The Debate about Social Software
Roland Piquepaille writes "Is "social software" the new overhyped buzzword? In an article for the Guardian, Jack Schofield says yes. On the contrary, in Historical Roots of Social Software, Howard Rheingold offers insights about this new phenomenon. And in this Tech Central Station article, Arnold Kling agrees with Rheingold. He thinks that social software is likely to the basis of what could be the next "killer app." Kling says that with social software, the interaction is no longer between you and your computer, but between the groups you belong to and networks of computers. In order to explain the issues, King studies three types of problems that this new kind of software might solve: the matching problem, the issue-resolution problem, and the classroom-management problem. So, is social software hype or reality?"
It must have ChattingAndDrinkingAtAPub.
So you mean that the someone is going to invent a MUD? I can't wait!
Am I the only one who finds the term "social software" terribly ironic, considering the social skills of the people who write software? :-)
RMS gotta be behind this...
so can social software help a desperate slashdot reader get laid any time soon?
Hype or reality? Total hype. I mean why would people want to use software to say, "post their ideas" on a "shared forum". Totally ludicrous.
It's 10 PM. Do you know if you're un-American?
And in this Tech Central Station article, Arnold Kling agrees with Rheingold.
Did anyone else read that as Arnold Klingon? You're needed in Oregon ASAP, Mr. Klingon!