(2022-12-06) Sloan A Year Of New Avenues
Robin Sloan: A year of new avenues. It’s so powerfully obvious to me, it might as well be written in ten-foot letters of flame: the platforms of the last decade are done...we all have a new opportunity. Here’s my exhortation: Let 2023 be a year of experimentation and invention! Let it come from the edges, the margins, the provinces, the marshes! THIS MEANS YOU!
am thinking specifically of experimentation around "ways of relating online"
This doesn’t mean you ought to start a company. (start-up)
I want to insist on an amateur internet; a garage internet; a public library internet; a kitchen table internet. (Indie)
neither the big tech companies nor the startup financiers are going to produce the “ways of relating” that will matter in the next decade. Almost by definition, any experiment that’s truly pathbreaking and provocative is too weird and tiny for them to suffer
“web browsers” doesn’t just mean Chrome, Safari, and Edge; every operating system now offers a trivially available web canvas to which you can add anything you want
For people who care about creating worlds together, rather than getting rich, the web is the past and the web is the future
Okay, so, what kind of exploration? What kind of invention? I have some rough (and perhaps only marginally useful) ideas for new avenues, which I will type out below.
First, though, I want to acknowledge that inventing new things, particularly new “ways of relating”, is a lonely task. In the beginning, it’s just you, or, at best, you and your tiny gang of collaborators. You can only HOPE that maybe a few dozen other people start to pay attention
Try the new new new thing
Spend some time with Arc, the new browser from The Browser Company of New York
Think deeply about discovery
How might you help people find new things on the internet?
I suspect the answer has to do with good old-fashioned human recommendations, but who knows? Maybe TikTok has it right; maybe everybody deserves one (1)audition with the capricious god-algorithm of the realm
Climb into an overlay
The deep structure of the internet stymies peer-to-peer protocols
some people are turning to simple, secure overlay networks that make peer-to-peer addressing easier, or even possible at all. ZeroTier and Tailscale are the leaders here
Maybe you should start a ZeroTier or Tailscale network with a few friends or collaborators and … see what happens?
Go digging in the crates
What half-forgotten old protocol might be revived and repurposed?... RSS?
Where else is there wiring already in place? What new signals might you send through it?
My own avenue of exploration, a new protocol called Spring ‘83, takes direct inspiration from the internet of forty years ago
Make a thing with which you can talk about the thing
I feel like this is a common pattern: a community is building something new, and they talk about it … on Twitter. Maybe Discord.
Back in the 2000s, a lot of blogs were about blogs, about blogging. If that sounds exhaustingly meta, well, yes — but it was also SUPER generative.
Make exemplars before services
Remember that a single exemplar of a new format can be a profound contribution; in art and culture, maybe the most profound. These are the works that found genres.
Work with the garage door open (Work With The Garage Door Up
)
Less an avenue, more a way of approaching an avenue: This isn’t a time for “products”, or product launches
Ignore Mastodon
I suppose this is an anti-avenue, because: Mastodon is not it.
it doesn’t represent a sufficiently interesting experiment, because it accepts too much as settled
Now, a comment on the fizzing thing of the moment! ChatGPT
I guess I’ve been using these AI tools long enough that the “wow” has worn off, so I’m left with the “what now?”
I have a directory bursting with images created using Stable Diffusion. They were fun to make, but/and … what are they for? So far, the answer is “my amusement”. That’s fine; I like being amused. But amusement is not what’s stenciled over the door at OpenAI. They want to remake the whole economy over there.
it leaves out everything about the process that’s actually interesting.
here’s a lesson from my work making olive oil. In most places, the olive harvest is mechanized, but that’s only possible because olive groves have been replanted to fit the shape of the harvesting machines. A grove planted for machine harvesting looks nothing like a grove planted for human harvesting. (Seeing Like a State)
For me, the interesting questions sound more like
What new or expanded kinds of human labor might AI systems demand?
What entirely new activities do they suggest?
How will the world now be reshaped to fit their needs?
That last question will, on the timescale of decades, turn out to be the most important, by far.
I have to confess: even considering ChatGPT’s prodigious capabilities, I’m skeptical that any of this will happen very quickly
It is telling, though, that its public applications all have to do with the mass production of medium-quality text … which wasn’t exactly rich terrain even before GPT-3 came on the scene
The milestone that will impress me, honestly, is an AI agent with a bank account. Obviously that will also terrify me. But/and, maybe this is Sloan’s definition of artificial general intelligence (AGI): given a bank account and a few bucks to start, can this AI agent make it in the world?
For me, ChatGPT’s fluency with code is its most impressive feature. If you spend any time with it, try asking politely for “some cool CSS code for a blog”, or “a JavaScript function to identify an email address in a string”. It’s really something!
Finally, here’s my technical question.
it is not presently possible to sync localStorage between the multiple instances of Safari or Chrome that a user is logged into
My second question, the real one, is: what’s the next-best thing? Is there anything simpler than a remote function, created and maintained by me, to which I get and set a copy of my localStorage?
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