I’m a Quaker from
South Jersey with a love of
outreach and ministry.
More bio and my contact information in my
about Martin
post. My other sites: QuakerQuaker.org, a
social networking site for Quaker bloggers and
MartinKelley.com, my
technology blog and freelance web services site.
Must read: G/localization: When Global Information and Local Interaction Collide
Read a fabulous article last night and this morning by Diana Boyd, a PhD student at UC-Berkeley and a researcher at Yahoo! Research Berkeley. She's writing about the interactions of culture and technology and it speaks a lot to some of the online and offline conversations I've been having lately.
Here's the link: G/localization: When Global Information and Local Interaction Collide. And here are some snippets to entice you to follow it:
On culture:
When mass media began, people assumed that we would all converge upon one global culture. While the media has had an effect, complete homogenization has not occurred. And it will not. While some values spread and are adopted en-masse, cultures form within the mass culture to differentiate smaller groups of people. Style-driven subcultures are the most visible form of this, but it occurs in companies and in other social gatherings.
Techies will like her take on "embedded observers":
While the creators have visions of what they think would be cool, they do not construct unmovable roadmaps well into the future. They are constantly reacting to what's going on, adding new features as needed. The code on these sites changes constantly, not just once a quarter. The designers try out features and watch how they get used. If no one is interested, that's fine - they'll just make something new. They are all deeply in touch with what people are actually doing, why and how it manifests itself on the site.
On online communities:
Digital community participants sometimes find that they "accidentally" meet someone. People collide on Flickr because they took similar photos; the find wonderful blogs through search. These ad-hoc interactions typically occur because people are producing material that can be stumbled across, either through search or browsing. They may not intend for the material to be consumed beyond the intended audience, but they also don't see a reason to prevent it. In essence, they are inviting moments of synchronicity. And synchronicity is energizing.

hey martin, I noticed the "Essential Bloggers" sidebar disappeared from QuakerQuaker (which I always want to pronounce as Quacker-Quacker :) Was that intentional? I only ask b/c I relied on it to surf. Anyway, I hope you're well this fine Saturday. - Rob
Hi Rob,
For awhile I was thinking QuackQuack and for a moment I considered Quakr.org... Taking the blogroll was intentional, another small step in the evolution from my sidebar to a collaborative site--why limit the blogroll to my personal list? I don't have an obvious replacement, alas, but I have a few ideas bubbling. In the meantime, the list is on my personal pages again (nonviolence.org/martink) and on my QQ contributor page: surf on dude.
I worked Saturday since I took Friday off to celebrate my birthday at "Longwood Gardens":http://www.longwoodgardens.org/, the "Kingdom of Vegetarians":http://www.vegdining.com/GetRest.cfm?rk=US-PA-PHIL-KINGD and a "surprise vegan cake":http://www.giannasgrille.com/ at my mom's (no URL). Pictures of the birthday (observed) up on the Flickr account in a moment...
Happy Birthday Martin!!