WebSeitz/wikilog
z2002-03-04-f
Whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness.

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last edited by BillSeitz on May 13, 2008 12:10 pm

gives the big-picture review of .

Jon hits (again) on the blog-vs-[Online Forum] topic as it relates to scientific/academic research/progress. There is a separation of these informal conversations from the more formal communication seen in scientific publications. These writings also form a kind of conversation, but one that is less immediate and more reflective. Monitoring the flow and interconnectedness of this meta-conversation, by means of citation indexes, is central to the way science creates shared knowledge.

One feature related to is the that lets a Radio writer find the people reading his blog via Radio, even if they aren't linking to him. Because transparent measurement of influence and interconnectedness is one of the key ingredients of the Radio experience.

Jon's long-term goal is the ability to collaborate in many communities using the tools of hypertext, indexing, search, and cross-referencing... Radio doesn't yet know how to occupy that middle ground (between email and public blogs). But it has the tools people need to do the experiment: a distributed scripting engine and object database, Web-services protocols. When Radio's currently-centralized community engine itself becomes distributable (as is planned), I expect to see an explosion of group-forming activity. This gets back to managing , which no tools do really well (in terms of controlling membership). Once you belong to lots of closed blogs, which actually matter to you (more than as entertainment), then I can see where has more value, as long as your aggregator makes it easy to prioritize this need-to-know stuff from the fluff; which is a feature totally lacking from Radio so far. [OK], I take it back! In that scenario I'd still rather just have a list of subscribed blogs with their mod-date (and maybe tracking a last-visit along with it). Because the more the info matters, then the more the context of the overall blog matters. Though I suppose what this supports is using as a pointer to a specific blog/wiki item, rather than its full contents.


 




Bill Seitz, fluxent at gmail dot com, Weblog