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Seb Schmoller :: Blog :: Useful stuff in the Economist Technology Quarterly

June 10, 2007

I've flagged three useful and interesting articles from the current edition of the Economist's Technology Quarterly in this blog post. To save you going to it, here it is in full:

This week's Technology Quarterly from the 9/6/2007 Economist has several articles of interest, all of which seem to be accessible without a subscription:

1. Bringing free software down to earth, which is about entrepreneur and self-financed astronaut Mark Shuttleworth's successful efforts to fund the development of Ubuntu, a user-friendly version of Linux, which is distributed alongside a suite of Open Source applications for desktop PCs and laptops.

2. Home truths about telecoms, about anthropologists' findings concerning the way people use communication technologies. This is a "must read" article, which challenges assumptions about the convergence of digital technologies, and which offers evidence that:

  • users are showing a growing preference for semi-synchronous writing (text, chat, email) over synchronous voice;
  • private communications are invading the workplace rather than the other way around;
  • migrants are the most advanced users of communications technology.

3. Online gaming's Netscape moment? , about Multiverse Network, set up by some of the original founders of Netscape, which has created client and server software (based on open standards), and free for download by anyone who wants to build and host a virtual world.

 


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Blogs with Keywords: Linux, MMO, on-line gaming, Open Source, User behaviour

Posted by Seb Schmoller


Comments

  1. Very interesting. Extrapolating: the "home truths about telecoms" article might go some way towards an explanation of the satisfaction I felt using the Elluminate environment. The audio worked well for 1-way communication, but the semi-synchronous , colateral text channel enabled at least partly reflective discussion around, across and through the audio. I found this captivating and enriching: much more than either a lecture or a discussion forum. Needs more thought and work... over to theBloomsbury synchronous audiographic conferencing group?

    George Robertsgeorge on Sunday, 10 June 2007, 10:52 UTC # |

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