It's quite interesting that this topic has surfaced. The applications of such software might be of great interest in many areas. Some of those applications seem so powerful that it seems likely that this might be already well developed. The application mentioned in the opening of this thread concerns "late 17th and early 18th century letters of the "republic of letters" with the aim to reconstruct the flow of ideas and the personal networks that generated this flow" and the "tools we would later on use to analyze our data." Reference was made to analysis of wikis that "gave network structures of the interrelated pages and category trees" while recognizing the need to go much further, in order to "get definite pictures of the development of 17th century intellectual networks (how do they spread on the European map? Who is communicating with whom? Who is playing what role in the process?), and of the flow of topics within these networks."
Consider now a different study object: foreign diplomatic relations, drug trafficking (no pun intended), global warfare development, political intrigue or, at a smaller scale, organizational intrigue. From an historic point of view the results might provide great depth of knowledge. In real time, as the events unfold, this could be a powerful tool to understand how things evolve in a certain direction. The Wikimedia projects power structure is definitely a serious candidate for such analysis. Sincerely, Virgilio A. P. Machado (Vapmachado) _______________________________________________ foundation-l mailing list [email protected] Unsubscribe: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/foundation-l
