Geek curry night in Peterborough…

The belated arrangements for the fourth meetup for ‘Digital People in Peterborough‘ have now been announced, and in a change from the pub format, it’s going to be a curry night

I’m still surprised that something I’d mentioned in passing to my good friend @pjeedai and virtual acquintance (at the time) @joffff has turned into a regular meetup which sees 20+ digital people get together for drinks, food and chatting. All from just deciding a time and a place and seeing if people would turn up.

And it’s continuing to grow. We’re getting a reasonable amount of people checking out the site regularly, more and more people are registering and posting in the forum, the Facebook page has got 34 Likes so far, and the Twitter account has 25 followers.

That might be small if you’re used to reading case studies of global brands and millions spent in marketing, but as a group which met for the first time 5 months ago, and which has come together from nothing, I’m pretty amazed. And particularly as it’s revealed how many talented and skilled people are in the area – as a result, it’s led to the founding of digital design and development company Jodanma, of which I’m a co-founder, for example.

With the ease of communication and organisation, if you’ve ever wondered about starting a community around a cause, shared hobby, idea, dream etc, there really is no excuse not to give it a go. Maybe it’ll become massive in terms of size, or value. And maybe it’ll take a bit of time and work. But there’s no excuse for not giving it a try and finding out who else is interested…

 

Some calming inspiration…

Things have been busier than ever over the past few weeks, which makes me hugely thankful as someone who is mainly freelancing. And as a result, I’ve been reminding myself of various ways to keep inspired and avoid getting stressed.

Besides reading, videogames, and actually getting outside with my family, there are still some things which work whilst staying in front of a PC screen. Some research may suggest videos or images of cute animals helps lower stress levels, and I’m not averse to the odd lolcat, but I think the best thing I’ve found is a couple of minutes looking at ‘Interesting photos from the last 7 days‘ on Flickr.

It’s incredibly simple – a page of 9 photos which Flickr users found interesting. And the Reload button finds 9 more. And so on until infinity, or the next week presumably roles around.

But beyond the fact that most pages feature 9 amazing images on a huge variety of subjects, it’s also a calming and inspiring sign of how much amazing content is being uploaded onto the internet every second, minute, hour and day. Rather than feeling like the information overload of RSS and Twitter, the chatter of Facebook, or the audio-visual hullabaloo of Youtube, it’s just 9 simple images. No more, no less.

In some ways, it makes me question how complicated we actually need our information filters to be.

And on another level, it just helps me relax for a few moments – and it never takes long before I’m ready to get back to it!

My thoughts on Facebook’s commenting system

There’s been a lot of debate around Facebook’s new commenting system, particularly due to the fact it is currently being tested on Techcrunch.

Matthew Ingram does a good job of summarising at GigaOm, although the heart of the debate seems to be in the comments section of Robert Scoble’s post (I pop up a couple of times in the comments!). There are various reasons for allowing a choice of commenting profile, whether or not that includes the facility for anonymity in an easy or more complicated manner – such as creating a fake Facebook account. But I think I can summarise one major flaw in the test and reactions so far.

When UK pubs had a reputation for violence, they’d introduce a dress code requiring shoes. That’d work for a couple of weeks. And then you’d find yourself in fights with the same people, but in slightly smarter clothes.

On a more analytic level, there are a variety of reasons for not using a commenting system which currently rests on the shoulder of one company.

  • You may want to keep Facebook personal, and use Twitter/LinkedIn/your blog or site as your professional reference.
  • You may not your Facebook profile to be a mess of comments you’ve left around the web.
  • You may wish to be anonymous to voice your authentic opinion whilst minimising the repercussions either personally or career wise.
  • Facebook is blocked by a number of organisations, preventing commenting from people in the workplace.
  • Whilst I may choose a relatively public online persona, my friends and family haven’t chosen to participate in my online life in the same way. And whilst Facebook has privacy controls, I don’t fancy checking 500-odd people have the right settings in place before I post on Techcrunch. Or want any of them involved if I choose to disagree with something on there and annoy someone.
  • Blog comments have long been one way of creating community between bloggers, whether or not those comments are seo-friendly ‘do follow’ links or ‘no follow’. If someone posts a great comment on my site, I’d like them to get the small reward of a direct link to their site, if anyone wants to find out more. Not reward Facebook for doing nothing. And judging by the SEOMOz toolbar’s ‘NoFollow’ indicator, the Facebook comments are followed links back to Facebook everytime.
  • There are viable alternatives already out there – for instance Disqus, as used on this blog. Pick whichever ID you’re comfortable with, and use it!
  • The comment culture is built by the culture of the site – rather than using technical solutions, perhaps it’s more sensible for the TC team to look at why they generate so many antagonistic or crap anonymous comments. Besides their size and audience, perhaps the fact that they may sometimes stray into tabloid linkbait might contribute? Look at the difference between similar sites in terms of technology e.g. Digg vs Reddit vs Hacker News, for example. All three allow link sharing, but the quality of discussion is better on Reddit and Hacker News in my opinion, because there’s more of a community on both.
  • Facebook Comments has code in it which would have allowed Google and Twitter logins, but was removed for some reason – and as a company with an immense userbase, they’ve got no vested interest in allowing a wider range of logins.
  • Following a VRM principle would suggest that the content and data created is mine, and I should be allowed to choose how, when, and why I share it.
  • And finally, there may be times when I might have a legitimate reason to not share a blog comment, for example, on Facebook. Perhaps I’m enquiring about a present or a recipe as a surprise for my partner (Remember Facebook Beacon?). Perhaps I want to describe a personal experience which may relate to my family. Maybe I’m commenting on a site which I don’t want to necessarily be associated with or advertise because I want to disagree with what they’ve written.

I’m all for quality conversation, but as you’d imagine, I don’t think I’ll be installing Facebook Comments anytime soon… Am I making the right decision?

The natural decay of business structures

I’ve been interested in how businesses organise themselves for a while, but working outside of a corporate structure has been allowing me to think more about what works.

As I previously posted, I’ve been reading PW Singer’s Wired for War recently, and nature is a huge influence on the world of robotics and AI – after all much of the work is finding automated equivalents to the brains and mechanisms of humans and other animals. But is was catching some of Professor Brian Cox last night in a programme about Destiny and time that sparked this particular idea (The show is currently on BBC iPlayer here)

Big piles of sand by cobalt123 on Flickr (CC Licence)

Basically in a section on entropy, the example used was a pile of sand, which could be re-arranged in a huge number of ways without really altering the structure of the pile, and therefore it demonstrated ‘high entropy’. By comparison, a sandcastle containing the same amount of grains would be changed significantly by even just a small re-arrangement, and therefore demonstrated ‘low entropy’.

So with an extremely limited knowledge of the Second Law of Thermodynamics, what on earth does this have to do with business?

Entropy, time, nature and businesses:

Well, entropy affects all things, and is really a measure of energy changes as things disperse – think of a block of ice melting. And these changes which can increase entropy can happen spontaneously.

So busineses which arrange themselves like a pile of sand should retain their broad shape through a far bigger number of changes. The prime example could be the branded venture capitalism of Virgin. By using a branded VC model, they’re able to get in and out of various industries and fields relatively quickly and painlessly, whilst the overall company values remain. And they can experiment with space flight, for example, without fear.

Technology companies seem to be more adept at this – the 20% Google time for engineers to work on pet projects in one example of expanding and changing whilst apparently staying somewhere within the Google values (e.g. ‘Do No Evil) – hence the search and advertising business also includes a range of other projects which tie-in to a greater or lesser extent.

And smaller businesses which follow these ideas seem to be growing – for instance, the virtual agency model which tends to be occurring more often in the creative and marketing disciplines (as opposed to the crowdsourcing model which can often be more akin to ‘spec work’ – i.e. you just post your demand and someone meets it for the lowest cost). The virtual agency should be a collaborative co-creation environment, and certainly the better ones seem to fit that build (Disclosure – I’m a member of both Blur Group and Guided Collective)

The natural end of the formal structure:

The entropy idea seems to suggest that initially you had small, local groups, which turned into large formal ones due to advances such as the Industrial Revolution etc. In terms of the impact, the change was massive, but in terms of the duration of the change, 200 years isn’t such a long time.

Which makes me think that the move towards collaborative groups coallescing, splitting and reforming may well be the most natural state, and the time for the large formal institutions really is at an end.

Ronald Coase is attributed with the idea that economic tasks are performed by firms when the transactional costs suggest it. (Cheers to @jobucks for succeeding where Google and my memory failed).The earliest reference to it via Wikipedia comes from John R. Commons:

It is this shift from commodities and individuals to transactions and working rules of collective action that marks the transition from the classical and hedonic schools to the institutional schools of economic thinking. The shift is a change in the ultimate unit of economic investigation. The classic and hedonic economists, with their communistic and anarchistic offshoots, founded their theories on the relation of man to nature, but institutionalism is a relation of man to man.

But the digital age seems to enable a shift back to commodities and individuals with a basis in natural and social relationships. If each grain of sand is an individual loosely linked to the others in the group on the basis of selling a commodity, then it can exist with high entropy and continue to retain its shape in the face of the majority of external forces. Whereas tight formal rules of an institution bind ‘man to man’, but mean spontaneous external forces are far more likely to blow it apart.