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Ed Mitchell has a lot on this including
http://www.edmitchell.co.uk/blog/2007/10/19/social-networks-communities-a-difference-or-two/

... and good stuff from Lloyd Davis
http://perfectpath.wordpress.com/2007/11/28/tuttle-club-getting-to-the-nub-of-why/

Interesting thought from Simon...

Is email really dead? Did it really become obsolete? Perhaps it become overburdened, mis-used and abused? Unmanageable for most and clogged with unnecessary 'noise' from people we never heard of and entitled with subjects to beat the anti-spam rather than inform us... Oh, the pleasure of receiving a hand written letter from a friend!

Anyway, if the death of email is actually due to poor discipline by users... how would a change of technology bring back the disciplines needed to sustain it? Not to mention the challenge of 'limited span of attention.' We get bored so quickly! We bounce from one new idea to the next... from friends reunited to bedo to myspace to facebook to...? The internet is beginning to look like my garage - a store of once loved toys that are no longer loved by the those who once craved them! (Just a thought...)

Meanwhile, one-to-one dialogue is clearly still important, if we believe the stats on mobile phone texting, but our messages are rapidly becoming reduced to 'sound bites' with short-cut language...so much to say but only 120 characters to say it in! So, we don't talk anymore we 'chat'... but we don't chat, we "text"...and we develop 'online relationships' where we meet up in 'virtual worlds' where we can live the life we wish we had, and stroke our ego, and patch up our self-esteem... We used to "go out" with our mates for a beer and a natter; 'ave a bit of a laugh together... and, alongthe way, we'd develop social skills, and communication skills, and confidence and go home at the end of the day knowing there's someone there for me at a level online friends can't offer...

What a strange world we're creating.

It's about inclusion - people's need to belong and feel part of something but in the 21st century it's all about me and my individuality and being in control... but, to be part of a community I have to let go of my rights and think more collectively...

Well, a few random thoughts... stimulated by a thought about emails! Might look like an "anti-internet' rant... but you can't tell 'cos you can't see if I smile or grimace and you can't hear my tone - all you get is the words.

It seems to me that a bit more socialising and a little less social networking might actually start to change the world... I'm sure there's a parallel in our workplace?

:-))

Thanks for the pointers David and thoughts Damian.

Email isn't really dead - of course - but it is now used for things that it shouldn't be used for (I think). There is lots of knowledge and insights locked up and made inaccessible by putting them in an email.

Sharing them in one place which is accessible by all those who are interested has got to be a better way of doing some things.

On chopping and changing and going with fads. I agree - you have to be very careful. We stuck with our last platform for 9 years and during that period many other systems came along and were expected to 'blow us out of the water'. We looked at these, we assessed them against where we thought we were and where we were going and it's only recently that we felt it was time to move.

On the individual vs group theme . . . at the end of the day I, as an individual, am interested in loads of stuff and my level of interest (or the time I am able to apply to a particular interest) waxes and wanes. I am not sufficiently engaged on one issue long enough to warrant me joining a particular 'group'. So it suits me to be able to contribute on and off from something like this blog.

What makes is possible to find this blog entry and engage is the technology - Although I did get your email about it, I picked it up from your Facebook note appearing in my page.

If you just 'build it' they won't come I'm afraid because 'they' are either not engaging at all (still a serious problem with people stuck in their own silos) or they are doing it already in existing networks (whether these existing networks actually do work or whether they are just another set of closed off silos is another matter). The long term investment is not in the technology, it is in the time to use and animate these networks, reading, commenting, becoming more Kanter-esque - changing the way you work is the first stage, moving onto a more 'Web 2.0' platform enables you to do this, but it is not the answer.

I agree with this totally and want us at ruralnet|uk to spend less time in our email boxes and more time at our workbenches on the Internet.

The closest any organisation I have seen get to this is Demos. Go here: see www.demos.co.uk/ and click on people and you find some people are blogging eg: http://www.demos.co.uk/people/rachelbriggs/blog

Further to my point about how people work - this means retraining to be doing this stuff outside the inbox - Beth Kanter has a very good overview from someone Amy Gahran here http://beth.typepad.com/beths_blog/2007/11/information-cop.html

Finally Karl Wilding from NCVO has a challenge http://www.3s4.org.uk/news/yesterday-s-foresight-seminar-on-new-technologies-lets-keep-talking#posts-99

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