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World of Ends Public Draft

Doc Searls sent me the link over to the newest work that he and fellow Cluetrain person David Weinberger haveput together. It's called "World of Ends" although I like the subtitle "What the Internet Is and How to Stop Mistaking It for Something Else" better - but that's just me. In any case, some interesting reading, particular if you like/d The Cluetrain Manifesto. Update: 03/08 14:42 GMT by CN : Yeah, this is a dupe of yesterday's story. Everyone point at Hemos and laugh.

7 of 81 comments (clear)

  1. Dupe - was posted yesterday! by DJPenguin · · Score: 4, Funny

    Proof that DUPES can still get through will subscribers looking into the mysterious future!

    Yesterday's article:

    http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=03/03/07/1532 23 3&mode=nested&tid=95

    1. Re:Dupe - was posted yesterday! by hoggy · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Perhaps if there was a simple "dupe" button on articles in The Mysterious Future, these would get picked up quicker. When a subscriber sees a story in The Mysterious Future at the moment they have no immediate way to offer feedback on it besides emailing the editors. No-one's going to bother doing this.

      That way if an article gets a dozen "dupe" marks against it while it's still in the queue, it can get held until it's checked by an editor and then pulled if necessary.

  2. The net isn't rocket science by hugesmile · · Score: 5, Insightful

    All we need to do is pay attention to what the Internet really is. It's not hard. The Net isn't rocket science.

    Wasn't the internet invented as part of a military Advanced Research Project Agency, and include a mechanism for redundancy to keep communications going in case of a military attack (often delivered by rockets and missles).

    Sounds a lot like rocket science to me...

    1. Re:The net isn't rocket science by The+AtomicPunk · · Score: 4, Funny

      Slashdot has certainly perfected the redundancy part ...

  3. Aha! by xintegerx · · Score: 5, Funny

    ...We can build businesses without having to worry that "Internet, Inc." is going to force us to upgrade, double its price once we have bought in, or get taken over by one of our competitors.

    HA! If that's true, then explain what these "Internet, Inc." stock certificates are, that I bought online!

    I shall have free internet access FOREVER, here and on my MOON property that I also bought online...

  4. Goddamn it, Slashdot by Henry+V+.009 · · Score: 4, Funny

    My country is going to war in the next couple weeks. Could you refrain from stories including the words 'public draft' for a bit. It's a little unnerving to come across first thing in the morning before I've had a cup of coffee. Thank you.

  5. A good read by frdmfghtr · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Makes me wish I had seen it yesterday :)

    A couple points about the mistakes being made over and over and over ad nauseum:

    Other mistakes we insist on making over and over. For example, thinking that:

    * ...the Web, like television, is a way to hold eyeballs still while advertisers spray them with messages.


    This one in particular struck me. As has already been proven, users will find ways to block annoying advertising (Guidescope, AdSubtract, Junkbuster, etc.) rendering it useless. Free tip to the ad agencies: an ad that one finds interesting and compels us to explore further is not the same as oner that is obnoxious and gets our attention for the wrong reasons. An ad that is unseen will draw exactly -0- potential customers.

    As for those who believe that users who block ads steal content: there is nothing that requires me to read the ads in my local newspaper. If I don't read those ads, am I stealing content there as well? If I pull out the remote control and change the TV channel at a commercial or get up to get a sandwich when the ads come on, am I stealing content? (Yes, I know what the "content providers" say about that, and I say "screw you" to them.)

    * ...the Net is something that telcos and cable companies should filter, control and otherwise "improve."

    The Internet is a pipe. It is a pipe that transmits data hither and yon. That is it. The only improvements that the telcos and cable providers can do is add better and faster hardware to make the pipe bigger. Using the "Information Superhighway" as the analogy: when you have a freeway through your city and you improve it, you improve the efficiency of the flow of traffic by making it EASIER for traffic to pass through, not HARDER.

    * ... it's a bad thing for users to communicate between different kinds of instant messaging systems on the Net.

    If AOL, Microsoft, et al won't do it, I bet some intrepid programming brains will write "switchboard" type server software that will do it for them, assuming it hasn't been done already. The IM clients and services are free, so how can AOL be afraid of losing customers of their AIM users can talk directly to MSN Messenger users? Must be that whole territory, ego, alpha-male thing.

    * ...the Net suffers from a lack of regulation to protect industries that feel threatened by it.

    The threat facing those industries (music and multimedia content) that feel threatened by it is their own failure to embrace the INternet for what it is: a means for these companies to distribute their product practically instantly and at a extremely reduced cost. If I buy ten or twelve tracks from Liquid Audio and burn my own CD, that cost me about $12 or $14 all told. That CD is worth much more than the $16 CD that the local Camelot Music is trying to push with only two or three good tracks.

    The non-threatened industries take advantage of the Internet pipe and use it for what it is: a fast and easy means of transmitting data. Cisco apparently saw this when they developed the voice-over-IP phones (which, BTW, are very cool--I had the opportunity to use them over a multi-site network linked by satellite, and they sounded just like a land line) and the telecos are threatened because now users can communicate without using their proprietary, charge-by-the-minute phone systems.

    My thoughts for the morning...

    --
    Government's idea of a balanced budget: take money from the right pocket to balance...oh who am I kidding?