Corante

Authors

Clay Shirky
( Archive | Home )

Liz Lawley
( Archive | Home )

Ross Mayfield
( Archive | Home )

Sébastien Paquet
( Archive | Home )

David Weinberger
( Archive | Home )

danah boyd
( Archive | Home )

Guest Authors
Recent Comments

Gry Przegladarkowe on My book. Let me show you it.

Gry przeglÄ…darkowe on My book. Let me show you it.

DUI Attorney Chicago IL on My book. Let me show you it.

eau claire used cars on My book. Let me show you it.

MySocialMediaMentors.com on My book. Let me Amazon show you it.

Gry przegladarkowe on My book. Let me show you it.

Site Search
Monthly Archives
Syndication
RSS 1.0
RSS 2.0

Many-to-Many

Monthly Archives

August 5, 2003

History, Personality, and Wikis

Email This Entry

Posted by Liz Lawley

On Tim Bray's blog there's a follow-up to yesterday's News.com story about the Pie/Echo/Atom project ("Battle of the Blog"). Tim talks about the reporter's attempt to get him to focus on the personality politics in the story--and Sam Ruby reports a similar conversation in his blog. Tim goes on, however, to say the following:
You can't understand the real story--ever--without understanding the personalities and who said what to whom and when and why. Marxism had an alternate theory of history: that it was all predetermined by socio-economic forces and that the individual was not a factor in the story. There's a word for that theory: wrong.
Contrast that with Clay's posting here last month on the topic of the project wiki:
But there is a second reason, under the surface but possibly more important -- wikis denature personality. Echo exists not because there are things wrong with the RSS markup -- there are, but they could be easily fixed. Echo exists because there are things wrong with the RSS process. RSS is having not a technological crisis but a constitutional one, where who decides what concerning RSS is not clear, and will never be clear, because the people doing the deciding don't even see themselves as being part of a decision making body.
Are there times when "denaturing personality" is useful? Sure. But Tim's points bring out for me where my greatest discomfort with wikis come from. I believe it matters who said what, and when. That context provides enormous "metadata" for me personally. And the wiki explicitly strips that. I understand why, and I do recognize its benefits. But I'm still uncomfortable with it.

Comments (0) + TrackBacks (0) | Category:

August 3, 2003

Wiki Backlash?

Email This Entry

Posted by Liz Lawley

There's an interesting thread on Phil Ringnalda's blog today regarding the naming process for the !(echo/atom/pie) syndication format project. Sam Ruby, who maintains the wiki for the project, asks in the comments why Phil feels unable or unwilling to re-open "Pie" as a naming option. He wonders whether it's the tone of the wiki name vote page that's keeping Phil from doing so.

...continue reading.

Comments (1) + TrackBacks (0) | Category: