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This is my personal blog and anything I write here in no way reflects the opinion of Cisco Systems, my employer. If it does, it is only by pure coincidence :) Nothing here constitutes investment advice either, so you can't sue me.

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    Reporting Back on Wavelogging 

    Wave_breaking02 Back in December I decided I was going to run a little experiment and try moving my blogging entirely into Wave (wavelogging?).  It was an interesting experience but there is a deal-breaker that I just can't work around at the moment.  

    I thought it would make for an interesting discussion to report back on where things are at right now.  What works, what doesn't, what's awesome, and what NEEDS to be fixed.

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    I'm Dumping My Blog for Google Wave 

    IStock_000001136467XSmall  When I first started blogging in 2006 or so, I loved the idea of being able to have conversations with people all over the world, many of whom I didn't even know existed.  It's served me really well in that respect, I've met a ton of people and developed my most important online social network.  I have several relationships in the real world that developed because of blogs.

    Then Twitter came along, and was all real-timey and stuff.  It's fun.  It feels like a cocktail party.  I can blurt out things that I think would make funny fortune cookies and there's an audience for that I guess.  But in terms of content it was a real lightweight compared to blogs, the medium is just too constraining.  At its core Twitter is a 140-character message bus, and there are lots of things lacking there for heavy-duty collaboration to happen.

    Next came Facebook, which allowed me to find a lot of people but not necessarily the ones I wanted to have technical conversations with.  It's also completely ungeared towards anything longer than a sentence or two, the commenting system resembles a car with just an engine and a frame and a steering wheel.  Also not suited to hard-core collaboration of any kind.

    Over time the collaboration model on blogs got better with the introduction of commenting systems like Disqus (although I still don't like the fact that I rely on them 100% to safeguard those comments).  But it never really changed much, we always had blogs and RSS to distribute and comment on meatier content.

    But then, this year, came Wave.  And I fell head over heels in love with it.

    Continue reading "I'm Dumping My Blog for Google Wave" Continue reading this post

    The Usefulness of Waves Over Time 

    As I continue to use and experiment with Wave, I keep coming up with interesting little questions and thoughts about where this is all headed.

    (By the way, this is also being published as a Wave, so if you're on it you can follow along here.  The waves seem to be much more interactive so I'd highly recommend it.  If you need an invite let me know, I have a few.)

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    Who owns conversations? And what are the rules? 

    Conversation Before you get too far into this, I've also published this post to Google Wave at this link if you'd like to read along there instead.

    Using Google Wave heavily over the past several weeks has really gotten my mental gears cranking, pondering all of the changes coming down the pike in the next year or so.

    One of the things that I'm really trying to wrap my head around is how a medium like a wave changes the dynamic of the interaction between the publisher of a post and the observers and other participants.  In a wave it's possible for anyone to edit the original text or insert comments directly inline--this is a pretty big departure from the way most messaging platforms work.  For example in this blog post you can't edit what I've already written, and you can't insert your comments directly in the middle, but you can leave comments at the bottom.  In a wave you don't have those restrictions.

    Continue reading "Who owns conversations? And what are the rules?" Continue reading this post

    Looming Disruptions to the Software Industry 

    FissuresI view a major shift in technology, like the one that I see materializing right now with Google Wave (the protocol), as a huge object crashing into a an existing landscape.  There's this massive change right in the middle, a new space that has to be filled, and then all these fissures spidering out from the main event where the rest of the world is affected by that event--new spaces that must be filled with something.

    One of the fun things about technology disruptions is trying to figure out what the landscape will look like after the main event.  It's those changes that nimble businesses can take advantage of to pivot into the new spaces that were created.  For example when the Web finally went mainstream it created an entirely new industry, but it then proceeded to change the way every other existing industry operated to some degree, and we're still working through that with things like hosted applications and the SaaS model.

    Continue reading "Looming Disruptions to the Software Industry" Continue reading this post

    A Vision of a Post-Wave Internet 

    This is a follow up to my last post about Google Wave, er, XMPP.  That post generated a ton of commentary and questions, and my goal here is to address a lot of them, as well as take a stab at outlining what a post-Wave Internet looks like to the average person.

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    Google Wave: You need to pay attention to this. 

    So here's the deal with Wave:  If you deal in technology, and you get this one wrong, you'll miss the boat.  And it's a big boat.  If, on the other hand, you get this one right, you have the potential to do some incredible innovation.

    In a nutshell, this is the next revolutionary leap in Internet application architecture.  Maybe the first truly revolutionary leap since HTTP itself.

    I've been wanting to write this post for a while, but first I wanted to read fully thru and digest the specs and available code.  I haven't done any posts about XMPP for quite a while, but you're going to start hearing a whole lot about it, and not just from me.

    Continue reading "Google Wave: You need to pay attention to this." Continue reading this post

    My 5 Most Exciting Technologies of 2010 

    IStock_000008465949XSmall

    A couple of glasses of vino on a Sunday night and I got to thinking about what I believe will be the technologies that are going to reshape the world in 2010. After a stagnant year or two in there are some really killer things on the horizon right now.

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    Building a P2P Debt System on BitTorrent 

    This is a follow-on to my post the other day about peer-to-peer debt.  It's some of the stuff I've been drawing on napkins for a couple of years, an idea for building a peer to peer service network on top of BitTorrent.

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    Peer-to-Peer Debt: A Game Changer 

    Dollar bill I try not to use words like that too loosely, either.

    This banking system is dying.  I don't talk about it too much anymore because there's nothing that can be done to stop it at this point, but the Bretton Woods monetary system that has been in place since 1944 at the conclusion of World War II is coming to an end.  An interest-bearing debt based monetary system, which is what we have, has a finite life span from the moment it's born, and this one has reached its unsustainable peak and is on the way back down, fast.

    It's sixth-grade math, you can't deny it, there is no wishing it away.  It just is.

    So then, the question is what will rise as the next monetary system.  Never complain about me giving problems and not answers, here's a doozy.  I've been sketching these ideas out for several years now, and I've finally found a few other people who are thinking along the same lines.  If the current crisis has the end result of giving an alternative monetary system critical mass then it may be worth it.

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