MySQL 5.1 is out as a GA release, but with crashing bugs that should give likely users pause. Perhaps worse, the problems are blamed on essential breakdowns in the project management: “We have changed the release model so that instead of focusing on quality and features our release is now defined by timeliness and features. [...]
Posted December 10, 2008 by Casey Bisson
Categories: Dispatches, Technology. Tags: 5.1, bugs, community, Drizzle, mysql, open source, OurDelta, quality. Be the first one.
All yesterday and this morning I’ve been seeing tweets about SWIFT, so I finally googled it to see what it was about. The service promises to help organize conferences in some new 2.0 way, but it looks to be about as preposterous a social network as WalMart’s aborted 2006 attempt at copying MySpace.
There are some [...]
Posted April 3, 2008 by Casey Bisson
Categories: Libraries & Networked Information, Politics & Controversy, Technology. Tags: antipattern, antipatterns, community, faux pas, license, social networks, social software, SWIFT, trust. Be the first one.
Rebekka Guðleifsdóttir is one of my favorite photographers on Flickr. Her photos are amazing, and it’s clear a lot of people agree. That’s the easy part. Then two problems arose: First Rebekka discovered that somebody was selling her photos for profit, and she posted about it. The community was shocked, and angry. And then, and [...]
Posted May 17, 2007 by Casey Bisson
Categories: Politics & Controversy, Technology. Tags: censorship, community, community standards, customer relations, flickr, Rebekka Guðleifsdóttir. Be the first one.
Ironic secret: I don’t really like most wikis, though that’s probably putting it too strongly. Ironic because I love both Wikipedia (and, especially, collabularies), but I grit my teeth pretty much every time I hear somebody suggest we need another wiki.
Putting it tersely: if wikis are so great, why do we need more than one [...]
Posted April 24, 2007 by Casey Bisson
Categories: Libraries & Networked Information, Technology. Tags: community, critical mass, rant, wiki, wikipedia, wikis. 10 Comments.
Ryan tried to tell me about it a month ago, Jessamyn gets the idea but uses Facebook instead, DeWitt fell for it, Ross said it tipped the tuna, and now I’m finally checking Twitter out. I signed up yesterday and immediately went looking for ways to connect Twitter, Plazes, and iChat.
Tweet is an AppleScript that [...]
Posted March 16, 2007 by Casey Bisson
Categories: Libraries & Networked Information, Technology. Tags: chat, chat status, communication, community, plazes, twazer, tweet, twitter, Twitterrific. 2 Comments.
Right there are the beginning of Esther Dyson’s ten-year-old book, Release 2.1, she alerts us to the Web 2.0 challenge we’re we’re now beginning to understand:
The challenge for us all is to build a critical mass of healthy communities on the Net and to design good basic rules for its public spaces so that larger [...]
Posted January 28, 2007 by Casey Bisson
Categories: Libraries & Networked Information, Politics & Controversy, Technology. Tags: challenge, communities, community, esther dyson, release 2.0, release 2.1, web 2.0, web20. 2 Comments.
I certainly don’t mean this to be as snarky as it’s about to come out, but I love the fact that Isaak questions my claim that linkability is essential to online discussions (and thus, communities) with a link:
Linkability Fertilizes Online Communities
I really don’t know how linkability will build communities. But we really need to work [...]
Posted October 17, 2006 by Casey Bisson
Categories: Libraries & Networked Information. Tags: book discussions, book talk, community, conversations, durable link, findability, lib20, libraries, library, library 2.0, library systems, linkability, online community, permalink, social software. 6 Comments.
Lichen, who’s had a great string of posts lately, pointed out Amy Campbell’s website, which opens with the following:
So I guess this myspace thing is going to catch on.
I resisted for a long time. These things make me nervous – myspace, messenger, emoticons… I can’t help but see it as some sinister forerunner of the [...]
Posted October 4, 2006 by Casey Bisson
Categories: Politics & Controversy, Technology. Tags: Amy Campbell, community, inclusion, myspace, seduction, social software. Be the first one.
It’s hard to know how Fuzzyfruit found the WPopac catalog page for A Baby Sister for Frances (though it is ranked fifth in a Google search for the title), but what matters is that she did find it, and she was able to link to it by simply copying the URL from her browser’s location [...]
Posted May 15, 2006 by Casey Bisson
Categories: Books, Movies, Music, Libraries & Networked Information. Tags: book discussions, book talk, community, durable link, findability, google economy, lib20, libraries, library, library 2.0, library systems, linkability, online community, permalink, social software. 6 Comments.
Peter Caputa dropped a comment on Jeff Nolan’s post about Zvents. The discussion was about how online event/calendar aggregators did business in a world where everything is rather thinly distributed. Part of the problem is answering how do you get people to contribute content — post their events — to a site that has little traffic, and how do you build traffic without content? The suggestion is that you have editorial staff scouring for content to build the database until reader contributions can catch up, and that’s where Peter comes in, suggesting that content and traffic aren’t where the value and excitement are: it’s the opportunity to involve fans in the event planning and marketing process.
Posted March 27, 2006 by Casey Bisson
Categories: Libraries & Networked Information, Technology. Tags: collaboration, commons, community, conversation, decision making, documentation, inclusion, involvement, jeff nolan, pete caputa, promotion, social calendaring, social software. Be the first one.