Lots of great analogies in there, Oren. http://ihighfive.com/



-Alex



On Tuesday, Sep 23, 2014 at 8:51 AM, Will BennisLocus Workspace 
<wmben...@locusworkspace.com>, wrote:

Hi Oren,


I really appreciate your thoughtful reply about this. And it's definitely 
pushed me in the direction of greater support for the "cause." Two particular 
points that I can agree with: (1) the name is being spelled in two different 
ways for no very good reason. We might be able to solve that, and get it 
spelled in the way most people using the word want it to be spelled, so why not 
do it? (2) The way it's spelled matters to a lot of people in ways that are not 
specifically about language clarity and are more about identity and community 
support. And for those people, the preferred spelling tends to be "coworking," 
so why not respect that?




I'm in. I can respect that. 




Best,

Will



On Saturday, September 20, 2014 9:41:49 PM UTC+2, oren.s...@gmail.com wrote:Hi 
Will, 

I know what your name is, I was just trying to make a point. :)

I respect and value your points about no horse in the race and that the 
indifference of the "co-working" fans would never lead them to debate this to 
such an extent and that clearly this is something the "coworking" fans are 
pushing here. I also see your point about the flexibility of language and I 
agree no entity can stop language from changing and adapting and being 
interpreted differently in different contexts. 

All that being said, I find co-working to be disrespectful. There is a distinct 
difference between your example of "personal computing and computing" and 
"co-working and coworking". One refers to a rapidly adapting industry where the 
nature of what was being described changed over time. While coworking is 
rapidly expanding and comes across new variants all the time, I don't think 
anyone is claiming a full transformation is happening like in your computing 
example. 

Nobody in journalism misspells kibbutz in writing and nobody just started 
calling them collective agricultural communities either. Kibbutz means 
something because it staked out the term and owned it. I see the exact same 
thing happening with coworking except that spelling it co-working means a 
distinct unfamiliarity with the subject matter. 

Maybe I'm making some assumptions here, but this was one of the first things I 
learned about coworking. I don't know a single major organization, association, 
product, content hub, group or otherwise large group of coworking people 
identifying under the "co-working" banner. We're all squarely organized under 
the "coworking" banner. So what if some space operators choose to spell it 
co-working? Obviously that's their choice as an operator and they're welcome to 
do so, but to me it's always been a red flag that they're disconnected from the 
global community. Maybe I'm wrong in assuming so, but in my experience it's 
been validated pretty consistently. 

Even if there is little ambiguity in co-working vs. coworking (because there's 
nothing currently called co-working), it's still very undignified not be 
regarded as important enough to have a consistent spelling. That's the core 
issue at hand from my perspective and maybe you disagree, but that's why I 
think we're talking about entering the dictionary and the style guides. It's 
for the same reason that a apple is in appropriate but an apple is ok. If I 
said I'm going to eat a apple, you'd understand me but look at me funny. We're 
just trying to get the journalists to realize that from our perspective, 
co-working = a apple. 




On Friday, September 19, 2014 5:19:38 AM UTC-5, Will Bennis, Locus Workspace 
wrote:
Hi Oren,


I appreciate your reply about this!




Actually, my name is Will, not William, damnit!!! :)))) 




But I don't think this is really the same.




First, "coworking" isn't a company name or a given name / proper noun. It's not 
your name or my name. It's not even "the movement's" name. If "personal 
computing" became just "computing," what would you think if Apple or Microsoft 
or a handful of influential early players in the personal computing industry 
campaigned against the change and said that we can't change "their" name, and 
that it was as though their given names were being mis-spelled? I'd personally 
think they should leave the English language alone and that it wasn't the role 
of people in an industry to try to manage what have become common nouns in the 
English language. I have run a coworking space for more than 4 years now. I 
care what you call my space or what you call me and I care about coworking, but 
the idea that spelling coworking differently from how people who run coworking 
spaces think it should be spelled, or that misspelling is like misspelling a 
proper noun seems to me like a stretch. 




Second, to the extent the name is owned by the community of coworking space 
owners, or at least we have a meaningful stake in it (which I think we do), 
then who are *we*? You write that after 10 years, the coworking movement has 
earned it and that the "rest of us have all settled on coworking." But I don't 
think that's true. I see new coworking spaces all the time that put a hyphen in 
the term. As I wrote in the previous email, my (unsubstantiated) hypothesis is 
that there's really a pretty small group of coworking space owners who care 
about coworking being spelled without a hyphen. I've never seen poll results 
and I doubt the question has even been put to a wide audience of coworking 
space owners (and presumably members). Even within the industry I'd guess the 
vast majority don't care (if there were an option included in the poll), and I 
wouldn't be at all surprised if an international poll of coworking space owners 
and members showed that the majority even thought the better spelling would be 
WITH a hyphen. Why wouldn't you have heard that? The same reason I almost 
didn't make the last post in the first place: "the other side" (the side that 
would prefer a hyphen or just doesn't care), doesn't have a horse in the race, 
because for that side language is organic and functional and they don't see 
themselves as owning the name or as there being a meaningful difference in 
whether it's spelled with or without a hyphen. (To be clear, I have no idea 
about "the other side" or what justifications might be; I've never seen any 
data on this; but it also wouldn't surprise me). And the name coworking belongs 
to a much wider audience than just us coworking space owners by now, just as 
"personal computing belongs" to a much wider audience than Microsoft or Apple. 
And the Internet (or now internet) belongs to a much wider audience than the 
people who originally coined the name. That's a sign of the maturity of the 
word, and something to be proud of as a movement. Not something to fight 
against. 




Third, even if we were a coherent community who almost universally agreed that 
spelling it without a hyphen was superior, wouldn't it be good to examine the 
counter-arguments? If, after we all gave it some thought, we agreed that it 
really didn't matter and that we should let its spelling be determined 
organically, then wouldn't we have saved each other a lot of time working to 
change something that was better left to grow on its own according to systems 
that my be wiser than we are about naming?




My few cents, anyway.




Will





On Fri, Sep 19, 2014 at 9:30 AM, oren.s...@gmail.com <oren.s...@gmail.com> 
wrote:
I'm with Marius on this one. 

I think the important thing here is to get us in the dictionary with the 
spelling we use. 

To me, the spelling issue has always been indicative of a bigger thing, which 
is official recognition as part of the English language. 

After 10 years, I think the movement has earned it. 

William, how would you feel if everyone started calling you Bill or Will-iam? 
What if the difference between Will-iam and William was just in written 
language and not in speech? You even stated that the reason you spell it 
coworking is out of respect for the rest of us that have all settled on 
coworking (you even prefer co-working!). That's all we're asking of journalists 
in this case. And if they're denying our requests on the basis of being or not 
being in the dictionary, then let's get in the dictionary. 

Also Derek, the cowering autocorrect annoys me too! It never learns! 





On Wednesday, September 17, 2014 12:47:01 PM UTC-5, Marius Amado-Alves wrote:
FWIW, I agree with Will's arguments except the "cow" one.





To summarize, the spelling is irrelevant, because there is only one coworking, 
irrespectively of how it is spelt. As Will points out, working with others in a 
company is never referred to as coworking.




Nevertheless, I think there is interest in diccionarizing the terms. (And then, 
while we're at it, with the preferred spelling? It would be interesting to 
watch what happens to the guides.)



























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