Difference between revisions of "Collaborative technology"

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(Created page with "==About== This page is currently a loose collection of notes, eventually to be assembled into a coherent whole about how improvements in technology has enabled people to collabor...")
 
m (moved History of collaboration to Collaborative technology: better description; a history would be organized more chronologically)
 
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==About==
 
==About==
 
This page is currently a loose collection of notes, eventually to be assembled into a coherent whole about how improvements in technology has enabled people to collaborate with increasing effectiveness.{{seedling}}
 
This page is currently a loose collection of notes, eventually to be assembled into a coherent whole about how improvements in technology has enabled people to collaborate with increasing effectiveness.{{seedling}}
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==pre-printing==
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Before the printing press, there was [[money]], which allowed a society to keep track of [[resource allocation]] without actually moving resources around.
 
==era of print==
 
==era of print==
The printing press made it possible for printed knowledge to be distributed beyond the walls of closely-guarded monasteries and private libraries. It also made possible the newspaper, the broadsheet, and other ways of disseminating news. These weren't necessarily controlled by a central authority, but they weren't exactly interactive either.
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The [[printing press]] made it possible for printed knowledge to be distributed beyond the walls of closely-guarded monasteries and private libraries. It also made possible the newspaper, the broadsheet, and other ways of disseminating news. These weren't necessarily controlled by a central authority, but they weren't exactly interactive either.
 
==20th century==
 
==20th century==
 
Inexpensive reproduction of written materials made possible mailing lists and newsletters and groups with local chapters. The mailing lists became emailing lists, from which came MoveOn and its inheritors, which created web sites that were mostly auxiliary to their main activity.
 
Inexpensive reproduction of written materials made possible mailing lists and newsletters and groups with local chapters. The mailing lists became emailing lists, from which came MoveOn and its inheritors, which created web sites that were mostly auxiliary to their main activity.

Latest revision as of 01:35, 24 April 2011

About

This page is currently a loose collection of notes, eventually to be assembled into a coherent whole about how improvements in technology has enabled people to collaborate with increasing effectiveness.

This is a growing seedling article. You can help Issuepedia by watering it.

pre-printing

Before the printing press, there was money, which allowed a society to keep track of resource allocation without actually moving resources around.

era of print

The printing press made it possible for printed knowledge to be distributed beyond the walls of closely-guarded monasteries and private libraries. It also made possible the newspaper, the broadsheet, and other ways of disseminating news. These weren't necessarily controlled by a central authority, but they weren't exactly interactive either.

20th century

Inexpensive reproduction of written materials made possible mailing lists and newsletters and groups with local chapters. The mailing lists became emailing lists, from which came MoveOn and its inheritors, which created web sites that were mostly auxiliary to their main activity.

Then there came the (dial-up) BBSs, which became newsgroups, which became online forums.

21st century

Then there came the wikis, which spawned Wikipedia and other reference sites. The wikis enabled new technologies like "semantic markup" which are still being used largely on an experimental level.

Then came the centralized social networks -- Facebook, Friendster, and many others lesser known.

Then there came the meet-up/events planning services, like meetup.com and Facebook's "events" feature.