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Why I haven’t posted lately.

Patman the Pat recently accused me of being too busy with real life to post.  

Frankly, kind of true, as I spend on average 14 hours a day most days of the week working, schooling, and travelling.  Weekends are also generally a bust.  Those extra few precious hours at home? Non-working internet access.

I did want to mention one thing though: http://www.willkinchlea.com

I’ve decided to buy my own website domain and server space.  I’ve decided I need more customizability than what wordpress.com or blogspot.com or any other blogging site can offer.  I’ll be porting over stuff there soon, but for now, enjoy Tyndale University College’s 2nd Annual Summer Rock Paper Scissors Tournament as http://www.willkinchlea.com.

WK

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This entry was written by Will, posted on June 12, 2008 at 7:32 am, filed under Blog, Internet, Life and tagged , , , . Leave a comment or view the discussion at the permalink.

Web 2.0 – World Community

(Originally published in the Canon25, Spring 2007) 

 

I love the internet.  I remember the first time I was on the internet.  I was in the fifth grade and I was waiting in my mother’s office at the local public library and she quickly showed me how to search on Yahoo (www.yahoo.com).  I spent the next 2 hours looking up articles and homepages on Super Mario Bros. and Reboot, an old cartoon.  After that, I fell in love with what is now known as Web 1.0.

Didn’t know that the world-wide web is known as Web 1.0?  Well, technically, it’s not, but its important to know that the web that I surfed on when I was ten is no longer the same organism that once was.  Originally, through hypertext documents [ ".html"s, as it were],  the content and the form of the internet was the same.  Everything that you saw on the screen was part of one document, wholly separate from everything else and easily separated from other, similar documents.   Essentially, what you saw in the ‘code’ of the page is what you saw in your web browser.  You saw what I wanted you to see through the content I’ve inputed into the form.

This, however, has changed as Web 2.0 emerges on the horizon.  With an allusion to software upgrades, people are beginning to see the Web as something new; something that has, in a sense, evolved.  Over the last ten years, developers and coders have been creating new ways to view hypertext.  In fact, according to the World-Wide Web Consortium, we are now using Hypertext 4.0 – but that’s an aside; more importantly we are beginning to see the fruits of ten years’ labour in Web 2.0.

The crux of Web 2.0 is that content has now been separated from form.  What does this mean?  It means that content no longer has to be written into the code of the page.  What you see in the code is no longer what you have to see on the screen.  Hypertext has now become only the framework of what the coder wishes, they no longer have to be the author.  Authorship has been moved from coder to viewer.  The viewers and users of the sites are now the creators of content.

This is nothing particularly new for most people our age – we’ve been part of Web 2.0 since its inception and are the strongest contributors.  For examples of Web 2.0, think of social networks like Facebook (www.facebook.com), artistic content contributor sites like DeviantArt (www.deviantart.com) or even simply blogs like those found on Google’s own Blogger (www.blogger.com).  But how does this change interaction with others?

Message boards and wholly web-created communities are no longer just for geeks.  It is quite possible to be a ‘real person’ in the ‘real-world’ and create online friendships. I’ve been blessed with such a community, The Block (www.theblock.us).  Originally, the members of the block met on the message board of L.A. Symphony and after being repeatedly asked to talk more about the group (whose musical prowess seemed to be declining at an alarming rate) we set off on our own and created our own space.   After some four or five shifts in site and management, we now stand as a independent community whose members have only The Block as their connection.  

The Block is community whose individuals comprise most walks of life [though they generally are Gen X'ers or Echo generation in age] and seek to support one another as best they can.  While not explicitly Christian in nature,  The vision of The Block is to be an online community, set to encourage one another in their daily lives and give them an open and safe forum with which to discuss pretty much whatever they want.  I encourage you to come and join us sometime.  

The reason I bring this up is because I have had many important and lasting relationships stem from my time at The Block.  Flesh-and-Blood communities are no longer the only way to be supported in our shrinking world of rising communication.  While some Blockheads [to coin a term] have met at least some others through an annual meeting, many remain only a screen name and a picture.  This hasn’t stopped us from helping each other through relationship issues, financial problems, spiritual problems, easing others through the maturation process – basically everything a ‘brick-and mortar’ community would do for each other.  

Essentially, what I’m getting at is that with the advent of user-driven content inherent in Web 2.0, community and communication are being redefined.  The internet is moving beyond its information-driven origins – it’s becoming the world’s community– and I invite you to join. – WK

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This entry was written by Will, posted on March 31, 2008 at 5:03 am, filed under Essays, Internet and tagged , , , . Leave a comment or view the discussion at the permalink.


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