I think you are making a lot of sense.

Geoff, Indy Hall


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Geoff DiMasi
P'unk Avenue
215 755 1330
punkave.com
window.punkave.com

On Jun 3, 2008, at 10:15 PM, Dusty wrote:

>
> Hi everyone!
>
> After many discussions about what coworking entails (including things
> like non-profit vs for-profit), I've been feeling a bit like there's
> some confusion about what exactly coworking is.
>
> I'd like to propose that coworking is not a noun but a verb. So,
> coworking is not a space, a community, a set of values, a business
> model, or any combination of those things. It's an activity like
> swimming is an activity.
>
> If we look at the definition of coworking on the Coworking Wiki, we
> read that “coworking is a cafe-like community/collaboration space for
> developers, writers and independents.” This defines coworking as a
> noun and as a type of community space. Wikipedia does a bit better at
> defining coworking in my mind, but still places a lot of emphases on
> “the space.”
>
> From my experience with Jelly, coworking is something you are doing.
> For example, I’d use it in a sentence like this: “Today I am coworking
> at Jelly.” Or, “I might go to Citizen Space to cowork.” From this
> usage I’d like to propose the following definition.
>
> - Coworking is two or more individuals working independently or
> collaboratively who are socially interacting while they work.
>
> As a verb you can cowork with people, you can be coworking, or you may
> have coworked. You may even go to a designated coworking space.
>
> Also note, that this definition does not mention anything about a
> space or even proximity. This leaves the possibility to cowork
> remotely. Second Life and Yahoo! Live come to mind.
>
> When we talk about creating a “coworking space,” “coworking
> community,” or having a specific set of values, we’re really talking
> about how to create an environment or community that will encourage
> the activity of coworking. Arguments over values, profits, business
> models, and furniture can neither undermine nor enhance the definition
> of coworking. Build a pool and I may go swimming. Is it a free pool?
> Do I have to pay to swim? Is the water clean? Are kids allowed in the
> pool? Is there a swim team that meets at this pool? Is the pool’s
> owner honest? All of these thing may affect my decision to swim in the
> pool, but are ultimately a matter of taste.
>
> In this vein, the coworking movement is a movement of coworking
> enthusiasts. We participate in, promote, and discuss the activity of
> coworking.
>
> In summary, I'm proposing that coworking is NOT a cafe-like community/
> collaboration space. That’s like saying swimming is a pool. And
> arguments such as for-profit versus non-profit need not become heated.
> Coworking is coworking regardless of where it’s at, what values people
> share, or how big the community is. If you’re working and socializing,
> you’re coworking.
>
> What do you think?
>
> PS. I originally wrote this on my blog: 
> http://dustyreagan.com/redefining-coworking/
> but I wanted to bring the discussion here.
>
> Dusty
> >


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