Planet OSFA

Planet OSFA

June 07, 2010

Wild Webmink

ConsortiumInfo.org

The Alexandria Project, Chapter 21: What a Difference a Dong Makes!

New to The Alexandria Project?  Find a plot synopsis and guide to the characters here, find the earlier chapters here, and follow the F...

June 07, 2010 07:01 AM

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☞ BCS Faces No-Confidence Vote Crisis

I just received notice of an Emergency General Meeting at the British Computer Society – some members think the current leadership want to  subvert the BCS and turn it from the professional society for Alice and Dilbert into a mass-membership organisation serving the needs of the Pointy-Haired Boss and the corporations he serves. Read more over on my ComputerWorldUK blog.


by Simon Phipps at June 07, 2010 07:00 AM

June 06, 2010

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June 04, 2010

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☞ Google Fixes WebM Licence

I’m delighted to say that Google has responded and fixed the licence for WebM so that they don’t need to submit it to OSI any more – they are now just using a BSD licence with a separate patent grant. Read more over on my ComputerWorldUK blog.


by Simon Phipps at June 04, 2010 08:42 PM

Search Results for gov2.0

Connecting the dots with Intellipedia

The United States' sixteen intelligence agencies are using an internal wiki, dubbed "Intellipedia," to share information. We take a look at how Intellipedia is helping these agencies work better.

by Alex Howard at June 04, 2010 02:56 PM

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June 02, 2010

Search Results for gov2.0

Making community health information as useful as weather data

The chief technology office of Health and Human Services, Todd Park, is fond of using the National Ocean and Oceanographic Association as a metaphor for the innovation that may be unlocked through releasing public data. NOAA data underpins Weather.com and nearly every commercial meteorological service in the United States. Park has been working closely with other government officials and the technology community to create a framework for government to act as a platform through the Community Health Data Initiative.

by Alex Howard at June 02, 2010 03:39 PM

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June 01, 2010

Search Results for gov2.0

California: There's an app for that

Can California's budget-stricken government be improved through citizen engagement and civic developers? If a new application contest that launches this week bears digital fruit, there just might be an app for that. The state of California will partner with Microsoft, Google and Programmable Web to run an apps contest this summer. "While California is one of the anchor supporters, it...

by Alex Howard at June 01, 2010 04:34 PM

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Search Results for gov2.0

Four short links: 1 June 2010

XML in Legislature/Parliament Environments (Sean McGrath) -- quite detailed background on the use of XML in legislation drafting systems, and the problems caused by convention in that world--page/line number citations, in particular. (Quick gloat: NZ's legislature management system is kick-ass, and soon we'll switch from print authoritative to digital authoritative) Large-Scale Social Media Analysis with Hadoop -- In this...

by Nat Torkington at June 01, 2010 04:57 AM

May 31, 2010

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☞ Open Data: Fantastic, But Not Enough

In an unusual move for such a significant news item, the UK government announced over the weekend that they were ordering all government departments to embark on a voyage of transparency. There were some very good ideas in the announcement, including a mandate to publish details of all ITC procurements. And there is no doubt that a mandate for open data is a fantastic move. The letter from the Prime Minister was pretty clear:

Given the importance of this agenda, the Deputy Prime Minister and I would be grateful if departments would take immediate action to meet this timetable for data transparency, and to ensure that any data published is made available in an open format so that it can be re-used by third parties. From July 2010, government departments and agencies should ensure that any information published includes the underlying data in an open standardised format.

Read on over on my ComputerWorldUK Blog


by Simon Phipps at May 31, 2010 11:32 PM

ConsortiumInfo.org

Alexandria Project, Chapter 20: Does the Dear Leader have a Rocket in his Pocket, or is he Just Happy to See Us?

New to The Alexandria Project?  Find a plot synopsis and guide to the characters here, find the earlier chapters here, and follow the Furt...

May 31, 2010 06:14 PM

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Search Results for gov2.0

Four short links: 31 May 2010

Transparency is Not Enough (danah boyd) -- we need people to not just have access to the data, but have access to the context surrounding the data. A very thoughtful talk from Gov 2.0 Expo about meaningful data release. Feed6 -- the latest from Rohit Khare is a sort of a "hot or not" for pictures posted to Twitter....

by Nat Torkington at May 31, 2010 07:14 AM

May 30, 2010

OpenSF Blog

It’s About Everything, Not Just Technology – Part 1

I returned last Thursday from O’Reilly’s Gov 2.0 Expo in Washington DC with a long list of “next steps” and action items for myself. One of the first people I met there asked the familiar question we all hear at conferences, “So, what do you hope to get out of this conference?” and my answer wasn’t something I had rehearsed since it just seemed natural that I would be part of Gov 2.0 Expo. After a short pause, I told her that I wanted to develop a better understanding how we, local government, could get citizens to engage with us. This seems pretty straightforward and there are plenty of vendors whose products “engage citizens” but that’s not what I’m talking about. The technology is there, I work on a technology team, we know the technology in the space. I want to know about everything else, not just technology. I want to know how to get citizens to wake up and think to themselves “I want to engage with government today.”

With the simple goal of learning how to get citizens to want to engage with San Francisco’s government, I set-off to Dan Zarella’s presentation on “Creating a Social Media Strategy: The Data Shows Why It’s Important.” For government a social media strategy typically includes addressing all the legal implications of social media, rather than a strategy for reaching the broadest group of people and making the largest impact on them. Social media, such as Facebook and Twitter, are tools used by large companies to reach their audience where they are already engaged. As such, government should be using the same tools to market ourselves and services by going to the places they are already engaged and active.

Dan Zarella has compelling data and insights on how to best market yourself or company using social media. Most of Dan’s examples were not specific to government, however the overall marketing strategy can apply. For starters understand the audience using the different tools. Once you know your audience you can properly engage them, use them to make your marketing message viral.

From Dan’s presentation I realized people are motivated to action, whether it be re-tweeting or actual volunteering, when the message is clear, there’s a call-to-action, and they are being engaged in their own communities. The first “next step” on my list is to create a social media strategy for my next project and ensure that I apply Dan Zarella’s advice to the strategy.


by aliblack at May 30, 2010 04:11 PM

May 29, 2010

Search Results for gov2.0

Gov 2.0 Week in Review

The past week's Gov 2.0 Expo in Washington showcased the culmination of months of planning, particularly the international nature of the movement towards open government and open data.

by Alex Howard at May 29, 2010 04:36 PM

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May 28, 2010

Search Results for gov2.0

Data and simplicity can build the government platform

Tim O'Reilly and Aneesh Chopra, Federal Chief Technology Officer, had a wide-ranging discussion at this week's Gov 2.0 Expo in Washington D.C. Here's archived video and a breakdown of key insights from their chat.

by Mac Slocum at May 28, 2010 02:52 PM

May 27, 2010

Search Results for gov2.0

Tim Berners-Lee on Data.gov.uk, open linked data and open standards

Can you explain open linked data using a bag of chips? Tim Berners-Lee did precisely that yesterday in his keynote at the Gov 2.0 Expo. After the jump, you can watch an exclusive interview with Berners-Lee exploring open linked data, how governments' open data efforts should be judged, and more.

by Alex Howard at May 27, 2010 04:00 PM

Twitter / OpenSourceGov

OpenSourceGov: Jeremy Allison & @tmolini of Open Source for America will present at #openyourworld free webinar at 4pmET today. http://bit.ly/9IutqV

OpenSourceGov: Jeremy Allison & @tmolini of Open Source for America will present at #openyourworld free webinar at 4pmET today. http://bit.ly/9IutqV

May 27, 2010 01:37 PM

May 26, 2010

Twitter / OpenSourceGov

OpenSourceGov: RT@melaniechernoff: @massdotdev opend bus data & in weeks, 6 new apps online "better than anythg we cld hve created http://ow.ly/1qyoaj #g2e

OpenSourceGov: RT@melaniechernoff: @massdotdev opend bus data & in weeks, 6 new apps online "better than anythg we cld hve created http://ow.ly/1qyoaj #g2e

May 26, 2010 05:42 PM

Search Results for gov2.0

Crisis Commons releases open source oil spill reporting

The new iPhone and Android apps will allow organizations responding to the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico to report on the go. "The cool thing about the app is that the photos and information will be open to anyone to use," said Heather Blanchard, co-founder of Crisis Commons.

by Alex Howard at May 26, 2010 04:16 PM

Twitter / OpenSourceGov

OpenSourceGov: We are at the Gov 2.0 Expo in DC today. Visit our table. You could win a T-shirt for following us on Twitter or identi.ca! #g2e #osfa

OpenSourceGov: We are at the Gov 2.0 Expo in DC today. Visit our table. You could win a T-shirt for following us on Twitter or identi.ca! #g2e #osfa

May 26, 2010 01:50 PM

May 25, 2010

Twitter / OpenSourceGov

OpenSourceGov: Open Source for America will present at #openyourworld webinar at 4pmET on Thurs May 27. Registration is FREE! http://bit.ly/9IutqV

OpenSourceGov: Open Source for America will present at #openyourworld webinar at 4pmET on Thurs May 27. Registration is FREE! http://bit.ly/9IutqV

May 25, 2010 03:17 PM

Wild Webmink

May 24, 2010

Search Results for gov2.0

Gov 2.0 Week in Review

Bernard Kouchner may have written that the "universal spirit of the Enlightenment should run through the new media" but this week, the zeitgeist of the government information revolution online was powered by open data.

by Alex Howard at May 24, 2010 07:55 PM

What does Government 2.0 look like?

The most important thing I learned in grad school was very simple: "Draw the picture." (Thanks Tony.) By that my advisor meant that it's often hard or impossible to describe a complex system in words alone. And consequently, if you can't draw a picture of what you're trying to explain, you probably don't understand it. Drawing pictures of complex systems...

by Mark Drapeau at May 24, 2010 04:48 PM

ConsortiumInfo.org

The Alexandria Project, Chapter 19: The iBalls Shall Rise Again

New to The Alexandria Project?  Find a plot synopsis and guide to the characters here, find the earlier chapters here, and follow the Furthe...

May 24, 2010 02:10 PM

Wild Webmink

☞ Problems With WebM?

The announcement last week at Google IO of the creation of the WebM project and the release of the VP8 codec was a positive and welcome development, finally offering an alternative to the royalty-liable H.264 and to Theora. WebM arises from Google’s purchase of ON2 last year and had been widely anticipated. Google did their homework, securing endorsements from competing browser vendors Opera and Mozilla and even from Adobe (possibly in exchange for Google’s endorsement of Flash on their TV platform) and, weakly, from Microsoft. The parade is now in full swing, and we can expect many more announcements of support like the one from the Miro Project. Only Apple was painfully absent, pushing the Google-Apple tension further into the spotlight.

There was still more homework to do, though. Once all the hoopla had died down, it became clear there are some serious questions that need considering. Read about them on my ComputerWorldUK blog.


by Simon Phipps at May 24, 2010 07:00 AM

May 23, 2010

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May 22, 2010

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Michael Tiemann's blog

Re: VP8 and WebM--Thank you, Google! (P.S. Let's talk)

It was more than a month ago that I started my pilgrimage to Texas to prepare for and participate in a court case in East Texas, but it still seems like only yesterday. As Groklaw aptly reports, opposing counsel pressed not only the question of whether Red Hat and Novell infringed three patents originally issued to Xerox corporation (which later fell into the hands of a non-practicing entity), but argued before the jury that there was a fundamental conflict between property rights and open source software--a conflict they wanted the jury to resolve in their favor.

While I have been processing the events of the trial, playing and replaying lines of questioning over and over in my mind, I've barely been able to keep up with the extraordinary changes to both the competitive landscape and the competitive rules of the technology industry. Having escaped from one rabbit-hole, I appear to have fallen down another directly.

read more

by Michael Tiemann at May 22, 2010 01:21 AM

May 21, 2010

ITDashboard Blog Feed

Data.gov: Pretty Advanced for a One-Year-Old

One year ago, data.gov was born with 47 datasets of government information that was previously unavailable to the public. The thinking behind this was that this data belonged to the American people, and you should not only know this information, but also have the ability to use it. By tapping the collective knowledge of the American people, we could leverage this government asset to deliver more for millions of people.


Today, there are more than 250,000 datasets, hundreds of applications created by third parties, and a global movement to democratize data. To date, the site has received 97.6 million hits, and following the Obama Administration’s lead, governments and institutions of all sizes are unlocking the value of data for their constituents. San Francisco, New York City, the State of California, the State of Utah, the State of Michigan, and the Commonwealth of Massachusetts have launched data.gov-type sites, as have countries such as Canada, Australia, and the UK as well as the World Bank.


From these datasets, citizens have developed hundreds of applications that help parents keep their children safe, let travelers find the fastest route to their destinations, and inform home buyers about the safety of their new neighborhood. Never before have people been so empowered with the information they need to make decisions every day.


As I reflect on the 1st anniversary of data.gov, the most important accomplishment is the birth of a community of innovators that is helping change the way Washington works.


In less than eight months, a team of students at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute developed over 40 applications using data.gov. These applications range from easily searching the roster of visitors to the White House and tracking foreign aid across the world to shining light on the ratio of debt to assets for bankrupt companies.


At the Sunlight Foundation, a community of developers continues to build on the Apps for America contest that brought us innovative apps that allow us to check wait times at airports, demystify the rule making process and empower people with the tools to mash up different datasets to unearth new insights.


At the World Bank, recognizing the power of prizes to mobilize new and diverse talent, they are encouraging the development of applications that make innovative use of more than 2,000 data sets that document human development worldwide, including health, business, finance, environment, and social welfare statistics.


As we look to the next year, we recognize that the Web itself is evolving into a data platform and how important it is to link data from one agency to another or one country to another. True value lies at the intersection of multiple datasets and what we are witnessing is a continued movement across the world to democratize data, but more importantly the explosion of applications created by the emergence of a community of innovators.


So all you innovators out there – what data sets can we try to get out there to help you go further? Tweet your ideas for data we should try to put out with hashtag #datagov, and we’ll see what we can do in year 2.


Vivek Kundra is U.S. Chief Information Officer

by Vivek Kundra at May 21, 2010 09:39 PM

Search Results for gov2.0

App contests are unlocking government innovation

Peter Corbett has helped usher in a wave of development innovation within government by spearheading a number of app contests. In this interview, Corbett looks at the surprising success of the contest model and offers guidance -- and a few warnings -- for organizations considering their own innovation contests.

by Alex Howard at May 21, 2010 06:36 PM

Open space data can improve lives (and save birds)

Jeanne Holm, the former chief knowledge architect at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, discusses her efforts to build an an international ontology for space data.

by Alex Howard at May 21, 2010 04:43 PM

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May 20, 2010

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May 19, 2010

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☞ Not Just For Radicals

Software freedom may sound like a line from a revolutionary manifesto, but it’s the key genetic marker for value in the enterprise. read more on my ComputerWorldUK blog


by Simon Phipps at May 19, 2010 05:35 AM

May 18, 2010

Wild Webmink

✍ Home, Pele Permitted

By way of explanation for my preoccupation and paucity of publication of late, I finally made it back home today after my trip to the US with ForgeRock. We had a varied and busy trip that included several visits to potential customers and partners. I also had the chance of dinner with James Gosling and an interview with Robert Scoble, as well as many press engagements. There’s no doubt that interest in OpenAM is strong.

The Long Way RoundBoth journeys were affected by the unpronounceable Icelandic volcano. On the way out, we had to route round the ash cloud, so the plane was 4 hours late departing due to the inbound flight doing the same, and then we flew first almost to Stavanger (home of so many colleagues) and then north of Iceland – you can see the route from the airshow screenshot. We eventually arrived in San Francisco about 7 hours late.

On the way back, the flight Monday was canceled completely and I found myself in an airport hotel at SFO. Then Monday morning I went to the United check-in and was faced with a day on standby. Fortunately I’d already browsed flight alternatives and was able to “help” the agent find a pairing with standby seats via Washington DC. Providentially, both segments not only cleared but also upgraded and I was able to fly home in relative comfort. Thanks to Jasmine at SFO Red Carpet Club, who was able to achieve in moments what a Global Services agent found too hard.


by Simon Phipps at May 18, 2010 10:01 PM

Search Results for gov2.0

Applying social software to digital diplomacy at the U.S. State Department

Richard Boly, director of the Office of eDiplomacy at the U.S. Department of State, talks about internal collaboration tools at the agency, including Diplopedia and the development of "StateBook."

by Alex Howard at May 18, 2010 04:49 PM

May 17, 2010

Wild Webmink

ConsortiumInfo.org

The Alexandria Project, Chap. 18: More than One Can Play that Game

 New to The Alexandria Project?  Find a plot synopsis and guide to the characters here, find the earlier chapters here, and follow the ...

May 17, 2010 07:01 AM

May 16, 2010

Wild Webmink

May 13, 2010

OpenSF Blog

Law.gov Project Comes to SF

In a webinar about Gov 2.0 on Tuesday, publisher and conference convener Tim O’Reilly referred to Carl Malamud as the father of the Gov 2.0 movement. Wednesday, Malamud was in San Francisco at the Mitchell Kapor Foundation offices for the 10th in a series of 15 workshops he’s hosting around the country for his current project, Law.gov, which aims to create an authenticated bulk data feed for all primary legal materials in the U.S.
Malamud is not a lawyer, but he’s met plenty – allies and adversaries – in his time as the nation’s “rogue archivist.” If you want open government, Malamud’s your go-to guy.
Wednesday’s series of panelists balanced open data dreams with hard truths about privacy in the globalized infoweb. Bob Berring, a UC Berkeley law professor, summed up the core issue: Carl is working on a 10 year old’s question: Government has laws. We have to obey those laws. Where are they?
Twitter in-house counsel Alexander Macgillivray talked about the difficulty for legal staff’s at small companies to afford basic research because of high Westlaw and Lexis fees – fees that units of government pay as well for access to legal documents.
Malamud believes that the law is one area that the disintermediating promise of the Internet has barely touched, and he brought in friend O’Reilly for a lunchtime discussion with California Secretary of State Debra Bowen.
“What are we missing as a society because we are denied access to what is essentially the open source of our democracy?” O’Reilly asked.
A recurring theme was the problem of authentication of legal materials online, and the implied authority of the two major vendors. Erika Wayne, a Stanford law librarian, asked if anyone had seen an “informational only” disclaimer – common on web legal materials – on a physical book.
Chris Hoofnagle, a privacy researcher and UC Berkeley law professor also had a stark warning about the need to protect individual privacy as advocates seek to put more government information online. He argued that believers in “Big Brother” powers for the government – “I’m serious” – will use the language of the transparency movement to accomplish their goal of a surveillance society.
Despite the serious mission and very real challenges, the promising theme of open data, Law 2.0 mashups and lowered barriers to legal knowledge was not lost. Said Macgillivray, imagine a statue with its own Twitter account, tweeting its revisions. Another common theme was that local governments are some of the most open – creating universal standards for data release is the challenge.

- Adriel Hampton

by adrielhampton at May 13, 2010 05:57 PM

ITDashboard Blog Feed

Moving to the Cloud

Today, the Recovery Accountability and Transparency Board announced that it is moving Recovery.gov to the cloud. As the world’s largest consumer of information technology and as stewards of taxpayer dollars, the Federal Government has a duty to be a leader in pioneering the use of new technologies that are more efficient and economical.


For those of you not familiar with cloud computing, here is a brief explanation. There was a time when every household, town, or village had its own water well. Today, shared public utilities give us access to clean water by simply turning on the tap. Cloud computing works a lot like our shared public utilities. However, instead of water coming from a tap, users access computing power from a pool of shared resources. Just like the tap in your kitchen, cloud computing services can be turned on or off as needed, and, when the tap isn’t on, not only can the water be used by someone else, but you aren’t paying for resources that you don’t use. Cloud computing is a new model for delivering computing resources – such as networks, servers, storage, or software applications.


Recovery.gov is the first government-wide system to move to the cloud. The move is part of the Administration’s overall efforts to cut waste and fix or end government programs that don’t work. By migrating to the public cloud, the Recovery Board is in position to leverage many advantages including the ability keep the site up as millions of Americans help report potential fraud, waste, and abuse. The Board expects savings of about $750,000 during its current budget cycle and significantly more savings in the long-term.


In April, HHS leveraged cloud computing to support implementation of Electronic Health Records (EHR) systems. To coordinate healthcare providers’ implementation of new Electronic Health Record (EHR) systems, HHS is deploying a cloud-based customer relationship and project management solution provided by Salesforce.com. The solutions will support HHS’s Regional Extension Centers in assisting doctors and rural hospitals in the selection, implementation and meaningful use of EHRs. Various implementation approaches can be analyzed to quickly identify best practices for EHR implementation as they emerge.


By using cloud services, the Federal Government will gain access to powerful technology resources faster and at lower costs. This frees us to focus on mission-critical tasks instead of purchasing, configuring, and maintaining redundant infrastructure.


The Obama Administration is committed to leveraging the power of cloud computing to help close the technology gap and deliver for the American people. I am hopeful that that the Recovery Board’s move to the cloud will serve as a model for making government’s use of technology smarter, better, and faster.


Vivek Kundra is the US Chief Information Officer

by Vivek Kundra at May 13, 2010 05:27 PM

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May 11, 2010

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☞ Apache’s Lesson In Radical Transparency

The Apache Software Foundation’s radical and exceptional transparency provides a lesson all organisations need to learn. Read about it on Simon Says…


by Simon Phipps at May 11, 2010 05:23 PM

OpenSF Blog

Lean Lessons for Local Gov

You might not think that local governments are primed to be hotbeds of innovation. Then again, you may not yet have heard of Manor, TX, a little town that’s repeatedly garnered attention from the White House for its innovative ways. And you may not have heard entrepreneur-turned-scholar Vivek Wadhwa give one of his frank talks about the demographics of startup founders: 40, educated but not Ivy League, experienced.
Kind of sounds like an average government employee.
And don’t expect to get sympathy from Wadhwa regarding the lack of monetary incentives (bonuses) for innovation in government. Wadhwa points out that fledgling entrepreneurs generally work outrageous hours for little or no pay, motivated more by a dream for a better world than the short chances of financial success.
Shouldn’t public servants have some of that same sort of motivation?
Wadhwa spoke to more than 50 San Francisco employees Monday in the first of the Department of Technology’s “Innovation @ Work” lunchtime talks. Most of the attendees heard about the event through an e-mail to anyone who participated in a recent electronic suggestion box exercise on fixing the City’s budget woes.
Joining Wadhwa was Eric Ries, startup vetran and adviser, who advocates the “lean” model of getting a good idea off the ground, where the unit of progress is in lessons learned about meeting customer needs.
“Stop building stuff nobody wants,” Ries said. He also put the burden of successful innovation in government on the shoulders of managers. “Entrepreneurship is management,” he said.
Whether veteran public IT managers went back to their offices today with dreams of remaking their legacy systems in the lean model or not, Ries, a San Francisco resident, and Wadhwa stressed that the group was unusual in that San Francisco is embracing the need for critical change.
The US is in serious trouble,” Wadhwa said. “While we were sleeping, the world changed. … If you started to rebuild your systems, you would become the innovator.”
 
Postscript: I heard a bit of tittering when Vivek Wadhwa asked how many of us were tweeting from the event (I know of two). Why Twitter? Direct communication with the speakers. Cross-continental thought pollination. Notes for this blog post.

Onward and upward.

~ Adriel Hampton


by adrielhampton at May 11, 2010 04:49 PM

May 10, 2010

ConsortiumInfo.org

Alexandria Proj. Chap 17: May the Force be with You

New to The Alexandria Project?  Find a plot synopsis and guide to the characters here, find the earlier chapters here, and follow the Furthe...

May 10, 2010 02:34 PM

Wild Webmink

✍ New Week, New Column, New Job

Norwegian SwordsYou may have noticed I was a bit quiet last week. The reason? I was in Norway at a company summit for my new job, which actually starts today. More than that, I also have a new column in ComputerWeeklyUK, joining the esteemed Glyn Moody in providing their coverage of free and open source software. Glyn’s view is as an observer and (in the best sense) critic. Mine is as a practitioner, reporting from the field – a little like Matt Asay on CNet in the US. I’ll keep on blogging here, but anything with a tone of reportage is likely to end up over there.

The first post for the new column is today – read about my new job over there now.


by Simon Phipps at May 10, 2010 07:01 AM

May 09, 2010

Wild Webmink

♫ I’ll Still Be Using My Voice

In the best traditions of both british music and democracy, Thea Gilmore wrote a song to celebrate the election. Some people – politicians in particular – seem to think that the election is the chance for British citizens to express their views.  We then hear ridiculous statements about how “the electorate has voted clearly to…” {demand tax cuts | oppose health care reform  |  say no to proprortional representation | demand electoral reform|…} from people with the predictive chops of a fairground fortune teller.

Rubbish. I voted for a representative. I wanted to be represented. To do that requires constant consultation. An election doesn’t have enough bits to encode everything I want to say to my representatives. So I’ll still be using my voice.


by Simon Phipps at May 09, 2010 03:01 PM

May 08, 2010

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✍ Changes, Personal and General

I’m sitting at Heathrow Airport waiting for my flight to the US, volcano permitting, reflecting on the week.

Urban PicnicIt’s been a busy week on multiple levels. Last weekend I was up in Liverpool at OggCamp, where the photo to the right was taken after my keynote address – one of the delegates had brought a full picnic basket and we sat eating cake and drinking Pimms on the steps in the centre of the city.

OggCamp was a great event, full of energy, enthusiasm and optimism (which I almost felt sad to be damping with my pessimistic views on the future of our freedoms). An unconference created on-the-spot by the attendees,, it was well worth  the trip to Liverpool (despite the Millwall “fans” on the train home). I’d recommend attending next year.

Following OggCamp I went abroad for the start of the week, spending an intense three days with some really great people talking about a very exciting set of plans and ideas we share. I’ll be announcing full details on Monday when I’ll have two pieces of news I find tremendous.

The week ended with the general election in the UK. No political party has overall control in Parliament and I view that as the best outcome from a bad set of options.  The politicians have the chance to create consensus-driven minority-led government, if they choose to set their egos and power-lusts aside. Drawing together the views of many individuals is exactly what’s needed to deal with the hard problems that face us – participating in a highly-meshed global economy, providing security in a connected society without eliminating privacy and rights, conducting politics in a diverse and rapidly changing society.

For those sorts of problems, we need people who understand the connected society first-hand rather than from the dinner tables of the powerful. I think that a Parliament where respect for the views of many is an essential predicate for progress is actually what we need, rather than the hollow bluster we heard from the political parties.


by Simon Phipps at May 08, 2010 01:20 PM

May 07, 2010

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May 06, 2010

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May 03, 2010

ConsortiumInfo.org

The Alexandria Project: Chapter 16: You Want Aliens With That?

New to The Alexandria Project?  Find a plot synopsis and guide to the characters here, find the earlier chapters here, and follow the Further Adventures of Frank on

May 03, 2010 02:06 PM

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