Trend-Land
There should be a blog about the life-cycle of trends. Based on the hypothesis that all what is new will soon be old and the people soon will be oversaturated it should deconstruct all the new IT-buzzes.
Web2.0. hum. A paradigm, but what was meant besides multimedia? Community building? Yes, interesting. But how many communities have been "built" in the last years containing nothing except some bits. Real communities cannot be built, only fostered and constrained, they emerge.
While building virtual communities for the sake of profit, real communities may be destroyed and prevented to grow. Yesterday, the barber shop over the street was closed because all the money is somewhere else.
Maybe they built virtual communities with it. Being so virtual that all that lasts is a pile of metal, programmed to make fancy pictures, spin users into an illusion of community and need a lot of electricity while nobody feels a real community any more. We need to understand that the good ol' times of the net are no more existent, many communities are a product and feel like one.
As soon as something new, something more important, something more natural, can act as a new focus for the money-streams, subsequently being destroyed by them and converted into a we-are-all-very-happy-colored-supermarket.
Web2.0. hum. A paradigm, but what was meant besides multimedia? Community building? Yes, interesting. But how many communities have been "built" in the last years containing nothing except some bits. Real communities cannot be built, only fostered and constrained, they emerge.
While building virtual communities for the sake of profit, real communities may be destroyed and prevented to grow. Yesterday, the barber shop over the street was closed because all the money is somewhere else.
Maybe they built virtual communities with it. Being so virtual that all that lasts is a pile of metal, programmed to make fancy pictures, spin users into an illusion of community and need a lot of electricity while nobody feels a real community any more. We need to understand that the good ol' times of the net are no more existent, many communities are a product and feel like one.
As soon as something new, something more important, something more natural, can act as a new focus for the money-streams, subsequently being destroyed by them and converted into a we-are-all-very-happy-colored-supermarket.
NooPed - 27. Mär, 11:18