Internet Essay Topics.
Aug. 13th, 2004 04:42 amI've been giving some serious thought to writing some essays on the state of technology, where we are, and where we should be trying to go. I figure if I can get 7 or 8 written that I think are publishable, I can approach some place like betterhumans or similar and see if they would be interested in me doing a column or something.
To that end, I've started collecting a bunch of topics together that I thought I could write some essays on. Today, it occurred to me that the whole topic that I had described as 'fixing the internet' is a) HUGE and b) should be written as a gentle intro to NWO ideology. So, here is just a dump of what I have now (very incomplete - I spent maybe 2 minutes writing this down). Its not particularly pretty as its just a topic identifier and some brief notes to jog my memory about what I wanted to say on the topic. OTOH, I figured that it wouldn't hurt to ask on my friends list about what THEIR biggest beefs with the internet were, and what they think should be fixed. What I have is:
So, any suggestions?
To that end, I've started collecting a bunch of topics together that I thought I could write some essays on. Today, it occurred to me that the whole topic that I had described as 'fixing the internet' is a) HUGE and b) should be written as a gentle intro to NWO ideology. So, here is just a dump of what I have now (very incomplete - I spent maybe 2 minutes writing this down). Its not particularly pretty as its just a topic identifier and some brief notes to jog my memory about what I wanted to say on the topic. OTOH, I figured that it wouldn't hurt to ask on my friends list about what THEIR biggest beefs with the internet were, and what they think should be fixed. What I have is:
- First Class People, Nyms and ‘Hats’.
- Be able to log in anywhere, have subservient (‘kids’) accounts. Have multiple hats per nym. Have multiple nyms per user. Have group nyms.
- Replacing bookmarks w/ proper indexes.
- Associative bookmarks, meta-information, attributes, multiple-categories.
- Semantic vs Syntactic web
- Presentation vs. Content. The confusion of subjects (Plasma TV vs Plasma Physics), re-interpretation of data as appropriate to the user (images vs. descriptions, tables vs charts, side-by-side vs overlays). Web Designers vs Content Writers.
- The problem with URLs
- Permanence vs Impermanence, quoting, fair use, copying, deep linking, bandwidth stealing, meta-information.
- Web feedback
- Let anyone scribble on a web page, suggest better web layouts or clarify facts. Handle data spamming and fanatics with agendas. Amazon’s book rating problems and how to fix.
- Collaborative filtering and classification
- Why advertising isn’t inherently evil, and how to make the spam problem go away.
- What’s wrong with flash and similar technology?
- Non-extensibility, Lock-in, non-portability, non-open
- Holographic Storage and Distribution Systems
- Distributed, Encrypted information. Might make DOS attacks less likely, WILL help against slashdotting (cache’s with the data could broadcast it to other caches, even if the main site is down). Permits permanent storage.
- Protocols: IP, TCP, UDP and why we need QPP
- Revitalizing Usenet
- The idea of a global public forum isn’t a bad one, but it needs to be updated. We might also want a global public blog system nowadays.
So, any suggestions?
no subject
Date: 2004-08-13 04:16 am (UTC)No, Virginia, you are not a competent book designer.
WTF is with the pixel as the fundamental unit of graphic design.
User interface semiotics and the need to communicate with people whose cognitive strategies and abilities are different from your own. [OMG. I consider semiotics to be a low-level issue in this thing. Argh.]
Taking the last 35 years of compiler, language and operating systems research and bloody using it for a change.
Why extensibility cannot be added on in version 2. In fact, common uniform extensibility strategies from bottom to top (I don't know if you've noticed this in particular, but my NWO proposals have only one kind of 'pointer', and it covers everything from compressed content encoding specifications to allowing drag and drop of alien constants into source code).
Representation independence and the moral and technical requirement of universal readability.
Systems that defend themselves against technical error and vendor malfeasance; communal implementation denouncements.
And prospects. The prospects for:
automatic cryptography
online economy
offline presentation collaboration
integrated omnipresent computation (in which your sopace probes and your sneakers, your car and your paint all speak the same language)
democratic infrastructure and distributed socialism
no subject
Date: 2004-08-13 04:34 am (UTC)