Tracing the Evolution of Social Software 53
ChristopherRayAllen writes "I have just posted an article on the history of terminology associated with collaboration software in my Life With Alacrity blog: The term 'social software', which is now used to define software that supports group interaction, has only become relatively popular within the last two or more years. However, the core ideas of social software itself enjoy a much longer history, running back to Vannevar Bush's ideas about 'memex' in 1945, and traveling through terms such as Augmentation, Groupware, and CSCW in the 1960s, 70s, 80s, and 90s. By examining the many terms used to describe today's 'social software' we can also explore the origins of social software itself, and see how a very real life cycle centers around the use of technical terminology."
Is it really social software... (Score:4, Funny)
Thats all good but.. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Thats all good but.. (Score:2, Insightful)
I think that's a great idea, but someone has already done it. Its called government.
Re:Thats all good but.. (Score:2)
We would end up with communism minus a government* or chaos
*And even then we would have some inofficial government of people with more influence than others.
I'm not trolling, I'm a heavy free soft user and a small dev but if freedom and endless mailinglist discussions would be everywhere that would be a serious issue for mankind
Re:Thats all good but.. (Score:1)
'It has an unusual colour, it must be communism - destroy it'
'This is all very experimental and ground-breaking - communism - destroy it..'
Introduction to HCI (Score:2)
Quite cool, though. Maybe my HCI prof would find it interesting
If you want good social software (Score:3, Interesting)
What about us? (Score:5, Insightful)
Slashdot might be called a "news site", but in technical format it's run as a blog where a select few chosen by the owner of the sute post stories, then we all chime in with our comments. That's exactly how a "blog" is defined...
And you can't say this doesn't change how news is processed in our world. Just look at all the trouble Dan Rather is having with blogs teaming up pointing out his recent mistakes...
Re:What about us? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:What about us? (Score:2, Informative)
Look at this site if you want to read some interesting essays.
"Clay Shirky's Writings About the Internet
Economics & Culture, Media & Community, Open Source"
You'll find essays about blogs.
The link come from the article itself.
This article is pretty good (Score:2, Informative)
http://shirky.com/writings/group_enemy.html/ [shirky.com]
Re:This article is pretty good (Score:1)
really liked that (Score:2)
It was a great article though, I have observed similar effects for some time. Any interesting group always develops core members and the group is better off if those core members are able to somewhat control how the group as a whole operates.
And it's very true that if you go in and disturb a happily functioning group, the core members will go to great lengths to remove the disturbance and punish the offender in some way.
Another article alon
Re:Slashdot personalized story title filter featur (Score:3, Funny)
Usenet? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Usenet? (Score:2)
Or PLATO [thinkofit.com], at the University of Illinois and Control Data Corporation?
Do not forget about the classic BBS. (Score:5, Insightful)
Similar to the OSS movement, most of the BBS community was run by volunteers who spent their own time and money to make their systems possible.
Those are days that I will look back on with mostly smiles and happy thoughts.
Re:Do not forget about the classic BBS. (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Do not forget about the classic BBS. (Score:2)
-l
Re:Do not forget about the classic BBS. (Score:1)
[nt] shah right. (Score:2)
Re:Do not forget about the classic BBS. (Score:2)
Last two or more years? (Score:1)
Social Software swt/weblog (Score:1)
Here's my favorite "Social Software"...
I use MeetingPoint [net-cell.com] and MobiLuck [mobiluck.com] on my Nokia 6600.
Mobiluck is better and easier than manual bluejacking. Plus I like that app a lot. I use it when I want to choose who to pest.
Meetingpoint is in a slightly different business... it does not need ANY manual interaction, just set the message you want to send, put your cell in a pocket and walk around, automatically spamming every cell that gets close enough. Oh, and it also runs on palm, pocketpc, windows. But not l
Buzzword? (Score:4, Interesting)
*YAWN*
Re:Buzzword? (Score:2)
I'll probably be modded flamebait, but what the freaking hell is this.
Some guy invents a new term, writes a blog entry about it, posts it to slashdot, and of course it's accepted because it's news no one should be missing.
Personally I like anti-social software. (Score:5, Funny)
"Unix is very user friendly. It just picks it's friends very carefully."
m.
Online "social networks"... (Score:1)
Too bad... (Score:4, Funny)
Sheesh. I think I'll start blogging about TPS reports to see what recoginition I'll get...
telnet chat.fnord.org ... (Score:2)
-l
The article doesn't mention PLATO (Score:1)
"within the last two years" yeah right! (Score:2, Insightful)
ARPANET/Internet. USENET. FidoNet. Bulletin Board Systems (BBS) software, the sole purpose of which to build electronic meetingplaces, since the late 1970's. And countless machine-local 'mail' type systems on computers back to the earliest if the 1960's.
Re:"within the last two years" yeah right! (Score:1)
Source Control Software (Score:1)
I'm pretty unimpressed (Score:3, Insightful)
Plato (notes and email)
Usenet
Chat rooms
Instant messaging
i.e. he leaves out the things that get the most use by real people, and instead focuses on the MIT Media Lab kind of stuff that nobody in the real world really cares about.
How about CRM, CM, SFA, etc? (Score:1)