The tyranny of forms

I just started working at the Mobile Experience Lab at MIT. It’s been a while since I’ve had to fill in governmental-type forms, and it was slightly shocking to see my options as listed in one of their forms:

Unidimensional

I live a multi-ethnic life every day, so why do I have to choose a single ethnicity for the convenience of this form’s creator? And it’s not about how I self-identify versus how others see me: even if I see myself as multi-ethnic, this form dictates that I can be only one.

You find where download mp3 music on perssonal computer, You need mp3 music download for ipod mp3 player.

I’m faced, effectively, with an impossible choice. It’s the same as if parents were asked to indicate their favorite child.

Flickr, and social networking’s dark side

If you’ve used Flickr for a while, you’ve known about their acquisition by Yahoo and the subsequent inexorable march towards using Yahoo login names instead of the old Flickr login names. Well, the date has finally been set (March 15) and predictably there is a huge uproar in the Flickr message boards.

To their credit, Flickr seems to be managing this furor the best way they can, by being available for comment and kvetching in the message boards. And, really, there’s not much more they can do.

However, I can’t help but feel a twinge of discomfort at what’s happening, mainly because it shows the dark underbelly of social networking sites.

To wit: A group of people have an idea and put together some software that lets a bunch of other people engage in so-called social networking. Those early adopters are just as crucial to the success of the social network as the people who man the infrastructure and prune the message boards, etc. The difference is that the early adopters are unpaid for their time and efforts, while the infrastructure d00ds eventually/hopefully make oodles of money.

We’ve seen this happen before, just recently, with YouTube. The people who created this system weren’t the ones who put the effort into the videos which actually drew the visitors which…well, eventually attracted Google. Yet of the obscene amount of money that the company received, how much went back to the people who, when you really think about it, made it happen? It’s a bit of a chicken and egg situation, innit?

There is a co-dependency between the companies that develop social networks and the people who populate them, yet the systems currently in place serve to unfairly distribute the rewards of the service: 100% vs. 0%. Is this just how it is, or can something be done to make it more equitable? Because as it stands right now, YouTube and Flickr and all these other sites are effectively telling me that my time is worthless to them. And forgive me if I don’t agree with that perspective.

Getting back to Flickr, my fear is that as these kinds of mergers continue across the Web 2.0 universe, and as early adopters begin to feel more and more disenfranchised (or burned or perhaps even pwned), their enthusiasm for this exploitative environment will wane. What will replace it remains to be seen, but I can’t help to think it will involve shares of some kind, or some semblance of ownership or investment.

Now, this is not to say that early adopters know what’s right for a company, or that they should be involved in the day-to-day management of the company’s affairs. But I do believe it’s important to show respect, because they are as much a reason for where some of the companies are today as the people who put together the business. Whether that respect is acknowledged through discounts on premium services offered by the company, or manifested in some other way, such as recognition, I think there are means to reward the risk, time, and effort assumed by early adopters.

I would venture that so-called “old skool” members of Flickr prize their old-skool status, which is in its way a reward for their time and effort spent during the early days of Flickr. In that context, an outcry about changing login procedures is as much one of principle as it is identity and social standing, even if it’s a matter of personal pride (“I was one of the first!”). It remains to be seen whether Flickr will differentiate between former “old skool” Flickr members and newer members under the Yahoo system.

All I can think about right now is the next time one of these disenchanted, former-old-skool-Flickr users stumbles upon a new social networking site, and I wonder whether they will harbor any reservations about pouring their energy into yet another enterprise which, in the end, will not be theirs.

The bigger question, of course, is: will this sort of event, relived time and again over the course of many social networking mergers, lead to a chilling effect?

Identity and Health

Knowledge….I feel like I’ve been drinking from a fire-hose these past couple of days.

On Saturday I went to HealthCamp, held at Citizen Space in San Francisco, and on Monday and Tuesday I’ve attended the Internet Identity Workshop at the Computer history Museum in Mountain View. It’s finishing up on Wednesday (that would be tomorrow…today?), and I’ve decided to present RentAThing in one of the final afternoon sessions (IIW2006B is being run in the unconference style).

I really want to write more about my experiences at both workshops, but I’m exhausted after today’s proceedings and further elocution will have to occur at a later time.

Tasty Thinking

I’ve started working on a new project with Alex called Tasty Thinking. Right now it’s just a blog capturing our thoughts about health, nutrition, food, design, services, and suchlike. Any suggestions or tips would be appreciated.

We began Tasty Thinking on Blogger, but the lack of customization, the inability to schedule posts, and similar annoyances precipitated a move to WordPress, which, incidentally, also served as inspiration for the overhaul of A Sustainable Train of Thought.

New Home

If you’re reading this, then the DNS changes have propagated and you’re now viewing content from my new host. Yay!

As for what’s going on with this blog: personal, professional…it’s all tied up together now, so I might as well let this blog reflect it. Once things change, I may reformat things, but until then it is what it is.

Flickr and the great migration of ‘06

I’m currently in the process of moving several thousand photos from my personal gallery (along with captions and titles) into Flickr. Once this migration is complete, it’ll be much easier for me to switch hosts. Plus, more people will be able to see my photos and I’ll do without the annoyances of moderating photo comment spam (although, surprisingly, I just received my first comment spams on Flickr the other day).

I haven’t thought about what I’m going to do with this blog. Originally I kept my personal blog separate from my thesis/work/professional stuff. But I’m also tired of managing two blogging systems (wordpress and blogger). Minor annoyance in the grand scheme of things, but I also have to think about where I’m going to post something before I start to write it. I’ll just use the tagging system to manage the personal and professional stuff, and maybe when I have some time I’ll come up with some wordpress trickery to more visually distinguish the entries.

I’m starting to get a little annoyed by the linear-ness of blogs, just as I am with the navigational system on Flickr. As I am currently in the process of doubling the number of photos on my account, the whole thing is coming across as clunky. Add the Flash memory leak issue in Safari, and the Organizr is rapidly becoming my nemesis. (Yeah, I’m not a huge fan of Firefox either.) Of course a web app isn’t going to match the responsiveness of a desktop application, but I’d still like a more manageable, less resource-intensive way of dealing with large numbers of photos. I imagine the people who run Flickr already realize that accumulating massive numbers of photos will require novel methods of navigation.

For instance, after adding 500 new (old, really) photos, I wanted to check out some of the newer ones I’d taken. With the page-based navigation scheme at the bottom of the page, this required about ten clicks. Viewing and exploring photos is one thing, but methinks managing photos will require a different paradigm. Even going back and tagging all of the photos is a huge pain. I’d settle for some low-rez, quick-loading images when assigning tags—they’re my photos after all and I know what I’m looking at. If I want, I could always load a higher-rez version to confirm the details.

Assuming I’m going to be a customer of Flickr for the rest of my life (now that they have my photos locked away), I hope they’ll offer more, shall we say, modal management tools. That is, optimize my browsing experience. Optimize my photo management experience. Optimize my uploading experience (I have to use a third-party program to upload my 1000 photos, or else face a 5-at-a-time browser-based upload mechanism…what gives?!). Optimize my tagging experience. Let me switch between them easily, but demarcate them clearly. Again, I can’t imagine that the one-at-a-time method of viewing photos in Flickr will work when dealing with the millions of photos I will have in my photostream in, say, ten years.

Once my photo migration is complete (which may take another month considering the 2GB upload limit), I still have a bunch of problems with technorati to take care of (they don’t do well with subdomains, I found out), google sitemaps to create, analytics to install, and phase two of updating my portfolio. In addition to all the other projects I’m working on. Good to be busy I suppose.

In other news, I’ll be in NYC next week doing a write-up of a symposium. And here’s a nice sunrise:

Sunrise in Boston

New Portfolio

OK, the latest version of my portfolio is now up. Consider it a work in progress. One of these days I’ll get my blog consolidated and everything moved over to the new host. Really.

Fresh Start is up

The Fresh Start website is up and running on all cylinders.

Now my focus returns to my portfolio and making the transition to a new host (Fresh Start’s over there, but this domain has yet to move)...one thing at a time. Fixing things up on this blog is also on my list of things to do, but the prospect of tinkering with MySQL databases isn’t something I’m relishing…

Briefly

Updating the Fresh Start website, started up the Emergence 2006 group on Flickr, and made the Fresh Start poster available for download (click the image below for the jpg version—the pdf version is available here).

Fresh Start Poster for Emergence 2006 Conference

In the works…

The Fresh Start website will be updated in the coming days now that I’m back from the Emergence 2006 conference and have time to attend to it. Information about RentAThing can be seen here with a new dedicated site on its way.

I’ve also changed hosting providers, so I’m in the midst of figuring out how to safely migrate everything over to the new site, along with transitioning this blog away from focusing on my thesis towards a greater variety of subjects.