Tuesday, November 26, 2013
Thursday, November 21, 2013
The Power of Social Media
I just finished the book Here Comes Everybody: The Power of
Organizing Without Organizations, a good
read for anyone curious about social networks. I thought it was pretty long
though; the author could have ended at the halfway mark and still had a good
book. I think that social media is a powerful tool and a damaging resource. I
recently read a thought-provoking comment about Bad Luck Brian, a popular
internet meme. The comment said, “This meme is about a real person who is now
infamous for the nice school picture he was in. People using his face as a meme
is no different than cyberbullying.” The same thing is true for any number of
other memes, YouTube videos and letters to the editor. Studio C did a sketch about this very
issue. While funny, that sketch is also scary and true. However, this also
highlights the power of social media. Searching for “police brutality” on
YouTube brings up thousands of videos. With cops knowing they can be recorded
and their actions seen by the world I think they have been given greater awareness
of their actions.
Social media has the power to bring
to light things that would have never been seen before. Government officials
giving private meetings never know if their speech is being recorded. That
happened to Mitt Romney this past election. Taken out of context and given to
the broad audience of the Internet his speech sounded bad. That’s exactly what
social media does: takes things formerly intended for a private audience and
makes them public. Therein lies its power and the dangers of living in the
digital age.
Thursday, November 14, 2013
Stability vs Polish
I recently switched my laptop from Windows 8.1 to Ubuntu. I’ve
played with Ubuntu in the past and this is another, probably temporary, switch
away from Windows. I switched because I was getting the occasional BSOD. I’ve
noticed that, in general, Ubuntu is more stable than Windows, but it is also
less polished overall. I’ve noticed that this is the case for other open and closed
source matchups such as Libre Office and Microsoft Office, gedit and Sublime
Text. The reason for this is a subtle one. Closed source projects usually make money
from selling their software. That means the product must be attractive, easy to
use and have lots of functionality. Open source projects generally make money
from support of their software. That means the interface doesn’t have to be
pretty, just functional. Users can save money on support if the product is rock
solid. The beauty of open source is that users can become developers and solve
stability issues. This leads to an extremely stable product.
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