Undoubtedly, social software and social media have been revolutionary, but today's version is fundamentally hamstrung and restrictive in nature. The social network of the future will not be limited by any premonition of its use, but rather will dynamically adapt to the needs of its users. Join Sean as he explores topics such as self-organizing systems, ubiquitous computing, and genetic software development as potential sources of inspiration for the next generation of web applications.
2. Social networks have
revolutionized the way people
think about software, from both
the business and consumer
perspective
Webvisions 2007 Social Architecture May 3rd, 2007
3. Passion Centric
vs.
Passion Agnostic
Webvisions 2007 Social Architecture May 3rd, 2007
4. I Love @#&!
Webvisions 2007 Social Architecture May 3rd, 2007
11. Tags create a highly-malleable cataloguing system
Tags communicate “meta data” to the masses
Tags are easy
Webvisions 2007 Social Architecture May 3rd, 2007
13. “... I suspect in a matter of a few years a Web
page without a dynamic ratings system attached
will trigger the same response that a Web page
without hyperlinks triggers today”
Stephen B. Johnson Emergence
Webvisions 2007 Social Architecture May 3rd, 2007
14. People understand voting
Voting promotes trust and believability
Voting enables the community to decide what it
feels is important
Webvisions 2007 Social Architecture May 3rd, 2007
21. Customization allows for self-expression
Customization increases sense of ownership
Customization is a di erentiator
Webvisions 2007 Social Architecture May 3rd, 2007
22. All of these combine to form what are being
called
self-organizing systems
Webvisions 2007 Social Architecture May 3rd, 2007
24. Tagging is a conscious choice, it is work
Webvisions 2007 Social Architecture May 3rd, 2007
25. Voting pushes towards the mean,
it does not organize
Webvisions 2007 Social Architecture May 3rd, 2007
26. In its current state, customization is too manual
Webvisions 2007 Social Architecture May 3rd, 2007
27. Ironically, these tools detract from the primary
goals of our systems
Webvisions 2007 Social Architecture May 3rd, 2007
28. The next generation of social systems should
organize information without inhibiting the acts
of creating and consuming
Webvisions 2007 Social Architecture May 3rd, 2007
30. Ubiquitous computing is a model of computing
in which computer functions are integrated into
everyday life, often in an invisible way
Webvisions 2007 Social Architecture May 3rd, 2007
31. It is not only inevitable, it is already here
Webvisions 2007 Social Architecture May 3rd, 2007
38. A point of presence becomes a field of presence
Webvisions 2007 Social Architecture May 3rd, 2007
39. Enabling our networks to leverage ubiquitous
computing will reduce the cognitive load required
to achieve the desired task
Webvisions 2007 Social Architecture May 3rd, 2007
41. An emergent system is one of great complexity
that is created without oversight from a “master
designer” and comes about through agents
following their own set of simple, local rules
Webvisions 2007 Social Architecture May 3rd, 2007
43. More is di erent
Ignorance is useful
Encourage random encounters
Look for patterns
Pay attention to your neighbors
Webvisions 2007 Social Architecture May 3rd, 2007
44. Truly emergent organization can be hard to pin to
human behavior
Webvisions 2007 Social Architecture May 3rd, 2007
45. But we can start working towards it
Webvisions 2007 Social Architecture May 3rd, 2007
49. The outer boundaries of today’s systems are
defined by our own intellectual limitations
Webvisions 2007 Social Architecture May 3rd, 2007
50. Release the prioritization / creation of our back-
end systems to the community in the same
manner as we have released our IA through
tagging
Webvisions 2007 Social Architecture May 3rd, 2007
51. Create a base set of rules and let the community
grow /cultivate them through use
Webvisions 2007 Social Architecture May 3rd, 2007
52. A crowd is at its wisest when it is:
Diverse, Independent,
Decentralized, and Aggregated
Webvisions 2007 Social Architecture May 3rd, 2007
55. It’s already here in some capacity
Webvisions 2007 Social Architecture May 3rd, 2007
56. An emergent system is a less bounded system
Webvisions 2007 Social Architecture May 3rd, 2007
57. It is time to take the next step forward and stop
putting the hard problems o to another day
Webvisions 2007 Social Architecture May 3rd, 2007
58. Social Networks have limitless potential, but we
need to work towards designing them that way
Webvisions 2007 Social Architecture May 3rd, 2007
59.
60. Acknowledgments
Special Thanks To
Jasmyn Madden, Nick Finck, Valerie Casey, Je Veen,
Tom Watson, Jina Bolton, Mykola Bilokonsky
Photo Credits
http://flickr.com/photos/74833619@N00/93440933/
http://flickr.com/photos/boogah/151536846/
http://flickr.com/photos/damgaard/449566520/
http://flickr.com/photos/add/187811645/
http://flickr.com/photos/catskillsgrrl/99502267/
http://flickr.com/photos/whateverthing/128106986/
Webvisions 2007 Social Architecture May 3rd, 2007