on Bouchard’s most lasting legacy: a quiet counterrevolution characterized by the fact that Bouchard steadfastly “clawed back the advances Quebecers had won since the Quiet Revolution of the 1960s.”
Amazing stuff at
edge.org: What questions have disappeared? Plus answers by tons of folks including Richard Dawkins, Rodney Brooks, Howard Rheingold, Steven Pinker, just to name a few.
I’m sure it’ll make
waves for some people, but Nikolai’s 2001 weblog awards looks like fun. It may seem competitive, which (rightly, to a point) turns some people off. But I think he’s done a good job of thinking up a wide variety of categories, so lots and lots of sites could show up in the results – so I bet it’ll end up being a really great list of sites when it’s all over.
Yet another nay-saying
article about peer to peer network applications in eCompany Now [via Scripting News]. I don’t know what SETI@home has to do with p2p, however. It’s a classic client-server app, no? A central server collates the results of the work of a distributed network of machines that send it processed data. The only difference is the relationship between the machines doing the crunching and the server. Maybe I’ve missed something?
P2P is something else entirely – it’s all about eliminating (or minimizing) the central server’s position in the mix. That’s its power – and its disadvantage. It is hard to see where the profits lie in deploying P2P schemes. No harder, though, than divining the profit-potential of the internet as a whole – and that certainly didn’t hinder its development.
For me, the power of P2P is more fundamental than whether or not anyone has figured out the business model to make it work. Think of something like the old Firefly music-suggestion site (which was very cool for its day, and anticipated a lot of stuff people are looking at now). Imagine if people had the option of running Firefly within their net-aware MP3 player. And think if you could make “buddies” lists (like in an IM program) and integrate their preferences to help suggest what you might like. Say you could tell the software, “give 100% weight to my preferences, 80% confidence to my buddies list, and 60% to people one degree away from my own buddies.” Etc.
The trick with p2p isn’t to hold off until the profitable way comes along, just as that wasn’t the case with the net as a whole. The trick is to recognize that it’s there, and that people love it. That’s the world – now people have to figure out how to live in it, commercially or no.
Fair warning!
There’s an event this week. Dinner and drinks at Nantha’s Kitchen, a fabulous Malaysian/Indonesian place on Duluth right near St-Laurent. The regular crew of Montrealers who keep weblogs is coming out, plus one of our favourite former Montrealers, the irrepressible Jish. Are you coming? Everyone’s welcome.
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