Home

Bio & Disclosures

Discussions


xFruits

2007 Events

Author:   Doc Searls  
Posted: 2/8/2001; 4:38:20 PM
Topic:
Msg #: 539 (top msg in thread)
Prev/Next: 538/540
Reads: 4110

Pub rolling

O'Reilly is coming out with a new edition of Eric S. Raymond's The Cathedral and the Bazaar, with lots of updates and revisions. ESR explains here.

Why nobody wants a Swiss army phone

Nice piece by Kevin Werbach on the "tradeoff between doing things well and doing many things."

Bet on nature

A conversation has spread from Slashdot to the Cluetrain List, thanks to posts by Kevin Jamieson and Tim Cunningham.

What got it going was this item by Geert Lovink at Crythome, which takes issue with Charles Leadbetter, advocate of The Ignorance Economy:

What Leadbeater is trying to sell is dreamware, this time not developed by Californian anarcho capitalists but big media business, AOL-TimeWarner style. "The net will prosper when it is no longer the preserve of geeks, and when the speed of connections and size of bandwidth are secondary to the quality of the experience it delivers." How the news and game entertainment industry will reach supremacy while simultaneously pushing the borders of technological know-how remains unclear. In any case, the taming of geekdom is on the agenda of the virtual class -- not anymore the Microsoft case. The paranoia for monopolies has shifted to a diffuse fear for over-development in technological directions without markets.

The playful collaboration of technologists and venture capitalists has come to an end. Online creativity has shifted to other levels to express itself and moved, for example, to peer-to-peer networks and open source software development.  Decentralized gift economies which are much harder to economize compared to the heydays of webdesign and the following portalization of online content and services.

I don't have time to write much about his stuff right now, but my short take is that Leadbetter is coming from fashion and commerce on this chartCivilization while the geeks who made the Net (including many working in commercial software companies) come from the lower tiers of the same chart. They meet at the Infrastructure level.

Infrastructure has three fundamental characteristics:

  1. Nobody owns it
  2. Everybody can use it
  3. Anybody can improve it
We need free & open source geeks to generate more infrastructure. We also need commercial and closed source geeks to do the same, contributing as much as they can, to the ubiquitous infrastructure that makes our new world.

This is what's happening with all the companies involved in making infrastructure. Userland is doing it with SOAP and XML-RPC (as is Microsoft). Apple is doing it with Darwin. Caldera is doing it with OpenSLP. VA LInux is doing it with SourceForge. Olliance.com is doing it with Olliance.org. Jabber.com is doing it with Jabber.org. Dresdner Bank and CollabNet are doing it with OpenAdaptor. These companies are all trying to do business and make civilization at the same time — to do what's right for them, and for us — whoever we are, where the first person plural pronoun may represent a market, an industry, a community, or the whole species.

Perspective comes from looking at the bottom of the stack: at what changes least. Nature. It's looking up from here that we can start to reconcile Richard Stallman, who hopes everyone will be able to obtain good system software free, just like air, and Dave Winer, who says Ask not what the web can do for you; ask what you can do for the Web. In their own ways, both respect Nature. And both are trying to build infrastructure for all of us.

There's a lot to argue about. The free software and open source movements, for example, love to talk about licensing, which is really a set of social contracts that attempt to reconcile ideas about the nature of software with ideas about the nature of business. That's what's happening between culture and infrastructure, at the governance level of the chart. If you want proof of the cultural nature of open source and free software licensing, consider these two facts: Not one of these licenses has ever been tested in a court of law; and Not one business has dared to try. I think that's evidence of civilized behavior by both the hacker and the business communities.

I think we're only beginning to discover, right here where we make infrastructure, that what's most human about business is what each of us does for all of us.

This is not an easy place for business to go. It's at the heart of the Infrastructure Paradox that Craig talks about.

But we're going there, all of us. Including Mr. Leadbetter and the whole of AOL/TimeWarner, whether they help us or not.

He's not dead. He's just realligned with nature.

Euro Linux distro vendor SuSE calls it quits in the U.S. Here's the official flackage. Here's a story about it. Compare and contrast.




Copyright 2010 The Doc Searls Weblog

Membership : Join Now : Login

Create your own Manila site in minutes. Everyone's doing it!

Click to see the XML version of this web page.

Blogroll

 
Search archives

Santa Barbarians
Edhat
SB Independent
SB Newsroom
Kevin Barron
Blogabarbara
Craig Smith
SB*Free Press
Joe Andieu
Patrick Gregston
John Quiimby
Das Williams' dad
Katy Pearce
Taymar Pixley
Lisa Gates
Cookie Jill

Everybody else
Spot-on
RageBoy
MysticBourgeoisie
David Weinberger
Miscellaneous
Dave
Berkman
John Palfrey
IT Garage
Bret Fausett
Susan Crawford
Bruce Sterling
Steve Lewis/Bubkes
Hak Pak Sak
Brad Kava
Brad Templeton
Sheila Lennon
Don Marti
Steve Urquhart
Wes Felter
Brad DeLong
Tom Evslin
Brian Oberkirch
Dean Landsman
Hugh MacLeod
LAist
Jeremy Ruston
Geoff Jones
Vaspers the Grate
Sig Rinde
Chris Albritton
Ronni Bennett
Thomas Hawk
Kevin Bedell
Howard
Bryan
Deep Fun
BoingBoing
edhat
Terry Heaton
Jay Rosen
Kim Cameron
George Lakoff
Scott Rosenberg
Larry Lessig
Jim Thompson
Jeff Jarvis
David Isenberg
Stephen Johnson
Tim Oren
Geoff Moore
Rex Hammock
This is Broken
Max Sawicky
Stuart Hughes
Dave Pentecost
John Perry Barlow
Mary Hodder
Dan Gillmor
Steve Gillmor
Dean Landsman
John Stodder
Seth Finkelstein
Renee Blodgett
misbehaving.net
Ruby Sinreich
Ed Cone
Julie Leung
Ted Leung
Ken Coar
Flemming Funch
Mike Sanders
Marc Canter
Joi Ito
Ethan Zuckerman
Doug Kaye
Jon Lebkowski
Judith Meskill
Allen Searls
Esther Dyson
Christopher Lydon
Russell Beattie
Tim Bray
Brian Millar
Mark Pilgrim
Michael Hall
Backup Brain
Frankston, Reed
Britt Blaser
Brent Simmons
Loic Le Meur
Leslie Winer
Mike Taht
Eric Raymond
Volokh Conspiracy
Steven Levy
Lisa Rein
Skywave
Epeus' epigone
Glenn Reynolds
James Taranto
Frank Paynter
Ross Mayfield
Dana Blankenhorn
Ken Bereskin/Panther
Daily Wireless
Filchyboy
OxBlog
Bryan Field-Elliot
Rajesh Jain
Oliver Willis
Gary Turner
Michael O'Connor Clarke
Jennifer Balderama
Kevin Werbach
Amy Wohl
Phil Windley
Fulcrum
Real Joe
Greater Democracy
Mitch Ratcliffe /biz
Mitch Ratcliffe/soc
Wayne Robins
VivaCapitalism
Cut on the bias
Howard Greenstein
The Poor Man
Mickey Kaus
Dave Sifry
Buzz Bruggeman
Ben Hammersley
Matt Jones
Paul Andrews
John Robb
Schoolblog
Tom Shugart
Matt Welch
Blur Circle
Denise Howell
JY
BlackHoleBrain
Chris Pirillo
Marek
Tony Pierce
Chris Nolan's
Spot On

Wil Wheaton
Meg
Brian Linse
Dan Pink
Dawn Olsen
Craig
Yoz
The Head Lemur
Ev
Jeremy Zawodny
Susan Kitchens
K5
Anu Gupta
Jonathon
Fishrush
Dave Ely
Euan Semple
Eric Norlin
Paul Boutin
James Lileks
David Williams
Mary Wehmeier
Bruner Blog
Halley Suitt
Webword
Ann Salisbury
Om Malik
Moxie
J's Notes
Meesh
NUblog
TBTF
Cam
Seth Finkelstein
Tom Matrullo
Chip Hoagland
Deborah
Fortboise
J.D. Lasica
Photodude
Phil Wolff
Andre Durand
Eric Hansen
Mike McBride
Jeneane Sessum
Chris Nolan
Gonzo Engaged
Michael Mussington
UseTheSource
Wes
Adam
Sam Ruby
Miguel
Frank Field
Rebecca Blood
Joshua Allen
Cluetrain
JOHO
EGR
Searls site
Scoble
AKMA
Kottke
Tomalak's Realm
Tim O'Reilly
Mitch Kapor
Bill Quick
Dan Bricklin
Lou Josephs
Alan Reiter
N.Z. Bear
Todd Morman
Zeldman
Glenn
Joshua
Rex Hammock
Matthew Thomas
Brian Dear
Baylink
Burningbird