The document discusses how new social tools are emerging that are intended to augment social systems and shape culture. It describes how tools have evolved from private to public sharing, from asynchronous to synchronous communication. It also examines concepts like "edglings" and "centroids" and how trends may shift from hierarchical and top-down to more networked and bottom-up approaches across different areas like work, politics, media, environment, and spirituality.
4. Social Tools “ A new category of software is emerging, software intended to augment social systems. […] I call these social tools : software intended to shape culture.”
8. From Hiding To Sharing Synchronous Synchronous Asynchronous Tempo Microblog Chat Email
9. From Hiding To Sharing Public Private Secret Access Synchronous Synchronous Asynchronous Tempo Microblog Chat Email
10. From Hiding To Sharing Stream Room Inbox Context Public Private Secret Access Synchronous Synchronous Asynchronous Tempo Microblog Chat Email
11. [ from Edglings: A Well-Ordered Humanism and The Future Of Everything] Edglings Centroids
12. [ from Edglings: A Well-Ordered Humanism and The Future Of Everything] Bottom Up, Egalitarian Top Down, Authoritarian Work and Politics Edglings Centroids
13. [ from Edglings: A Well-Ordered Humanism and The Future Of Everything] Subjective, Partial Objective, Impartial Point of View Bottom Up, Egalitarian Top Down, Authoritarian Work and Politics Edglings Centroids
14. [ from Edglings: A Well-Ordered Humanism and The Future Of Everything] Networks Hierarchies Belonging Subjective, Partial Objective, Impartial Point of View Bottom Up, Egalitarian Top Down, Authoritarian Work and Politics Edglings Centroids
15. [ from Edglings: A Well-Ordered Humanism and The Future Of Everything] Post-Nuclear (Tribal) Nuclear Family Networks Hierarchies Belonging Subjective, Partial Objective, Impartial Point of View Bottom Up, Egalitarian Top Down, Authoritarian Work and Politics Edglings Centroids
16. [ from Edglings: A Well-Ordered Humanism and The Future Of Everything] Glocalism Nationalism Political Scope Post-Nuclear (Tribal) Nuclear Family Networks Hierarchies Belonging Subjective, Partial Objective, Impartial Point of View Bottom Up, Egalitarian Top Down, Authoritarian Work and Politics Edglings Centroids
17. [ from Edglings: A Well-Ordered Humanism and The Future Of Everything] Participative Mainstream Media Glocalism Nationalism Political Scope Post-Nuclear (Tribal) Nuclear Family Networks Hierarchies Belonging Subjective, Partial Objective, Impartial Point of View Bottom Up, Egalitarian Top Down, Authoritarian Work and Politics Edglings Centroids
18. [ from Edglings: A Well-Ordered Humanism and The Future Of Everything] Restorative, Sustainable Exploitative, Unsustainable Environment Participative Mainstream Media Glocalism Nationalism Political Scope Post-Nuclear (Tribal) Nuclear Family Networks Hierarchies Belonging Subjective, Partial Objective, Impartial Point of View Bottom Up, Egalitarian Top Down, Authoritarian Work and Politics Edglings Centroids
19. [ from Edglings: A Well-Ordered Humanism and The Future Of Everything] Decentralized, Enigmatic Centralized, Dogmatic Spirituality Restorative, Sustainable Exploitative, Unsustainable Environment Participative Mainstream Media Glocalism Nationalism Political Scope Post-Nuclear (Tribal) Nuclear Family Networks Hierarchies Belonging Subjective, Partial Objective, Impartial Point of View Bottom Up, Egalitarian Top Down, Authoritarian Work and Politics Edglings Centroids
20. “ A well-ordered humanism does not begin with itself, but puts things back in their place. It puts the world before life, life before man, and the respect of others before love of self.” Claude L évi-Strauss
The web is the most valuable human artifact ever created. We have no idea of how much we have invested collectively in its creation and maintenance, and while we may, as individuals or companies, consider the return on investment for some tiny element of the larger web, like a new router or server, on the whole the web is growing at a stratospheric rate with no real consideration of its relative cost. We don’t even know how much energy it takes to keep it going. It’s a truly distributed cultural activity. Our post-industrial civilization, in future centuries, may be defined by our building the web, in much the same way as we recall the ancient Egyptians for their pyramids, and the Chinese for the Great Wall. And in much the same way, the building of such artifacts says a great deal about the cultures that built them, and suggests a great deal about the shape of the cultures that followed their construction. But the web stands out from these merely physical artifacts. It has more in common with the rise of printing, as has been widely noted. And like the mass-produced books of the, the largest impact of the web will not be seen immediately, but will reverberate in our culture, as we are shaped by the tools we have built.