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Whats Hot and Not XML Summer School 2004

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When to time your toilet break. 1 Some examples of very stupid ... Karaoke machine and Mobile Phone show it can be done. People resistant to Junk Science ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Whats Hot and Not XML Summer School 2004


1
Whats Hot and NotXML Summer School 2004
  • Andrew Orlowski
  • The Register
  • andrew.orlowski_at_theregister.co.uk

2
When to time your toilet break
  • 1 Some examples of very stupid things
  • 2 you just dont get it!
  • and why this doesnt help anyone
  • 3 Prolonged stupidity may be curtailed in the
    near future
  • 4 Our role in all this
  • 5 Two characteristics of technology thinking that
    arent very helpful
  • 6 Reasons to be cheerful?

3
There is no shortage of stupid things
  • But what is stupid?

4
Some very stupid things
5
Some very stupid things
  • The 350 microprocessor

6
Some very stupid things
  • The 350 microprocessor
  • The Mobile Internet

7
Some very stupid things
  • The 350 microprocessor
  • The Mobile Internet
  • The Microsoft Inch

8
Some very stupid things
  • The 350 microprocessor
  • The Mobile Internet
  • The Microsoft Inch
  • Google is God!

9
Google is God
  • "If I can operate Google, I can find anything...
    Google, combined with Wi-Fi, is a little bit like
    God. God is wireless, God is everywhere and God
    sees and knows everything. Throughout history,
    people connected to God without wires. Now, for
    many questions in the world, you ask Google, and
    increasingly, you can do it without wires, too."
  • Alan Cohen, V.P. of Airespace, a new Wi-Fi
    provider
  • New York Times, 6/29/03

10
Google is God
  • "In accepting freedom of speech, we can't hide
    from its consequences - which in this case is
    millions of terabytes of unreliable information,
    badly designed and clumsily written. We have
    failed our own creation and given birth something
    truly awful. We're just too busy cooing over the
    pram to notice.
  • (anon)
  • http//www.internetisshit.org/

11
Some very stupid things
  • The 350 microprocessor
  • The Mobile Internet
  • The Microsoft Inch
  • Google is God!
  • Let Us Praise Sloppy Code!

12
Let us praise Sloppy Code
  • "What should reassure the technophiles, and
    unsettle the technophobes, is our world of lousy
    code. Because it is lousy code that is bringing
    the digital universe to life, rather than leaving
    us stuck in some programmed, deterministic
    universe devoid of life. It is that primordial
    soup of archaic subroutines, ambiguous DLL's,
    crashing Windows, and living fossil operating
    systems that is driving the push towards the sort
    of fault embracing template based addressing
    that proved so successful in molecular biology,
    with us and our computers as one of its
    strangest results.
  • Let us praise sloppy instructions, as we also
    praise the Lord.
  • - George Dyson

13
Part Three You Just Dont Get It!
14
You Just Dont Get It!
  • Translates as
  • I cant understand you!
  • I dont want to understand you!
  • I cant be bothered to explain

15
  • The giveaway that cult thinking is present in
    any environment is how responses are given from
    possible cult members to probable nonbelievers.
    If you disagree, then you "don't get it." Werner
    Erhard of EST (the über-cult of the 1970's) used
    to use this phrase over and over.
  • Tell Erhard that something makes no sense. "You
    don't get it."
  • Tell him that something is self-contradictory.
    "You don't get it."
  • Tell him that something is just plain stupid.
    "You don't get it."
  • This is the level of debate you can expect when
    cult thinking is present.
  • But, of course, "I don't get it.
  • (John C Dvorak, PC Magazine, Feb 22 2002)

16
Getting It
17
Do they mean us?
  • "Once people are online, the net can be used to
    entrench other forms of exclusion and privilege"

18
  • Like the American settlers, internet dwellers
    create a myth that there was no politics before
    they arrived. In order to establish entirely new
    and egalitarian communities, American settlers
    had to ignore the fact that the land was already
    occupied.
  • To the same end, Internet settlers choose to
    ignore the historical and sociological facts of
    how the internet is run, who lacks access to it
    and why, and the mechanisms used online to divide
    people. The risk is that the politics of the net
    follows America towards gated communities, each
    having only an inward-looking, group-based notion
    of politics, and ceases to question the macro
    institutions and systems around them.
  • William Davies, NotCon, June 2004

19
Maybe these people get it ?
TV satellite dish, Lafayette La.
20
Hello, earthlings!
Spoof Wired story makes it past the sub-editors
21
The destination
  • is not a destination

Technology that is not for everyone is not going
to be accepted by anyone
22
We Never Had It So Good
  • Cynicism now rampant
  • Offshoring makes the problem go away

23
If we cant fix our own mess?
  • Spam
  • I would suggest they just write a new protocol
    from the beginning
  • - Suzanne Sluizer, co-author of MTP, (SMTP's
    immediate predecessor)
  • CNET August 1 2003
  • Internets Background Radiation

24
How can we fix yours?
  • Ideological objections
  • End-to-end principle
  • Freedom, Choice and Openness again
  • If we cant fix our open network, then closed
    networks will win
  • Because they work

25
Does IT Matter?
  • IT investment brings diminishing returns
  • Competitive advantage?
  • Not for long
  • What do we do when were done?

26
Part Four whats the real role of technology?
27
Part Four whats the real role of technology?
  • Economic Efficiencies

28
Part Four whats the real role of technology?
  • Economic Efficiencies
  • Faster obsolescence

29
Part Four whats the real role of technology?
  • Economic Efficiencies
  • Faster obsolescence
  • We dont live in a bubble

30
Part Four whats the real role of technology?
  • Economic Efficiencies
  • Faster obsolescence
  • We dont live in a bubble
  • Will analytical processing save the
  • IT industry?

31
Part Five Here Be Knowledge!
32
Part Five Here Be Knowledge!
  • Because Here Be Information

33
Part Five Here Be Knowledge!
  • Because Here Be Information
  • We Dont Offer Knowledge

34
Part Five Here Be Knowledge!
  • Because Here Be Information
  • We Dont Offer Knowledge
  • Information is NOT a special kind of stuff

35
Part Five Here Be Knowledge!
  • Because Here Be Information
  • We Dont Offer Knowledge
  • Information is NOT a special kind of stuff
  • Is it raining?

36
Part Five Here Be Knowledge!
  • Because Here Be Information
  • We Dont Offer Knowledge
  • Information is NOT a special kind of stuff
  • Is it raining?
  • In the absence of real knowledge, is more
    information better?

37
Information doesnt
  • Supplant religion or ideas
  • Or metaphysics
  • Doesnt make us wise
  • Thinking produces knowledge
  • Machines dont think
  • Desire to make machines Magic

38
More Information problems
  • Veneration of the transmitters
  • Bad metaphors biological wishes
  • You get knowledge by thinking not by gathering
    facts, or even asking questions
  • "Let us praise sloppy code"

39
If More Better?
  • "a thousand minds all contributing small pieces
    to a project trumps 20 geniuses on a payroll
  • - Steven Johnson
  • Discover magazine, January 2004

40
If More Better?
"a thousand minds all contributing small pieces
to a project trumps 20 geniuses on a payroll -
Steven Johnson Discover magazine, January 2004
  • Then monkeys wrote Linux!

41
Part Six
  • This isnt the best time to lose our minds

42
Mind and Information
  • Cybernetic Totalists
  • - Jaron Lanier
  • Positivist Mysticism
  • - Richard Barbrook
  • Empowerment through technology
  • Who is empowering what, exactly?

43
From Whizz For Atoms
  • To looking for patterns Biology wants to
    replace Physics as the grand narrative Some
    very contentious claims being made. And some
    very dubious philosophy, cf. Thermometers have
    souls Daniel Dennett Many biologists even
    evolutionary biologists object Junk science
    So, man is just a very complicated machine?

44
Mind your mind
  • The mind itself be from the very outset not left
    to take its own course, but be guided at every
    step, and the business be done as if by
    machinery.
  • Francis Bacon

45
  • At last the human brain, ensconced in a
    computer, has been liberated from the weakness of
    the mortal flesh...It is in control of its own
    destiny. The machine is its body it is the
    machine's mind...
  • It seems to me that this must be the mature form
    of intelligent life in the Universe. Housed in
    indestructible lattices of silicon, and no longer
    constrained in the span of its years by the life
    and death cycle of a biological organism, such a
    kind of life could live forever
  • Robert Jastrow

46
Checking Into the Hive
  • Computer mediated communication
  • The return of structuralism
  • Look whos talking
  • LSD and birth of the cyberculture In the trip
    atomization of the ego
  • Not all egos survive
  • but some emerge stronger than ever!

47
Checking Out of the Hive
48
Death by Bad Metaphor
  • Metaphors are not prescriptive
  • Good metaphors may make for bad prescriptions
  • Bad metaphors will always make bad prescriptions

49
Immediate Problems
  • False hopes
  • The Dean Bubble
  • Problems of accountability
  • GMail
  • Fatal consequences
  • Emergent Cheese Sandwiches
  • Bad Social Policy
  • Viewing society as a networked system

50
  • pace The Prisoner

I am not an IP node I am a Free Duck!
51
Introducing the Bosak Machine
  • Roberts Rules of Order

A distributed and asynchronous yet legally
binding process makes possible - Global
decision-making - Local decision-making -
Every layer of governance in between If it
works, this could be a viable way to solve the
big problems facing us
Jon Bosak, 2000
52
Whats wrong with this?
  • The first reaction I had from someone was a very
    smart person that I work with at SUN. He could
    not decide if this was insanely great or greatly
    insane. I dont know either and it is going to
    take some groups to figure that out

Jon Bosak, 2000
53
Whats wrong with this?
  • The first reaction I had from someone was a very
    smart person that I work with at SUN. He could
    not decide if this was insanely great or greatly
    insane. I dont know either and it is going to
    take some groups to figure that out
  • Everything taken care of except consensus.
  • Thats the tricky part

54
6. Reasons to be cheerful
  • Karaoke machine and Mobile Phone show it can be
    done

55
6. Reasons to be cheerful
  • Karaoke machine and Mobile Phone show it can be
    done
  • People resistant to Junk Science

56
6. Reasons to be cheerful
  • Karaoke machine and Mobile Phone show it can be
    done
  • People resistant to Junk Science
  • We dont have a choice

57
6. Reasons to be cheerful
  • Karaoke machine and Mobile Phone show it can be
    done
  • People resistant to Junk Science
  • We dont have a choice
  • But everyone must be on board

58
What next?
  • Write to me!
  • Download this presentation
  • http//www.badpress.net/talks/
  • Much more interesting stuff in the book
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