"v4," and "Also"
Sunday, May 29, 2005
v4: As clear, this site had a makeover. Or, if I must stick with makeup metaphors, it had an exfoliation, as almost nothing is left.
Also: I went to the air show today, but the write-up will come no earlier than tomorrow.
Jones Beach Air Show
Thursday, May 26, 2005
As I will likely be attending the air show this weekend, I would like to know who is interested in coming.
Recently and Soon
Thursday, May 12, 2005
Notes in chronological order:
- Hajime no Ippo is the second anime I am watching. (The first was Cowboy Bebop.) I only saw the first two episodes of Ippo so far, which were kind of cheesy and predictable, but otherwise good.
- A critical security fix for Firefox was released, so everybody using it should go download and install version 1.04.
- I finished the last of seven AP tests several minutes ago. The only class I have work in is now post-WWII history with Manning, which I took because it gives no work.
- My brother will be back from Binghamton in a few hours.
Self Service Systems
Tuesday, May 10, 2005
At the Y the other day, I noticed that locker 1 is labeled “Lost and Found.” This idea is so simple, it only qualifies as brilliant because I have never seen it anywhere before. The lost and found is usually hidden away behind somebody’s desk, which makes it far less effective. An accessible lost and found locker runs on the same principle as Wikipedia, a free community-edited encyclopedia, and other such “self service systems.”
Since 2001, the Wikipedia community has written the largest English encyclopedia, as well as encyclopedias in almost two hundred other languages and side projects that aim to catalogue all human knowledge. Wikipedia allows anybody with Web access to read and modify its content, which allowed it to grow large so quickly, and its web-based nature also makes it the timeliest encyclopedia in the world. The most amazing part of Wikipedia is that, even though anybody can very easily fill the encyclopedia with advertising, bias, obscenity, and other garbage, its pages are almost always accurate and well-written.
While probably more important than helping people find their missing gym shorts, Wikipedia works for the same reason the lost and found locker does. Assume that most people are good. This might be wrong, except that the systems can only work when most people do not want to cause harm, and they do work, so the assumption is at least right in a limited scope. Since these good people generally would not steal from the locker room or spam the encyclopedia, it is safe to use these systems. (The reason it is safe to have mostly good people instead of only good people is low opportunity cost: lost and found items are of little value, like a sweaty towel, and changes to the encyclopedia are tracked and reversible.)
These self service systems are not just safe—they are beneficial. In a typical lost and found setup, people are usually lazy. Most items lost are cheap, so returning them is not a top priority, especially when the loser is unknown. Being able to throw the fugitive shampoo bottle into a locker on your way out reduces the laziness barrier to zero. It is not good that people are so lazy, but there is no sense in denying it. Similarly, Wikipedia could have been a set of simple web pages, and if anybody wanted to change them or add to them they would have to email an administrator, but I think it is obvious that that would not work.
The Web abounds with other examples of self service systems, notably “folksonomy” organization on sites like del.icio.us and Flickr. Some cities such as London are experimenting with “naked street,” a traffic model that takes out all formal controls and trusts people to handle themselves on the road. Surprisingly (or not), this also seems to work.
Self service still has not penertated mainstream culture, which might be for the better in areas where the risk is higher, but it is definitely a powerful way to harness people to help each other. It is at least something to consider when designing interaction, whether in a club, on the Web, or in any other group situation.
Two Games
Friday, May 06, 2005
- I considered calling it "Frockey" or "Friskey." Justin likes "European Frockey." My favorite name, though, is "The Hosbies." Three-on-three Ultimate on a hockey rink, except instead of passing to a teammate in the end zone, you score by throwing the disc through the goal from one of the face-off circles.
- This one is solitaire. Equipment: 1. can from macaroons (coffee would be suitable,) empty and topless; 2. clicky pen. Place the can on a table. Click the pen open, and press the clicker against the table, depressed. Slide the pen toward the can and release. Small scale basketball. If it becomes too easy, shoot three-pointers.
Credits: the guys for the first and a bored me for the second.
Update: Carl comes up with the best name: Canadian Frisbee.