June 11, 2007

Berners-Lee Wrong on Web 2.0?

Will Samson has an interesting quote from Tim Berners-Lee revealing his thoughts on 'Web 2.0':

"If Web 2.0 for you is blogs and wikis, then that is people to people. But that was what the Web was supposed to be all along."

I'm not a big fan of the phrase 'Web 2.0' either. But I think there are differences between the web then, and the web now.

It seems to me that in the past people searched the web to connect to documents.
Now, we search to connect to people.

I think that's a significant enough shift. But not significant enough to warrant the silly monicker we've ended up with.

Leaves

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September 12, 2006

Backside Cache | Dirt and Computing

Exploded-View-ToiletGreat article in Wired at: http://www.wired.com/news/columns/0,71763-0.html?tw=rss.index

At first sight, a computer is a system that seems "clean." Early mainframes were housed in dust-free rooms bathed in unvarying white light. Nobody ever got physically dirty handling a laptop. The computer-using proverb "garbage in, garbage out" is just a metaphor; nothing physical goes into a computer, and nothing physical comes out of it.

Then again, why would a "clean" system require so many filters? Spam filters, search filters, surf filters? Why would stuff we encounter on a computer screen be capable of making us feel dirty, or "infecting" our clean machines with a virus?

Just as every animal has a mouth and an ass, with processing stuff in between, a computer operating system has inputs, processing and outputs. We input content through a keyboard, a modem, a drawing tablet, USB or Firewire ports. Useful stuff is output via screen, printer, speakers or over the internet. The useless stuff -- dirty old computer waste -- leaves the system via a little desktop metaphor called the Recycle or Trash bin.

It might be refreshing if, one day, the people who made your computer's OS would call a spade a spade. In a section of his conference talk titled "The Geometry of Filth," Adam Jasper Smith gets to the uncomfortable yet unavoidable nub of the matter. "Dirt radiates out from us," he says. "The primal form of this dirt -- the perfect dirt -- is shit."
 

June 21, 2006

Not At My Table

Mad Cow"What if the next burger you ate was created in a warm, nutrient-enriched soup swirling within a bioreactor?"

Does anyone actually want this?

Would a vegetarian eat it on absence-of-animal-cruelty grounds?

Can they really replicate that bacon-sandwich smell?

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June 16, 2006

Surface Tension | Lost Worlds

"One of the great losses of the Information Age is texture. Consider the pre-computer desk: a litter of papers, large and small, handwritten, printed and typed, course and fine; letters in varying hands, envelopes of various sizes bearing stamps from all over the world. Here are books, annotated and bookmarked; here is a typewriter with its ribbon and its heavy steel frame. Here are photographs and drawings, coins and banknotes, documents bearing seals and counter-signatures, pristine originals and faded carbon copies... Papers lie in piles, navigable vertically according to what has been most recently consulted; some are turned sideways-on to mark the stack.

"Now consider today's equivalent. All is stored on the network and accessed via mouse-clicks on a clean glowing screen. Everything is the same: an image seen through glass. We touch nothing, mark nothing, smell nothing. In the new world of I.T., it is not just the desktop that is a metaphor: everything is a metaphor, where nothing yellows with age and everything is clean and new. We are become creatures of sight alone, our whole attention focused on a hundred and fifty square inches of expensive glass.

"We have lost something in the process. Not just texture. Something more. The computer makes everything retrievable; but it doesn't retrieve everything. Only the surface. Scratch the surface and - look! - more surface. The rest is lost."

From Michael Bywater's excellent Lost Worlds: What Have We Lost, & Where Did it Go?

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June 11, 2006

When Web2.0 Doesn't Work | Blogging 2.0

Perhaps I'm being professionally defensive here, but having looked at RateMyTeachers.co.uk I was left wondering whether this was actually a project that had any use. Part of the beauty of the 'ratings' section of sites like Amazon and Flickr is that they actually allow you to make decisions - which seller is reliable, which photos are 'interesting'. But there appears to be no end use for rating teachers. Children cannot decide who is going to teach them, and parents' choice about which schools they send their children to is often very limited.

There are also other problems. For ratings sites to work there needs to be an element of trust in the rating. Having messed about with RateMyTeachers (ie putting stupid comments and shockingly bad ratings about other teacher friends ;^) it appears to be a total free-for-all. No questions are asked to prove you were actually taught by the person, nor could any proof be given. Sites also rely on the number of 'negative' users being outweighed by the number of 'positive' ones. And as [ this ] article in the Telegraph recently showed, there are naturally a lot of mischievous kids out there looking to have a bit of fun. Who wouldn't. (Then again, when a parent logs on and writes that a teacher is 'evil' there is perhaps something more worrying.)

Connectly, I had a very interesting conversation with a guy (a psychologist by trade) who works in the web research department of the Open University. He was saying that the stuff they are working on is 'Blogging 2.0'. What he meant by that was, how to create a system that goes beyond tagging and comments and actually allows interesting posts to come to the fore more easily - using some kind of distributed rating system. I think this connects very well to the previous posts [here and here] on the problems the blogging is facing: the massive volume of posts, and the enormous task of sifting through to find the good conversations. They are currently running initial experiments, but I look forward to the final product.

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May 16, 2006

A Message From My Publishers

save the SPCK
Save the SPCK!

So say's Dave at CartoonChurch. Their shops are threatened apparently. So don't buy Pete's book online. Get down your local SPCK and make the men in sandals happy.

May 11, 2006

SwarmSketch

Img000088"Collective sketching of the collective consciousness."

Via Wired.

Emergence-y question: will the sketches get better and better with time, or will they need chasing down from local peaks to properly improve?

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March 30, 2006

Nic's Blog | Haunted Geographies

Haunted Title

Nic is/was/shall always be a co-conspirator. He's a very fine designer, and is graphing a complex and beautiful path on the axes of spirituality and design. He's finally relented and started a blog. I've added him to my Blogs list, and encourage you to click there often.

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March 24, 2006

Self-Organizing Island Community informs Organizational Software

Article in Wired, here.

"If Friday's boat from St. Mary was cancelled, there might be six people in the village that needed to know. Armstrong found consistently they would all have that information within hours, even without a formal distribution system, and few uninterested people would be burdened with the knowledge."

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March 23, 2006

Platial: Flickr for Maps

Nice Web 2.0 idea. Think Google Earth and Flickr's lovechild.

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March 21, 2006

Buying (sic)

Thanks to Jonny for the heads up on (sic).

Just a note - if you're in the US the prices, including delivery are approx $23 for hardback and $15 for paperback.

From the UK the postage can be a lot. (Hardback $30 inc. delivery and $22 for paperback, about £18 or £14)

However, I can bulk order and get free postage. So if you'd like one in the UK, email me on kesterATthecomplexchristDOTcom and I'll be able to do them for £15 hardback and £10 paperback (inc delivery in UK).

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March 13, 2006

Emerging Church and The Hunch Engine

Article in Wired on an emerging software that combines hunches with mutations to take anything, from photo manipulation to postman route planning in new directions that have a individual touch.

"Our hunches tend to be repetitive and predictable, while mutation can take us in novel directions"

The parallels with new EC programmes are obvious. Keep the human involvement, but bring in other forces to encourage new mutations and prevent stagnation.
Keep it local, emergent, intelligent.

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February 27, 2006

A Party-less Politic? | The Emerging Church Shows the Way

Just been listening to a very interesting report on the BBC about The Power Commission's report into British democracy which has been published today. The parallels with Alan Jamieson's work on Churchless Faith were astounding and, as I mentioned in my book, the church really does have an amazing opportunity to model a mode of change and being to the rest of society, rather than copying it in twenty years time.

The Power Commission - funded by the Joseph Rowntree Charitable Foundation (JR was a fabulous Quaker-Philanthropist-Chocolatier) - initially asked MPs why they thought voter numbers were down. 'Apathy' they said.

Rather like the ministers Alan asked, they reasons they gave for people not participating were totally wrong, and laid the blame at the wrong door. The Commission found very little political apathy. On the contrary, people are up and involved in politics all the time. It's just that Westminster don't call that 'politics', because it's not the 'Politics' of Downing Street in the corridors of power.

Their first recommendation then is that Westminster needs to realize that the solution is not to 'get people more interested in politics' - ie drag people to Westminster to see all the great stuff they do (cf. get more bums on seats in church) - rather, Westminster needs to get back out there and get involved in the issues people are involved in locally.

You simply cannot - whether in church or political parties - expect people to sustain membership of organizations they feel totally alienated from. Unless there is genuine opportunity for meaningful participation, why should people hang around? I have often argued with MPs - especially over the Iraq War - that they are in dereliction of their duties if they vote against the will of their constituents. Our democratic system is currently topsy-turvy. We vote for parties who set out an agenda for action. What the system originally intended was for people to elect a representative to send to Westminster to speak for them. In other words, the motivation for action came from the people. We have lost this original intention, and are poorer for it.

The solutions the Power Commission recommends? Unsurprisingly if you've read The Complex Christ, a move from the top-down to the bottom-up, greater low-level interaction, and feedback loops. . More power to the local, and mechanisms whereby dirt can be dished and people listened to and action taken. Interestingly enough, they suggest that more MPs should blog, but beyond that, they think that there ought to be a system whereby the public can force Parliament to debate an issue if a certain number of people get together and sign for it. Furthermore, they recommend changes that would allow people to stand for election more easily without being swamped by the big parties.

One commentator was an academic who commented that 40 years ago we were debated the role television might have in politics (see previous post). It clearly had a profound one, and he argues that e-Democracy will have similarly profound effect not only on our politics, but on the way we see ourselves as citizens too.

Clearly, the Emerging Church movement has made big steps forward in this area already. e-Spirituality and the emergent, underground blossoming interest in the spiritual has had a profound effect not only on our theology, but on the way we see ourselves connected as Christians too. Spirituality and theology are no longer the holed up in Ivory towers to which only the sacred few have access; what we must do is help politics move the same way. It is, of course, a movement that is irresistible because it's the way of co-operation, the way of inter-relation, the way of the divine. And it is, of course, a movement that will be always resisted by the powerful.

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February 12, 2006

Google Search Added (+html help?)

In the right side-bar.

A few people have been asking for this... Just a way of searching through the blog archives.

PS - can anyone help me get the align correct? The thing needs bumping in a few pixels to line up with the other items, but I can't work out how. Nothing in the sidebar2 template seems to suggest this list item (ie I pasted the google code into a typepad list, which this template calls) has any different settings...

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February 09, 2006

Mobile Blogging | Are You Suffering From Hyperconnectia?

102,1100690667,8-2
Reading TSK's post on the Vizrea mobile-to-blog tool, I wondered if we are in danger of suffering collective Hyperconnectia. [ See Wikipedia entry here ]

Do you get Super-highway Rage when you're connection is dropped, or you can't find wifi?
Does your blood pressure and perspiration rate increase in inverse proportion to the number of battery bars you have left?
Is your eye-to-eye / eye-to-screen ratio very poor?

Perhaps you are suffering.

Hyperconnectia sufferers may appear distant or ill at ease in human company. They will regularly text others during conversations, or disappear to check blog stats. They will tend to have their laptop open in meetings, even social gatherings, and their eye-to-eye / eye-to-screen contact ratios may be very poor. They appear happier with on-line relationships than face-to-face ones.

On a more serious note, an excellent article in this month's Prospect (full article here) asks whether an always-on-everywhere society is such a good thing:

"Most of the argument about our progress into the digital future assumes that it is both inevitable and desirable...The only question left unanswered is how quickly we will get there. But while the benefits of the digital revolution are evident enough,

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January 24, 2006

Blook | (sic) | Lulu

For those who asked, I've just received the final (hardback) product from Lulu, and the quality is excellent.
If I was being finnickity I'd prefer matt to gloss finish on the cover, but apart from that, no hesitation at all in recommending them.

How much do I prefer page to screen?

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January 20, 2006

Plogging | Blooks | etc.

Links to some good discussion around plogging / writing blooks:

Jason Clark has some stuff here, and also a link to the original blook here.

Jonny has some wider ideas about how Lulu could be used to get materials out there, and Maggi has some great thoughts, with interesting discussion going on, about the wider implications in terms of copyright, writing forms etc.

As the boundaries between forms become more fluid, it's definitely something we'll see more of; the screen just hasn't hit it as a comfortable reading format yet.

And if we are happy to publish our comments globally on each other's blogs, we ought not to be shy of them being on the printed page, should we?

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January 18, 2006

Plogging: You Read It Here First

One of the things I dislike about blogging is the volatility of posts: you write your heart out, and in a couple of days it's disappeared into the aether, too far down for scrolling, rarely to be seen again.

Perhaps this is why Doug Pagitt has decided that blogs are not a good way to conduct discussion and debate. I disagree, but personally need a different format to keep up with what I've written. I just don't find online archives a good way to browse back.

Hence I hearby declare the word created, and announce the arrival of Plogging: Publishing a hard copy of your blog.

Sic_coverI called the book (sic) - "an adverb used in brackets after a copied or quoted word that appears odd or erroneous to show that the word is quoted exactly as it stands in the original" - which sums it up pretty well I think. Mine is a beautifully bound edition of the unexpurgated posts, comments and tags from this blog, July - December 2005.

It's really easy to do through Lulu - an excellent online publisher, which I think is going to radically change the nature of publishing as we know it.

Hardback edition available [here]

Softback edition available [here]

PDF previews of the first few pages are available there too. I'm personally really excited about having a hard copy of the blog - it runs to 260 pages or so - and being able to browse a book, rather than a screen! Looking through it, it's amazing to be reminded of the stuff people have contributed... dirt, humour, insight. Doing so makes me want to challenge Doug to think again. Going private on discussion may not do everyone a service.

No I don't expect any sales. And no I haven't considered copyright of people's comments ;p

Enjoy

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January 04, 2006

Winning the War?

"I declare that World War III is now being waged by short-haired robots whose deliberate aim is to destroy the complex web of free wild life by the imposition of mechanical order."

Timothy Leary in his Manifesto, written on escaping from prison and fleeing to Algeria.

I think we're gradually winning now, Tim. We got tags on our side.

January 02, 2006

Technology: Fight the Power

I've been musing while away. Wondering: what is technology? It struck me as we tanked along in a car about to seize up that it was nssothing more than raw creation re-worked by human hands. Forged to help us. Rock, sand and timber reined in wild like horses and bridled under our control. In other words, technology and power are intimately connected.

Technology, this taming of raw creation, created power imbalances. I looked from the car today, and saw a man breaking into a trot as he crossed a road, an SUV tanking deliberately for him. And I thought - stripped bare of tools, of technologies, what harm could we do to each other or our environment? So little. A man approaches, wants my wallet. Soldiers march. Criminals raid. Without the technologies they carry, we would be equals: knifeless, gunless, weaponless... Our slaps and fists able to scrap, but, as Lorenz has pointed out, probably unlikely to do much more.

When the first tools were made, the first weapons forged, the branch lifted and used to strike, the sharp stone bonded to make a knife or spear, a choice lay before all humanity: crush that weapon, or take up the same and fight on an equal footing. And so the arms race began. And so the finish-line for our species approached more quickly than we could ever imagine.

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December 29, 2005

End of the Original: Old Masters vs Artists of the Digital

Clouds



"The dominance of the art market - not to mention the art object - is being challenged by hackers, code warriors, and artistically motivated nerds who prefer networks, websites, and $19.95 posters to glitzy shows and art-star fame."



Thus begins the article 'My Art World is Bigger Than Your Art World' in December's issue of The Believer (I'm a huge fan). The scope of the article is wide, covering 'net.art', the history of 'video art' and the work of some 'hacker art', exemplified by the piece 'Super Mario Clouds' by Cory Arcangel (screenshot below, cartridge above) which he created by hacking the code of the Super Mario game. The result of this intervention is a 'minimalist game environment - no iconic Mario figure in red coveralls, no coin-generating brick blocks, and no poisonous mushrooms - all that remains are the puffy white clouds gently drifting across a clear blue sky'

Cloudsscroll_1 Beyond the artistic merits, or otherwise, of such pieces, the article raises a far more interesting - and for my thoughts on Emerging Church issues, pertinent, question about what constitutes 'an original'.

The art world makes its money out of the concept of 'originals' - a case of the economics of scarcity - and artists have long sought ways to subvert - or at least appear to subvert - the 'insularity and pomp of art-world conventions'. Photography was an early example. As mechanical image, could it be called art? And, more to the point, how could one distinguish one print from the negative from another? There was no 'original', and thus the art world had to invent ways of creating an 'aura' around a piece, by limited edition numberings, signatures, framings etc.

Warhol took this idea of mechanical reproduction further in much of his work, as did Duchamp with his signed 'bog-standard' urinial. But all of these examples, with a little tweaking, can be distilled to some 'original', whether it be photographic negative or screen. What is interesting about the work of the digital artists that the article explores is that, with many of the media they are working in, there is simply no concept of original at all. And this causes the art world a great deal of trouble, for how can it create profit, aura, buzz, exclusivity...power, if it cannot control access to the object?

In building this argument the writer notes:

"A work of video art is simply a video signal on a tape. Early analog video technology is termed 'lossy' - meaning that with every successive copy there is a noticable degradation in quality. Analog technologies still had some claim to the construction of an 'original' - the photograph had the negative, and the video has the master copy, from which further copies are struck. The negative and master thus have more value than their offspring.

"Digital video formats released by Sony in the 1990's changed this condition completely, as they alloweds for perfect reproduction. Video is now simply a piece of code - a string of ones and zeros that, unlike its analog parent, is wholly duplicable. Enabling the production of infinite clones with no discernable value hierarchy thus renders 'original' a meaningless term."

Reflecting back on Arcangel's work with the Super Mario hack, his release of the method for producing his pieces, and admission that the 'original' cartridge got lost, again forces us to re-think whether the term has any meaning for his work. Anyone following the right instructions can perfectly create the 'work of art' that he did. So what of it can be bought or sold? What value does it have? There are millions of Mona Lisa prints for a penny, but only one priceless original. If you could have a perfect reproduction to gaze at, would it spoil your visual enjoyment?

The question then comes round to 'what is art?' It is clearly not just about enjoyment of a created environment. We like the 'aura' of the gallery where the 'original' hangs - exclusive, live, real... It gives us a sense of power - because the original is invested with such power by ArtWorld™.

Paul said with relief that he was glad he hadn't baptized many of the Corinthians. Why? Because he didn't want to participate in the heresy of 'the original'. Being baptised by him was no different to being baptised by anyone else. There was no special power the closer you got to him. "Is Christ divided?" he asked? No. We all have the same access to Christ by the Spirit, unmediated by the high priests of art, culture, church or anywhere. This is dangerous speech, a gift many think 'the common people' are not responsible/wise/intelligent/cultured enough to handle. But the truth is, it is a free gift, one which is devoid of human power, which is all about the Other, not about us.

The Emerging Church must avoid the 'aura' offered by mega-churches, experts or names. They have wise experience to offer - let's not forget that. But they don't mediate our access.

The Spirit hacks us with the same code. We are all a unique original. Priceless. Signed. Not cloned. Not reproduced by Graham, Robertson, Gumbel, Wimber or McClaren (insert Male Pastor Name here). Without "value hierarchy." It's a gift. It can't be bought or sold. Or gallaried; hung up in a stale white cube.

So remember, whatever you do, View the Source.
That's the bomb.

Happy New Year.

December 21, 2005

Technorati Conspiracy

OK, so someone tell me why my blog doesn't come up in the Technorati Blog-Finder.
Yup, I've claimed it, tagged it, mailed them about it... And it does come up in their other searches. But no joy.

Clearly a conspiracy...

December 18, 2005

Emergent Church

Andrew has blogged a lot about the impact of Web 2.0 style thinking on the Church, and I would totally agree that we can learn a lot from the 'governing dynamics' that are making these new 'applications' take off.

Flicking around some sites on this, I came across this diagram, which holds some amazing parallels for us:

Figure1

Just to highlight some of the balloons:

  • Radical Decentralization
  • Radical Trust / Trust Your Users
  • User as contributor
  • Rich User Experiences
  • Play
  • Emergent: User behaviour not predetermined
  • Small pieces loosely joined
  • Harnessing Collective Intelligence

This is precisely what I am trying to argue in the book, and expand upon here on this blog. All the above reads like a manual for Church 2.0 - or whatever you want to call it. For me, much of what links many Web 2.0 applications, like Flickr, Delicious etc. is the idea of the meta-tag. It's these tags that allow data to be sorted in multiple intelligent ways, and for radical cross-referencing of ideas that seem totally disperate on the surface.

Linking together some of the posts I've written about the place of the Spirit in the Emerging Church, and Leadership, I think there are very strong ideas to take from the principles the map above outlines. It's as if the Spirit is the Web which allows these mini-apps - our gifts - to run, and leadership - which I defined previously as 'disturbing and facilitating communication' is the database of tags that allows cross-referencing, and thus emergence, to occur.

And the core attitude that runs through it? Trust. Trust that the 'little people' out there in the congregation are not dumb, but wise. And their collective intelligence is better than anything one single person can be uploaded with at seminary. It's this radical trust that the Spirit enables in people. That's why the powerful hate it, and long to divide and rule. Well, thankfully, the web seems to be finally putting pay to that. And hopefully the body of Christ - the emergent virus of the Spirit - won't be far behind.

On Riches and Freedom | Faith and Direction

"You have riches and freedom here, but I feel no sense of faith or direction. You have so many computers, why don't you use them in the search for love?"

Lech Walesa. On his first visit outside the Soviet bloc.

December 12, 2005

RSS Feed for Comments

If, like me, you are using RSS in Safari, or a Newsreader, and use Typepad pro, you might be interested in this code (Thanks to Daniel Gerges) which allows you to get a feed for comments on your blog.

December 02, 2005

Upcoming.org | Events Node for alt.emerging UK

Thanks to Jordan for suggesting the site upcoming.org.

Basically, it's an online events database that you can subscribe to via iCal etc, or view online. See what's going on in your city, or somewhere you're going. See who else is going. Invite people to stuff. Add code to your blog.

It also has a groups facility, and to this end I've added an alt.emergingchurch UK group which you can subscribe to. So if you have an event you are organizing, sign up, put it up and people can know about it. Just added the National Gathering.

Spread the word.

September 25, 2005

'Hundreds Lie Dead in the Streets'

Occasionally you read an article that seems to carry a scent of the future, and, ever so slightly, your world is re-framed.
I came across this and was left thinking, "what the...?"

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