Wednesday, November 19, 2014
Where is the Unbalance?
People who play MMORPG's perhaps are looking for a social element which has been absent in their reality. Many people who are addicted to MMORPG's have found that they are popular or accomplished in the virtual world. Because these games are essentially a large social network, the stimulating effects of becoming the hero in these games are just as powerful as becoming the hero on the football field. Everyone has a need to feel needed. If our society is not able to offer everyone a way to become successful and important, those who are socially rejected will turn to other avenues to find their place. I don't see our society moving away from the clubs, cliques and classes which promote favoritism and leave others as unimportant and under-appreciated. Therefore I find it fortunate that the virtual world can provide an alternative to our socially biased reality.
Wednesday, November 12, 2014
The Power of the Community
Reading Here
Comes Everybody it was often stated that institutions have a “Coasean
Ceiling” meaning that an institution can only grow to a certain size
before the cost of management becomes prohibitively large. Google is one of the
largest public business institutions I am aware of and it doesn’t seem to show
signs of slowing. Shirky explains in
chapter ten that large institutions have little room to make innovative discoveries
in their fields because the cost of failure is too high. Google is an extremely
innovative company, as they have developed many cutting edge technologies. Google glasses was an ingenious idea which
hasn’t necessarily been a huge pay off for them. The self-driven car which they
are spending millions of dollars on currently is having some problems getting
approved. It seems like they have had plenty
of failure while still being a huge institution and they are thriving financially.
Maybe I am missing something; according to Shirky this should not be the case.
In my analysis of Shirky’s observations of traditional
institutions in relation to Google, I have not yet taken in to account that
Google may not be as traditional of an institution as I first thought. I wonder
if Google has enough revenues coming in from their data analysis and search
engine advertising to spend outrageous amounts on research and development. I
have heard that Google uses more of a flat managerial hierarchy. This managing
style may cut down on the cost of the institution.
Personally, I found one of the most applicative
topics in this book to be that of “publish now filter later.” This has quickly
become the way the internet is run. There is so much media being published on a
regular basis the only way we can know what content is important is by the
filters which we or the community create. I regularly use amazon.com to make purchases;
at amazon we find a great example of the need for a community filter. When a
user searches for a particular item the results offer hundreds of varieties of
that same item. The most reliable way the community has found to filter these
items is to submit user reviews. The reviews on any given item are the single
most influential factor to a purchasing decision on amazon. It may be observed
that many companies, along with amazon itself, offer free products to frequent
reviewers in exchange for an honest review of their items. This behavior demonstrates
how important reviews have become to amazon. In general the “publish now filter
later” principal is beneficial to our online media community for the same
reason Shirky gives for open source’s advantage over the traditional
institutional development: the cost of failure is free. As an example, it takes
no money to post a video to YouTube today, if the community likes your video
enough and views it consistently you will be rewarded monetarily. This is good
for the community because those “brilliant but erratic” amateurs have a platform
to publish their masterpieces.
Very often brilliant ideas are inaccessible
to institutions because they are forced to hire the “steady performer” versus
the “brilliant but erratic” programmer. This is what the CS department is
teaching the students coming through BYU. We are being taught to be the steady performers
talked about in the book. It is sort of up to us to have the brilliant ideas
but we are taught the skills necessary to get steady jobs in the institutions. As
developers going into the technology field it will be necessary to take in to
account how new technology changes the ways people interact and think. If we
can use the internet to harness the social connectivity it promotes new
businesses and idea become possible.
Monday, November 10, 2014
What happened to women in Computer Science?
According to statistics curated by an NPR reporter, from about 1965 until 1984, the number of women in computer science was on the rise. These numbers correlated to the number of women going into the medical field or law; while the the number of women going into those other careers continued rising steadily the number of women in computer science began to decline in 1984. I find it interesting that was the year the Apple Macintosh was released. The ensuing media campaign for the Macintosh included an ad with a bunch of men marching like zombies and a scantily clad large chested woman running down an isle and throwing a hammer at the "Big Brother" figure. I believe that when personal computing started to become popular the marketing was mostly targeting men and wrongly it became a social paradigm that computers were boys toys. I don't know the exact reason for the decline in women in computer science; I do know, however, that the women we have working in computer science now play a vital role in the future of the field and I am grateful for my friends who are women in the industry.
Wednesday, November 5, 2014
The Ethics of Open Source
Can a developer be expected to give away the Intellectual Property which may be a means of providing for his family? Open source software most certainly has its place on the internet, it allows communities to grow and improve a software together.This encourages the application of technology to the society for the common good. Free software is a worthwhile philosophy, one which I find myself being involved in from time to time. I do, however, believe that just as a writer of a novel is entitled to the exclusive rights of what he develops, a software creator is entitled to exclusive rights of the code he has written. Pressuring a developer to release his source code is like pressuring an artist to put their music up on the internet for free or asking an author to release his book at no charge. Just as the musicians and the authors are, for the most part, in the business to make money, likewise, for the most part, the software programmer is in the software industry to make a living.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)