Archive: February 2005

Some Rights Reserved

Monday, February 28th, 2005

I’m impressed with the Creative Commons and their implementation of the Commons Deed, a human readable version of a copyright license. These easy-to-understand, one-page summaries make licensing one’s content a snap. I believe I’ll be using their licenses as an important piece of my infrastructure for many years to come.

Howtoons

Sunday, February 27th, 2005

Two folks that I’m happy to know through the MIT world are Joost Bonsen and Saul Griffith. Both brilliant in their own right, together they are making real headway creating comics they call Howtoons. Cartoons focused on empowering the world’s children by teaching them how to build – Howtoons have the potential to educate millions of kids that they too can change the world around them.

Go to the Howtoon’s site to learn more about the concept and download Howtoon’s for personal use.

The Power of V2

Saturday, February 26th, 2005

Ever been part of a software, website, or other project where decision makers had opposing or misinformed opinions about functionality or goals? As a web consultant, I ran into this quite a bit, and I continue to run into from time to time on various fronts.

Assuming that all members of a group have the same end goals in mind (a big assumption), breaking gridlock or steering folks away from ideas that will keep them from their goals is possible, and “version two” can help.

I have used version two in the past, but never really understood it until this past week while I was having drinks with an old friend from school and describing a project from years earlier. It was in that moment of description, over a pint of Guinness, that the power of version two hit me.

In groups, version two steers people away from their ideal solution toward more reasonable and realistic short term goals. These goals are typically easier to build consensus around than the larger, end-goal, and therefore, allow the group to move forward with all members feeling like some of their personal vision will be released immediately and the rest will come in version two. By the time version two rolls around, the individuals in the group have more knowledge and shared context, so their ideals have converged a bit more, and the process repeats until the final goal is reached.

As individuals, version two helps us by allowing us to make progress toward our own idealistic end-point. Version two can help us convince oneselves that the next baby step is good enough and that the ideal is just a few steps beyond instead of impossible to reach.

So when trying to get something done myself or in a group, I always try to remember the power of version two.