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Month: April 2014

Choose your silo (or, Why are we partying like it’s 1999?)

Depending on when you first got online, images like this that adorned the bottom of web pages 15 years ago may or may not be familiar to you:

Best viewed with IE / Netscape

To me, it’s a symptom of what happens in unregulated emerging markets with an inexperienced audience. Companies attempt to provide shareholder value by aggressively adding users and making the cost of switching to a competitor high. They do this through incompatibility with alternative products. It’s an example of attempted ‘vendor lock-in’ and, at the end of the day, is all about enclosing things for profit.

It’s nothing new. The Agricultural Revolution in England 250 years ago provides another example. Here, common land was literally ‘enclosed’ for private profit. The people on the land protested, but rapacious capitalists forced legislation through by way of ties with the government. In unfettered Capitalism, public goods are sacrificed to the sword of private profit. The trouble is that we’re see this in the digital world again and again. It’s sad to see the lack of collective awareness.

In software development, a ‘feature’ is something that is meant to be there and is (usually) good for users. The opposite of that – something that’s bad for users – is a ‘bug’. For some reason we tend to treat a ‘bug’ of a the wider ecosystem as a ‘feature’. For example, this (despite how shiny your chosen silo might be) is not the mark of a mature and healthy marketplace:

App download icons

Forcibly erecting a wall to make apps inoperable provides temporary profit, but is not in the best interests of users. Even on a basic, financial level, re-purchasing apps because you switch device is frustrating. But, more importantly, it means that users have to make forced decisions before they even start using the apps for work or pleasure. As vendors look towards tighter integration between hardware and software for competitive advantage, software decisions are increasingly also hardware decisions. Am I going to purchase an iPhone so I can access this set of apps, or an Android device, to access a different set?

Often, decisions around software are made on behalf of users. For example by schools attended by students, businesses worked at by employees, or even by family members who ‘know more about technology’. The problem here is that the person making the decision has little option but to hitch their wagon to the roadmap of a company pursuing shareholder value. That company is then only likely to consider interoperability as a last resort.

Thankfully, the world is not simply full of companies trying to make money. There’s also non-profits and people innovating on behalf of users. I’m a paid contributor to the Mozilla project, but I also used the Firefox web browser when it was still called ‘Phoenix’. Open standards and interoperability matter. If you haven’t yet explored Firefox OS then I would encourage you to do so. There’s also, amongst others, Jolla’s Sailfish-powered smartphones, or Canonical’s upcoming mobile Ubuntu devices. What’s different about these mobile operating systems is that they’re putting users first; not just in the sense of creating a delightful user experience, but also in terms of giving users freedom and choice.

Let’s learn from our mistakes. As users, let’s not be seduced by ‘free’ as in ‘free beer’ but actively fight for ‘free’ as in ‘liberty’. Given the amount of time we spend on mobile devices, I don’t think it’s hyperbole to say that part of the future of human flourishing depends upon it.

Image CC BY-NC-SA .keeva999

Weeknote 15/2014

This week I’ve been:

Next week is a short week: I’m taking a day in lieu as I worked Saturday this week, as well as a day’s holiday. That, in conjunction with the Easter weekend, means I’ll have a good chunk of time off before the Mozilla All-Hands in San Francisco.

Image CC BY harritimonen

Weeknote 14/2014

This week I’ve been:

  • Much happier and I’ve generally had more energy. I put this down to a combination of not drinking any alcohol or coffee, making sure I get enough sleep, and tracking everything.
  • Trying to stay focused in the wake of all that’s been happening within Mozilla.
  • Attending a SuperMondays event on ‘Makers’.
  • Finishing off a Webmaker whitepaper. We’ll announce it and invite community feedback when things have calmed down a bit.
  • Experimenting with going for a walk instead of running to see if it makes any difference to my migraines.
  • Increasing the number of lengths I do at the swimming pool. I’m up to 56.
  • Responding to feedback on my DMLcentral post about Open Badges.
  • Messing around and testing out the private beta of BadgeKit.
  • Re-publishing my post about ‘Super Mentor badges’ on the Mozilla Webmaker blog.
  • Moderating this week’s #TeachTheWeb community call. It was a particularly good call this week, I thought. You can catch up here.
  • Commenting on the Scottish Qualifications Authority’s new Digital Literacy Competency Framework.
  • Responding to feedback on the WebLitMapper.
  • Turning down requests to speak at events and run workshops. I’m enjoying travelling less at the moment (although I’ve got a bit of travel coming up over the next few weeks).
  •  Talking with Bryan Mathers and Tim Riches about a ‘Digital Skills Sandwich’ idea and how it relates to the Web Literacy Map (now at v1.1.o!) and Open Badges.
  • Starting work on applying Carla Casilli’s 3PBS badge system to Webmaker badges. I talked to her about it on Thursday, too.
  • Creating resources for aligning with the Web Literacy Map.
  • Replying to interview questions from Shreyas Narayanan, a Mozilla contributor. You can read the interview on his blog.
  • Starting planning for the Oppi Festival next week.
  • Working out my expenses for February and March.

Next week I’m at home on Monday and Tuesday, then I’m off to Helsinki, Finland for the Oppi Festival. I’m speaking and running workshops with Melissa Romaine and Emily Goligoski.

Image CC BY-NC-SA Daniel Kulinski

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