Ive tried. I really have. I installed phpWiki on my own server, and used it for a curriculum development project that it was well suited to. Ive participated in the wiki-based development of content hosted at Socialtext for the emergent democracy and social software groups.
I love their functionality. I really do. Its very very cool to be able to do ridiculously easy collaborative document editing.
But
lets face it. Theyre ugly.
Im not a shallow person. Really. (Well, maybe a little shallow. But thats not the point.) I do, however, respond better to web pages that are well designed and pleasant to look at. And wiki pages arent. Even with phpWiki, which lets me choose from a variety of layout schemes, I cant do anything to make them better without changing everything on every page. I cant apply styles selectively. I cant put things in fixed-size divs so that they dont spread all the way out across the page.
You can spot a wiki page a mile a way. They all look exactly like the pages that my students used to turn out in basic HTML classes back in 1995. All theyre missing are the rainbow-colored bars to replace the ubiquitous horizontal rules.
I had somewhat high hopes for Hydra when I first heard about it, but the documents Ive seen output from it this week (like the notes Tom Coates et al created at EtCon) lose all the lovely color-coding and connection to people that the screen shots of the application show. (I wonder
does it work like iChat, which lets me save a chat and then reopen it as an iChat document with all the originally formatting intact? If I open a Hydra-generated document using Hydra, days after the shared editing is over, will it still show me the authors who participated?)
Ive seen a sneak preview of an edit-this-page type of outliner that Marc Canter is working on, and I like it a lot better. Why? It doesnt hurt to look at it, mostly. Silly? Maybe. But I know Im not alone.
In fact, Ive been thinking a lot about visuals in the context of social software lately, due in large part to Adam Greenfields recent post on Friendster. Id been trying to figure out why I like Friendster, despite the many many things about it that I find problematic (a user interface thats driven away several of my friends, the often obscene bbs messages that Im forced to look at on the main page, the fact that I cant see the last name of people who want me to acknowledge that were really friends, etc). Greenfield nails it: Friendsters killer app? The swelling joy that fills my heart every time I look at the pictures of these, my good friends. (Awwwwwww
).
Such a little thing, right? Pictures of your friends on the main page? Surely he cant be right. But then I thought about how much more I like iChat than any other IM client Ive used. Pictures of my friends, again. In a clean, aesthetically pleasing window. And I thought, too, about the fact that I regularly return to Friendsters main page, and look at my friends. (Twenty-three, at last count. And theres even a smiling picture of the elusive burningbird in there!)
Theres a lesson in there for developers, I think. A theme thats emerging. Its not just about the software-enabled connections. Its about the visualization of those connections, the personalization of those connectionsand faces are an important piece of that.
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