" - more people will take for granted that they can interact." Man, good stuff.
Wednesday, December 31, 2008
Heading for the world of the 4 year old
Posted by
John Dumbrille
at
12/31/2008 07:56:00 PM
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Wednesday, December 24, 2008
Tuesday, December 23, 2008
Here Comes Everybody: The Big Deal is Groups
Enabling groups changes everything.
Conventional business and governments behavior is giving way, and the Internet is helping.
Worth watching and re-watching IMO:
Posted by
John Dumbrille
at
12/23/2008 11:27:00 AM
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Labels: BOWEGOV business internet
Sunday, December 21, 2008
Surowiecki Shirky and BOWEGOV
Clay Shirky's "Here Comes Everybody" provides some great input to our self governance effort. The book's observations are very bookmarkable - 'remarkable made reusable'... It builds on some of what James Surowiecki uncovered in 2004's Wisdom of Crowds.
James Surowiecki says distributed groups whose members aren't personally connected often generate better answers, as they pool both knowledge and intuitive wisdom without having to come to intrapersonal agreement. The k and iw are, as Peter Rawsthorne would say, 'tacit.'
Surowiecki recommended ( from the wikipedia entry):
* Keep your ties loose.
* Keep yourself exposed to as many diverse sources of information as possible.
* Make groups that range across hierarchies.
Chapter 11 of Shirky's book is called Promise, Tool, Bargain.
The Promise - is the basic WHY for joining and contributing to a social group. Linus Torvald got it right; others have too. A statement of intent that is neither daunting nor mundane, that satisfies a basic human need.
The Tool - What has to be satisfied is "Will I like using this tool" and "Will enough others be there, or use this, so that this thing succeeds?" There are slot of people using the Bowen Island Forum, but, Shirky says, smaller groups are better for convergent thinking. People seek agreement in smaller groups, and that is what they very good at. The Bowen Island Forum is arguably not a great tool for 'wisdom of crowds' self governance because it is about personal interaction.
The Bargain - The Bargain for Wikipedia was that the material created by writers could not be alienated from them - i.e. it couldn't belong to Wikipedia Inc.
BOWEGOV's tools are emergent, but we can think about what is the Bargain. Any thoughts?
Here's what I have on the Promise of BOWEGOV:
Exploring freedom in self governance
Seems the Open Source movement shares the same foundation as the Slow Food movement and the self governance movement.
The common foundation, platform: exploring the intrinsic value, the healthiness, the developmental benefit to feeding ourselves and our community, as opposed to being fed by a vendor or a government.
Chances are we will still rely on a municipal administration and elected officials and currency to get basic things - just like Slow Foodists usually dont mill their own flour. But we've gone overboard with the division of labor: industrialization of our food supply, the division of labor, and the professionalization of governance.
The really key things, like our meals, like what is going on in our backyard, like where our taxes go - these are too basic to give away.
Posted by
John Dumbrille
at
12/21/2008 12:50:00 PM
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Labels: BOWEGOV
Saturday, December 20, 2008
Sunday, December 14, 2008
closing the gap
Closing the gap between producer and consumer.
My 14 year old daughter makes graphics for other nonprofit sites, designs her web pages, blogs. Not a prodigy, she's just like alot of kids her age. It's fun to do, making things. There is no money changing hands, so where is the economy? It's a barter system, people trading off influence, friendship, work, developed knowledge.... and people growing together.
As we engage in this kind of work, which is about getting and sharing the things we make, the GNP figures sag. But these funky knitted slipper socks that my 72 year old neighbor gave me contradict those numbers anyway.
Posted by
John Dumbrille
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12/14/2008 11:55:00 AM
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Friday, December 05, 2008
you, me, them: us now
Governing together
Promo for documentary, "Us Now"
Posted by
John Dumbrille
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12/05/2008 10:41:00 AM
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