Dear Anthony,

I agree with you but now I gotta take a break and think...

See you tomorrow.

Regards,

Flint

On Mon, 20 Oct 2008, Anthony Carrico wrote:

Date: Mon, 20 Oct 2008 13:05:48 -0400
From: Anthony Carrico <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: Vermont Area Group of Unix Enthusiasts <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Astroturf

Sorry for spamming the list with Clay Shirky ideas lately, but here we
are bumping up against another one.

Traditional organizations start out when an activity requires
coordination to be accomplished. The catch is that the organization's
nominal primary activity (fostering digital business in Vermont, etc.)
is always subject to the continuing existence of the organization
(writing grants, etc.), and therefore is actually secondary. As a member
traditional organizations I'm not bashing, just pointing out a 'fact'.

But it isn't a fact. Our technology and culture have progressed. We are
not fully conscious of the new reality, and therefore we don't take full
advantage of it. It is now possible to accomplish that which would have
historically required an organization without one. The application of
this new fact to cases which could never possibly support or justify
traditional organization yields a newly possible class of human
endeavor, and that is exciting. There are already plenty of examples.

--
Anthony Carrico



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Paul Flint
Barre Open Systems Institute
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