Comment Re:Phrasing? (Score 1) 108
Or you can blame the idiot designer who didn't properly explain the consequences of "doing this" in their black-box interface, so that the user could make an informed decision.
Or you can blame the idiot designer who didn't properly explain the consequences of "doing this" in their black-box interface, so that the user could make an informed decision.
Like wiki pages, Flow posts have their own revision history. Flow-enabled pages have a wiki-style header. Each thread has a summary which can be community-edited. Threads can be collapsed and un-collapsed by anyone. All actions are logged. In short, wiki-style principles and ideas are implemented throughout the system.
However, a core property of wikis -that the structure of the page can be edited in any shape without the need for programming- is missing. Flow is a threaded conversation system by design, and only a threaded conversation system - it can't be tweaked by their users into something else, and the sequence of comments is shown in order enforced by the tool. All discussion regarding how the tool could be generalized to support other kind of collaboration workflows or those basic needs such as reordering and merging comments, which are trivial to make in the basic wiki "everything is a stream of text" model, were dodged or delayed to be studied at future "more complex" use cases. That didn't provide any confidence that those needs were understood by the design team.
I find your post interesting, and your points in many ways are an accurate analysis of many major problems with Wikipedia - yet I still find your point 11 ("The wiki is the problem") a non-sequitur. A wiki is in essence a model for data storage, where the expectations for interaction and data management are closer to control versioning than to the classic CRUD cycle. As such, it's a neutral tool that could be used in many other ways and improved to cover most of the current shortcomings; in particular, there's no reason why those other "practical solutions" and workflows for organizing content couldn't be built on top of a wiki-like storage layer, so the contradiction you see doesn't exist in essence.
The problems you mention are for the most part caused by the community dynamics and rules, with a few caused by the current wiki platform, rather than the wiki storage model itself.
The only point directly related to organizing things as a wiki is point 6, "Page ownership" - which is a real problem, but only exists because of the decision to build an encyclopedia where each page is an article that can be edited by anyone, not because the tool for storing the page is stored a wiki system. Every other point is caused by the project's original view as an anarchist playground which permeates all its policies, not any inherent limitation of the software.
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As for the approach taken by newslines.org, I agree that there's a need to give visibility to contributions from any user without giving the next editor in the line the possibility of removing them completely without trace; though that doesn't the benefits of a wiki.
Newslines is good for news-driven topics, but there's a need for an encyclopedia-like description of the topic, that a list of unrelated news doesn't cover; there needs to be a coherent wording that describes the highlights of the topic and how each part relates to the whole, and a wiki page covers that need. Compare the pages for Ebola at Wikipedia and at Newsline - which one would you prefer for first learning about the disease, and which one for staying up to date with recent developments? It's clear that they serve different, complementary purposes.
I've been following the development of Flow, and it's definitely not hyperbole.
The problem with Flow is not that it's not a valid talk system, it's that Wikipedia talk pages are not mere talk system. Even if Flow was the niftier, most standard, most boring talk software, there were needs in the ways that the users actually use the software that were never addressed in its design, and which caused all the backlash.
Wikipedia talk pages are based at their core on a wiki system, and wikis are the closest thing to the original vision of a hypertext made for "augmenting the human intellect" - it's the purest native digital way to store information for collaborative authoring and communication; it's the equivalent of clay for modelling thoughts, and Flow was a mere striped notebook. Flow took the power away from their users, and the users revolted.
Flow might have been an interesting tool to be used on a different new project, but was a poor fit for the existing user base, who were already used to a more powerful and flexible tool.
In other words, the computer was unable to learn to distinguish beautiful people from ugly people.
Why should it do that? It was not the purpose of the experiment.
The future of fine art. Ugly pictures because those are the only ones not generated by an algorithm.
You've just described all the *ism movements at the beginning of the XX century. Your clock is 100 years late.
Now all pictures will tend to be the same with the algorithm telling the amateur photographer how to frame the shot.
You say that as if it was a bad thing.
ÂBlock (read as "micro-block") has smaller memory footprint than AdBlock (and therefore Adblock Edge), and can use the same major privacy lists (EasyList, EasyPrivacy, Peter Lowe's Ad Server).
Why do we want semi transparent smart devices?
Take a look at augmented reality.
There are over a hundred different altcoins by now. What makes this one so different that it's Slashdot-front-page worthy?
It has hit Slashdot front-page, therefore it has got exposure to some high profile geeks (or it would, if there were any high profile geeks left reading Slashdot).
I actually wonder why anyone pays for the Office Suite now
One word: styling. In a corporate environment that needs to 1) allow mostly untrained office workers to share, cut and remix content and 2) stage it with corporate branding of tolerable quality, MS Office is still the easiest software stack to set up.
There are other platforms for technical writing that are more flexible and provide better, more professional results, but they're a nightmare to mount from scratch, and require a good deal of training. MS Office only requires to follow an install wizard to have it up and running.
The huge investments MS makes on making it obvious to use for simple use cases ensure a gentle ramp up where users can start using it at their own pace and being productive in a short time. Learning its numerous and frustrating quirks to achieve more complex results can happen later, as knowledge disseminates within the organization, which then gets locked-in in this software platform.
If your phone has Project Tango hardware and a good amoled screen with high resolution, and if the manufacturer implements a high refresh rate, you will have a lot of what the Occulus Rift has in terms of image quality
Occulus limitations are there to provide an extremely low latency, which is needed to reduce the above effects. Full immersion in a VR environment has disorientation effects much more intense than those of 3D cinema. There are some users immune to them, but major publishers are not interested in this technology unless they can sell it to 99% of common people.
Cardboard is a cheap way to test what it's like to have a virtual environment with head position tracking, but it doesn't compare to the quality of an Oculus device. Heck, even Oculus is having problems with creating lasting nausea for many, and it's being created by an all-star team of world-class developers.
For this to have any effect someone would need to force 100s (small-town election)
Which is easy to do when the small town is dominated by the local chieftain.
to millions (presidential election) ppl to vote the way they need.
Which is certainly doable by a well-coordinated syndicate of local chieftains with a shared interest in a pro-local-chieftain candidate.
With just a few percent of the victims testifying anyone trying to pull this off should find themselves in serious trouble.
This is why vote anonymity is essential. If a ruler is powerful enough to impose the votes on a whole community, no one would be silly enough to risk their neck by openly testifying against them. This may look hypothetical today, but if you open the possibility for coercion in elections, its only a matter of time that it gets abused on a wide scale.
Mathematics is a language, but not a natural one. The parts of those sciences dedicated to make programming less mind-bending are not a subset of maths, yet they're still CS. There are parts of computer science which are math, not all of it.
You have that a little wrong. God *can* (in principle) be proven. If the sky breaks open, choirs of angels break forth, a 10km-long arm reaches down from the skies and an 8km golden-haired, bearded face looks down upon humanity and utters words of unshakable truth...then God is proven.
That ostentatious display of fireworks wouldn't prove that the entity responsible for them would be omniscient, all-powerful, omnipresent and all-benevolent, though.
These are characteristics that those in the know consider essential properties of what they call "God", and those wouldn't be proven by your hypothetical display of evidence; that would only show that someone has a tremendous FX budget.
By their very definition, those "omni" properties cannot be proven by empirical evidence, so by definition they are outside the reach of scientific enquiry, and belong to the realm of the purely philosophical. All theology and most classic philosophy depend on those universal, unlimited powers of God for their reasoning, so most of what you've heard about such entity would still remain unproven. That's why all this talk about "science can prove the existence of God" or "science can prove that God doesn't exist" is quite silly; they would anyway work only for some trivial values of God, not its core definition.
It's not an optical illusion, it just looks like one. -- Phil White