On 03/12/2013 01:51 PM, Melvin Carvalho wrote: > > This means understanding the nature of the URL, HTTP and HTML, in that > order. > > The issue is partly that people (with the exception of mark zuckerberg) > have pre concieved notions about how this works, and do not understand > that it has the power to do everything you need. > *** Are you suggesting we invite him for a talk? <g>
Seriously, maybe we need to figure out some "How to leverage the Web in your next Social Web project"? That would probably include comparative implementations of basic building blocks: - how to handle identity? - how to handle messaging? - how to handle references? Saying that an URI can be your identity, messages can be passed as URIs, and references point to RDF graphs does not seems to be sufficient for most people to grasp the simple beauty of the URI. Instead that would require working examples of how things work with XMPP, OStatus, OAuth, etc. and compare to what can be done when leveraging the powers of URIs instead. > People have the tendency to think you need something new to be > successful. The reality and history has proved the opposite. Making > something new leads to a local minimum that is rarely interoperable. > *** +1 > The majority of successful projects come from cloning something existing > and putting it in a slightly different context. > *** Sounds like the theory of evolution. So, I gather that dissecting Facebook might help finding out what they do well. I'm still convinced that the means shape the form, and goals are deeply intertwined with function. Let's contemplate for a minute that Facebook got "all the right technology for all the wrong reasons". How can we leverage that technology, or what technology is there to unfold that social networking platform for freedom? == hk
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