Shirky: Power Laws, Weblogs, and Inequality

Below is opening of a useful piece by Clay Shirking talking about Power Law dynamics:

Shirky: Power Laws, Weblogs, and Inequality: “A persistent theme among people writing about the social aspects of weblogging is to note (and usually lament) the rise of an A-list, a small set of webloggers who account for a majority of the traffic in the weblog world. This complaint follows a common pattern we’ve seen with MUDs, BBSes, and online communities like Echo and the WELL. A new social system starts, and seems delightfully free of the elitism and cliquishness of the existing systems. Then, as the new system grows, problems of scale set in. Not everyone can participate in every conversation. Not everyone gets to be heard. Some core group seems more connected than the rest of us, and so on.

Prior to recent theoretical work on social networks, the usual explanations invoked individual behaviors: some members of the community had sold out, the spirit of the early days was being diluted by the newcomers, et cetera. We now know that these explanations are wrong, or at least beside the point. What matters is this: Diversity plus freedom of choice creates inequality, and the greater the diversity, the more extreme the inequality.”

The Artful Manager: To be of use

The Artful Manager: To be of use

While searching for something else, I stumbled onto a great (as usual) 2004 keynote by Ben Cameron of Theatre Communications Group (you can find the keynote here), which led me to a wonderful poem by Marge Piercy that Ben invokes in his comments.

A favorite passage:

I want to be with people who submerge
in the task, who go into the fields to harvest
and work in a row and pass the bags along,
who stand in the line and haul in their places,
who are not parlor generals and field deserters
but move in a common rhythm
when the food must come in or the fire be put out.

Me too, although I’ll admit to being a parlor general a bit too often. Read the poem and roll up your sleeves.

Television Disrupted – The Transition from Network to Networked TV by Shelly Palmer

Television Disrupted – The Transition from Network to Networked TV by Shelly Palmer

Television Disrupted The Transition from Network to Networked Television, follows the money and the technology that enables it. The book also looks at the business rules and legal issues that are having a huge impact on the future. File sharing, copyright laws, geographical form factors, temporal windows and much more.

During the next few years, everything we know about the business of television is going to change – Television Disrupted The Transition from Network to Networked Television will serve as a guidebook and roadmap for the foreseeable future.

Andy Carvin’s Waste of Bandwidth: At the U of Missouri Scholarly Communications Conference

Andy Carvin’s Waste of Bandwidth: At the U of Missouri Scholarly Communications Conference: This morning I’m in Columbia, Missouri to speak at the Scholarly Communications Conference at the University of Missouri. I’ll be giving a keynote entitled ‘Open Content vs. Closed Doors (Or Closed Minds?).’ I’ll post more about it later; in the meantime, here’s the powerpoint.

Linkology – How the Most-Linked-To Blogs Relate

Linkology – How the Most-Linked-To Blogs Relate: “here are upwards of 27 million blogs in the world. To discover how they relate to one another, we’ve taken the most-linked-to 50 and mapped their connections. Each arrow represents a hypertext link that was made sometime in the past 90 days. Think of those links as votes in an endless global popularity poll. Many blogs vote for each other: “blogrolling.” Some top-50 sites don’t have any links from the others shown here, usually because they are big in Japan, China, or Europe—regions still new to the phenomenon.”

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