Latest Updates: information RSS

  • Steve Spalding 10:47 pm on July 28, 2010 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , information, ,

    John Wayne is going to hunt me down in my dreams for this one.

    We are becoming a world of gunslingers.

    “Whatever do you mean by that?”

    Well, there is this dream that little boys grow up with that one day they are going to be a Fireman or a Superhero or a Space Cowboy or something.

    The core of the wish is that they will be free to roam the plains bringing joy and light to a world in need. Information technology and the web are bringing us one geeky step closer. It’s bringing into being a world where traditional career paths are shifting wildly and may, dare I say it, become extinct.

    It’s stunning when you think about how many thousands of job descriptions won’t exist at the close of the next decade. There are just the jobs that will be automated and oursourced away. Much worse, many more jobs that once took a half-dozen people will may be able to be done part-time by a single person with the right combination of off the shelf technology and savvy.

    Where does that leave the legions of information workers who will find themselves on their butts in a few ears? Well, since it’s work or starve the most clever of these folks will take up their guns and spurs and put themselves up for hire. We are seeing it already in Social Media. It’s the rise of the Consultant Culture, people who in any other time would have found themselves inside firms are blazing their own trails and creating new styles of work.

    It’s a world so far removed from anything that we have seen previously that the question isn’t what effect a herd of wild consultants will have on a particular industry, it’s what in the world could a cult of knowledge workers all with slightly different jobs mean for a society and an economy.

     
  • Steve Spalding 10:34 pm on July 25, 2010 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , information

    Internet people get fired up by really weird things.

    Social aggregation (Digg, Twitter, Facebook oh my!) is a slightly higher rent version of technical aggregation.

    Human beings are way better than computers at finding context, but are much, much worse than computers at sorting through giant, complex piles of complicated data. Honestly we have better things to do, like watch The Jersey Shore and cure Cancer.

    The result is that social aggregation gives you more meaningful information from a much smaller group of sources.

    You trade a little extra relevancy for a lot less diversity.

     
  • Steve Spalding 10:24 pm on July 22, 2010 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , information, intelligence

    One day I’ll do a lecture on the collective intelligence of a child’s Lego set. I expect a standing ovation on that day.

    There is a rather significant difference between “collective intelligence” and information contagion. The secret is the intelligence part. The world we’ve built out of matchsticks and Facebook is very, very good at generating the conditions for contagion but not so good at the sort of filtering and contextualization tasks that lead to intelligence.

    Never forget that the fact that we are obscenely well connected to just about every other human being on this planet doesn’t mean that we are using these connections to spread anything useful.

    Then again though. It also doesn’t mean that we aren’t.

     
  • Steve Spalding 10:18 pm on July 21, 2010 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , information

    I am sure the dinosaurs figured they still had a few good years left in them.

    Here is a simple rule of business.

    If you increase supply while maintaining a constant demand, prices will drop. Eventually, if nothing stops this process, prices will drop to zero.

    If you are in the business of information creation, that is what is happening today. Right now. Yes, I am talking to you.

    Your current model is threatening to lead you towards extinction. Like the paper newspaper or the CD, information brokers of all variety, whether they call themselves artists or entrepreneur are standing at the edge of a cliff.

    If you choose to ignore this fact. If you don’t start looking now for ways to adapt. You are going to go right off the edge with them.

    I’m really sorry.

     
  • Steve Spalding 10:09 pm on July 19, 2010 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , engineer, , information

    Long ago I decided to form all my social and economic theory by watching reruns of Sliders and Dr. Who.

    Since we’re talking about “generating time,” I thought it wouldn’t hurt to take a little road trip into Speculation Land, where technological utopians like myself wax poetic about how bits of silicon may one day save us from ourselves.

    Here’s a bit of personal history. I am actually an Electrical Engineer. Weird, right? I studied Artificial Intelligence at the University of Florida for quite sometime before grabbing my Masters, sticking it in a closet somewhere and buying a one way ticket to the Internet.

    Either way, what always fascinated me about intelligent machines wasn’t necessarily the idea of being able to hold a conversation with my robot butler, but the idea that intelligent software could act as a means for us to copy ourselves in a way that might actually allow us to create more time.

    Imagine a world where everyone ran a piece of space-software on their hyper-computers that understood the types of things that we were interested in, the way we did did research and the methods we used to parse information once we found it. The only difference between the software agent and you would be that the software could act millions of times faster, slicing and dicing data down into summaries that were orders of magnitude more relevant than anything you could find on your own. It almost wouldn’t need anywhere near as much coffee.

    Not only is this kind of software possible in the (relatively) near-term, but it may also be one of the only ways we have of seriously increasing the supply of Attention in our economy.

     
  • Steve Spalding 9:53 pm on July 18, 2010 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: filter, , information

    You know, I hate to say this but my Twitter followers can beat up your Twitter followers.

    Many very clever people see the web as this magical tool that will make us all publishers, that will democratize content creation in some fundamental way, allowing John and Jane Everyman to share their ramblings on the same footing as national broadcast media.

    While this has turned out to be may more true than any of us would have expected, this idyllic land of popcorn and Unicorns can only be maintained if our ability to filter information starts to catch up with the volume of information that is constantly being added to our lives.

    When you live in a world where every hour a day or more worth of video is being added to Youtube and everyday, major blogs the world over can add 30+ new posts that will inevitable end up near the top of Google, what you are left with isn’t Democracy – not by a stretch. What your left with is the same, basic hyper-concentration of influence that we’ve come to expect from the real world. The only difference is that this time it’s way cheaper to maintain.

    People will always pick the sources that are easiest to find.

    Those sources are the ones that have built the biggest platforms and widest communities.

    It’s becoming increasingly difficult to build those communities.

    The question left in the air then is how long before individual creators get shaken out of the mix.

     
  • Steve Spalding 9:49 pm on July 18, 2010 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , information, technology

    Tony Stark is my Wingman.

    I’m trying to have a good mix of rants, analysis, aphorisms and good old fashioned, “here’s what I done thought up this week,” in this book. Since it is after 4 AM, let’s take a page from that last column.

    I have never bought a coffee table book before, but today I did, Iron Man: The Ultimate Guide to the Armored Hero. Before you ask, I have been reading the comic for the better part of two decades. It’s funny how a Blockbuster movie success can raise the profile of a previously forgettable hero. Tony has been interesting to me since I was a wee tot for two reasons, the first is that he flies around in a suit of armor, which to the hear of a six year old boy with aspirations of saving the world and a love for futzing with technology seemed awesome.

    The second and more recent revelation is that he is the perfect analogy for what the Information Age can ideally create, a person who truly owns the technology and can transform it into knowledge. Knowledge he turns around and uses to change the world he lives in.

    I readily admit that this is probably a convenient excuse to read more comic books.

    I am OK with that.

     
  • Steve Spalding 9:39 pm on July 15, 2010 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: adaptability, , , information

    We are all going extinct.

    Information moves way faster than you do.

    Whatever your business is, as it stands, it’s a form of arbitrage with you at its center trying to make as much money as you can before the market wises up and puts you out on the street.

    One of your core business questions should be whether you have the brass to change everything when the time comes, and whether right this second you are far enough out in front of the next curve to keep from getting crushed when this one comes crashing down.

    That is all.

     
  • Steve Spalding 9:37 pm on July 15, 2010 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , information

    We really don’t care all that much about fancy new ways to organize data.

    Ask anyone how excited they get about updates to Google’s search algorithm.

    The information systems that will survive in the longest run are those that have human beings at their core. Human beings who get a jolt out of things that touch on “human stuff,” like their biases and their overwhelming sense of existential deprivation.

     
  • Steve Spalding 9:28 pm on July 12, 2010 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , information,

    The first and hardest act is always convincing business owners that people are more than the numbers in their Google Analytics. This is true whether they are a non-profit looking to cure Cancer, or a E-commerce brand trying to push some new sunglasses.

    The Internet has given us access to more information than we’ll ever know what to do with. While this is great news for anyone who has ever stayed up late wondering how many seconds have really passed since the beginning of the Universe. Unfortunately despite all the gifts the web has doled out, and the high-minded talk about Social Media Revolution, we have a greater and greater tendency to see each other as statistics rather than people.

    Trust me, it’s really easy to do, especially when the only access you have to the people visiting whatever slapdash piece of content you’ve put together is from the comments, which are often poorly concealed spam and from analytics packages which can barely differentiate between people and bots let along tell you anything useful about them.

    Despite the ease of viewing the Internet as a nameless, faceless playground, this is dangerous. Not because abstracting things doesn’t have a practical benefit, but because it makes it far to easy to think you can succeed by following trends lines rather than thinking about what actually makes sense to do.

    Reducing people to data points makes us far too comfortable ignoring common sense, which is a bad thing – always.

     
c
compose new post
j
next post/next comment
k
previous post/previous comment
r
reply
e
edit
o
show/hide comments
t
go to top
esc
cancel
ss_blog_claim=95c4a241b66b975cba010f667506de2d