The Internets


11
Dec 08

Asymmetric Follow

Great post by James Governor at RedMonk about something I’ve been thinking about for a while now — the idea that everyone’s Twitter feed is a unique view on the world, that you can’t always see every conversation that everyone else is having. He calls it “Asymmetric Follow,” which is as good a name as any. It has really different scaling characteristics than a lot of online communications we have, and is fascinating to me lately. (I’ve found myself following @reply threads of other people into various subcultures and piecing together relationships sometimes — of late those of The Daily Show writers, who are a little, um, quirky.)


22
Nov 08

lessig on charlie rose

Worth watching the whole piece. Fantastic and articulate, as always. Remix is on my nightstand now.


15
Oct 08

The Big Picture — Days of Autumn

The Big Picture does it again, with amazing, amazing photos of the Fall Season. I should just set up a permanent pointer to these, because they hit it out of the park every single time. As Paul mentions, it’s a testament to the power of a good, simple photo. No animation, no Web 2.0, just phenomenal photography, and a great editor pulling things together.


1
Oct 08

Jimmy in China

An amazing meeting in Beijing — Jimmy Wales seeing Chinese officials at the State Council Information Office. I met Jimmy in Dalian at the WEF event a year ago — he mentioned then that people in the Chinese government were interested in talking with him about Wikipedia. Rebecca’s got a great writeup on it, as she apparently saw Jimmy at this year’s WEF event there (The event last year is when I met Rebecca, too.) We live in interesting times.


19
Sep 08

The Future of the Internet (and How to Stop It), by Jonathan Zittrain

Read this a few months ago, but haven’t posted, which is a little weird, considering how much it’s affected the way I think about the Internet. Anyway, the quick summary is that this is an incredibly important book, with an extremely important concept in it: generativity. It’s the idea that systems that are open, have standard interfaces, and are not controlled by single parties (or small groups of them) are generative — they tend to result in high degrees of innovation. Further, that the Internet is a very special case where it’s open in the right ways, on the right levels, with the right interfaces — and it’s been unprecedented in delivering innovation & user-centered designs to normal people. And, more than that, that there are some signals in the world that we’re heading in bad directions — we tend to gravitate towards closed, tethered systems — like the iPhone, Tivo or Kindle (all of which I myself own and use).

I’ve got lots more thought about this & technology life cycles, but the bottom line on JZ’s book is that everyone who’s trying to work on the Web and build something great should read it.