IBM history. More importantly, it offers valuable lessons on what it takes to build a world-class, enduring brand or product.

BTW- Did I mention I now have Skype on this puppy? VoIP…now I find myself wanting a TOR server…

Not sure if Google Earth works yet- I’ll find out. Heck- I’ll try the pack!

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