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.)
The Internets
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.


IVF
May 18, 12:58 › 添香防辐射服: p2wm2s明天你还会更新的吧 明天我在来 May 16, 9:29 › Deborah Barrow: Just looking in to see how you're doing. So glad to