<html><head></head><body style="word-wrap: break-word; -webkit-nbsp-mode: space; -webkit-line-break: after-white-space; ">Thank you Michel, this is a good reply. It informs me and i spent almost 2 hours with miles fidelman on the phone yesterday. I suppose you would say Mlles and I are of the same internet generation. We met in 1991 while i was employed by the long defunct uS Congress office of technology assessment on doing a policy analysis of al gore's ideas fro a national research and education network.<div><br></div><div>having heard directly from miles what you are responding to here what you have written puts the issues well in focus.</div><div><br></div><div>I like the phraseology with which you reply... It is a process of feeling our way in the midst of chaos and miles as an inside techie engineer in the 80s and 90s which i never was will be satisfied by things very different from what makes you and i happy.</div><div><br></div><div>IO have been reading the next net list more closely now that my r and e book project is done and falling on deaf ears as far as i can tell. I would like to see the would be next net builder list a series of requirements.... that is to say what exactly to they want to build? Like a wireless mesh? Ummmm ok. How will it function who will it reach? What kind of traffic will it carry where.... under what conditions. How will it cross something like an ocean.</div><div><br></div><div>what is it that you are going to build???? If someone would t6ry to put some functional specifications together it would i think be very helpful for the understanding of the rest of us.</div><div><br></div><div>I think i am as alienated as anyone here by the corporatist betray of what5 once was the so called middle class.</div><div><br></div><div>There for I took my readings from here added them to John robbs global guerrillas and the like and build a strongly anti-capitalistr corporatist framework around an otherwise quite technical subject.</div><div><br></div><div>US UCAN was not designed as i would have folk use it. It was designed for stability rule and control of the washington power structure, I am beginning to think that my framework may have killed the rest of what i was trying to do because all these network collaboration science builders need government money and corporate grants to continue.. I guess i am finding out what the rest of you know quite well and that is taking an iconoclastic view of this stuff is a very risky business.<br><div>
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<br><div><div>On May 30, 2011, at 10:47 PM, Michel Bauwens wrote:</div><br class="Apple-interchange-newline"><blockquote type="cite">Responding to Miles, and by the way, NextNet is in not 'our' list , I'm just a participant, and so are eventual other people who may contribute to our work. The list was created by Venessa for ContactCon, and the section on P2P Infrastructure was conceived as a service to that community.<br>
<br>Miles, you write, <br><br><Perhaps it's that the p2pfoundation wiki is young, or perhaps it's that <br>
I just know too much about the various subjects that are indexed - <br>
either way I struggle to find a value add above what I can find through <br>
judicious use of Wikipedia and Google.><br><br>Yes, indeed, it is not meant for people who know too much about the various subjects, though I would find it surprising that you would also be an expert on say p2p spirituality, or p2p agriculture and food trends ... As for Wikipedia and Google obviating the need for curation, being a very good searcher myself, I am quite doubtful of that. First of all, not so many people know how to search well, and search and the wikipedia are inevitably biased (of course, so is p2p-f), but the issue is time and organization. Each section aims to be fairly comprehensive, but may not always be, and has many gaps; nevertheless, if you combine say a p2p-f wiki section with some of the other portals being referenced on a same topic, you would quickly gain an overview of a field that may be quite time-consuming to obtain. That's all really. Anyway, as imperfect and incomplete as it is, we still get enough feedback from researchers who say it made a difference for them, and that's all we can hope for.<br>
<br> <br>
<And then, perhaps I find myself disappointed that a "Foundation" that <br>
"studies the impact of Peer to Peer technology and thought on society/"/
<br>
is really primarily functioning as a "clearinghouse for open/free, <br>
participatory/p2p and commons-oriented initiatives" - with seemingly <br>
little participation by folks who are truly pioneers and thought leaders
<br>
in the field (where, for example are Richard Stallman, Linus Torvald, <br>
Ian Murdock, or Eric Raymond in any of this?).><br><br><br>People who are already firmly established in a field in which they are experts will generally not be motivated to volunteer to such information gathering exercise, nevertheless, apart from Ian Murdock, whom I don't know yet, ost of these names would be represented by tags or quotes or references in the wiki, but it is true that we do not focus on those people who were active say 15 years ago, but on emerging actors of the last few years. One of the reasons is that we use 'opportunistic updating' as a methodology for the site, i.e. we do not search to write complete entries, but rather add on new things as we come across them, it's rather like putting a puzzle together. To the degree that say Richard Stallman would make new interventions, we would add and reference them, but we would not necessarily go back to the early writings, though if some other volunteer would want to do this, it would get done.<br>
<br>I don't think there is such a "Bible" available, but, many good (some very good) books and essays have appeared and are available, and most of them are referenced; we have a list with recommend essays; we have a book section in the wiki (<a href="http://p2pfoundation.net/Category:Books">http://p2pfoundation.net/Category:Books</a>); we have regular coverage of books including a book of the week section in our blog, etc ... We make top ten list of best books every year, etc ... The field is probably too vast to have just one such book, but again, the specialized sections, say p2p spirituality, will certainly point you to the major books on a given topic. Never perfect or fully comprehensive, but putting you on the way in a decent fashion, I think so.<br>
<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
<br>
<br>
> in Berlin ... at that time, pessimism about open hardware was <br>
> pervasive, it had all been tried, and failed (see Graham Seaman's <br>
> texts of the period); <br>
<br>
I guess we have a different sense of history, and of Graham Seaman's <br>
writings (which of his writings are you thinking of?) ><br><br>I don't have a specific reference, but the different of perspective may be explained by different 'timing'. Certainly, in the period in which I researched open hardware the first time, say around 2004, people were despondent and it followed a wave of failures; but things started picking up a gain 2-3 years later and we're now at a high point of emergence and optimism. Undoubtedly, a period of relative failure may create a new wave of despondency, etc ... I only retained a positive assessment of Seaman in the wiki, see <a href="http://p2pfoundation.net/Can_peer_production_make_washing_machines%3F">http://p2pfoundation.net/Can_peer_production_make_washing_machines%3F</a><br>
<br><br>
<br>
<Hey, I was there, in the middle of a lot of it. What I disdain is <br>
looking at things through rose colored glasses.><br><br>I don't think Isaac or others are necessarily looking at reality through rose-coloured glasses; they are motivated, have a vision however imperfect, and are willing to face obstacles; I don't think they are going to approach it in the same way as the older waves did; it is of course useful for the new generation of hackers to look at the experiences of previous generations, not to be discouraged, but to see more usefully where they have most chance of succeeding; most likely their experience will be a mix of successes and failures; however, the conjuncture is also very different, the 60s were still a period of ascending capitalism, in the high-growth half of Kondratieff; we are now behind a systemic breakdown of a kondratieff wave, with no structural reforms to speak off, and an all-out war against workers and middle classes, i.e. in which the system hardly offers any hope to young people but rather the opposite. It makes a lot more sense to build constructive alternatives now, rather than attempt say to cajole the system into reforms. Recent mobilizations in Spain, Greece and elsewhere show that this generation is inventing its own forms of struggle and is not just content to built dwarfish alternatives, but is also starting to engage in more fundamental pursuits. It's early days, and they must learn, and history can be a bit of a guide, but cannot offer exclusive guidance.<br>
<br>
<br><br><br><br>
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