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The BSM Ecosystem

3 Posts tagged with the bmcdn tag

- By Fred Johannessen, Technology Alliance Program and Market Zone

 

The real revolution with interactive communities is just starting with technologies such as Second Life.

 

From wiktionary:

 

community (plural communities)

 

1. Group of people sharing a common understanding who reveal themselves by using the same language, manners, tradition and law. (see civilization).
2. Commune or residential/religious collective.
3. The condition of having certain attitudes and interests in common.
4. (Ecology) A group of interdependent organisms inhabiting the same region and interacting with each other.

 

I can’t help but think that we’re in a transition phase with the whole Web 2.0 concept (it’s really concepts). And of course, we’re always in transition phases regardless of whether your talking about technology, society, or just life. So, what I’m saying is we may be reaching an inflection point in the evolution of social networking. We have many very interesting social networking enablers with blogs, wikis, podcasts, rss, etc. These are effectively evolutionary technologies from their roots in Usenet and ftp which I was using back in the ‘80s. All these technologies provide a shade of the definition of community but they do so from mostly an information exchange perspective. And now we have consolidators such as Jive that join many of the technologies together in one location to give an even greater sense of community by giving access to much of the information in one locale such as BMCDN.

 

This is why I think we’re reaching an inflection point:   basically, even with a consolidator, we’re still doing store and forward. We have elements of chat/interactivity, but we’re still operating at a fairly superficial level. Based on the definition above, we share language and we have agreed upon manners, we also have media for sharing common interests. But look at the deeper aspects: 1) People who reveal themselves by using… tradition; residential/religious collective; interdependent…interacting.

 

We’ve taken a very data centric approach to the online community concept, so we’re pretty efficient with data storage, search and retrieval, but we haven’t quite mastered the interaction method. A community should be a place you spend some significant time: you exchange ideas, you give, you take, you argue, you learn, you grow, you help others. And you have varying relationships: some cursory, some technical, some friendly, some public, some private. And these characteristics change dynamically.

 

All a twitter… I had been skeptical about twitter until I read a Wired article a couple of months ago titled, “Clive Thompson on How Twitter Creates a Social Sixth Sense”. The article is about how the aggregate effect of getting “pings” of everyday life from people you are interested in creates a sense of awareness of those people that goes beyond the superficiality of the information they’ve provided. Twitter and other constant-contact media create social proprioception. He says, “They give a group of people a sense of itself, making possible weird, fascinating feats of coordination.” In other words, it gives people a sense of community. He goes on to say, “This awareness is crucial when colleagues are spread around the office, the country, or the world. Twitter substitutes for the glances and conversations we had before we became a nation of satellite employees… So why has Twitter been so misunderstood? Because it's experiential. Scrolling through random Twitter messages can't explain the appeal… but the real appeal of Twitter is…[that] it's practically collectivist — you're creating a shared understanding larger than yourself.”

 

Wither now? Look at the evolution of Second Life from an online gaming type of community to a medium for online classes, marketing, and (drum roll) collaboration! Combine the shared consciousness of Twitter with the 3-d type of community that Second Life provides and you start seeing the revolution of the virtual community. Now the interaction method becomes oriented to the actors (us) and we are able to create personae for ourselves that reflect the particular social interaction that we are engaging. Second Life enables you to create avatars for yourself (in fact you can buy them online if you don’t want to create one from scratch). What we still need to work out are the filter mechanisms for the interactions – I should be able to create outbound filters that indicate things like mood, desire to interact, and level of interaction that influence other’s ability to interact with me. It’s kind of like having spheres of influence that are set in two ways: 1) statically to reflect my core type, and 2) based on circumstance and level of relationship. However, once we start engaging in a revolutionary type of media such as SL, then the evolutionary processes will kick in to provide higher and higher levels of service and nuances of relationships. The type of complexity you need to have a real sense of community.

 

And then we need these identities to follow us whether we are on a laptop, phone, pda, or any other interactive device. Now the interaction method becomes human-centric so rather than exchanging data, we communicate in memes – ideas that evolve and become an artifact of the culture – a new, dynamic, and growing online culture – Web 3.0?

 

If you want a long term projection of where this can go, read “The Golden Age” trilogy by John C. Wright.

 

P.S. I referred to Weather Report last blog. Joe Zawinul, the founder along with Wayne Shorter, died last week after battling cancer. RIP.

 

 

The postings in this blog are my own and don't necessarily represent BMC's opinion or position.
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- By Fred Johannessen, Technology Alliance Program and Market Zone

 

The music ecosystem and commonality with the software industry.

 

I'm not really a Ray Bradbury fan, I got this title from a Weather Report album, which was no doubt inspired by the Walt Whitman poem. Weather Report was instrumental in the transition from traditional jazz to jazz fusion.  Joe Zawinul (keyboards) and Wayne Shorter (sax) were on a couple of Miles Davis' fusion albums and then broke away, forming the new group called Weather Report.

 

My favorite album of theirs is "Heavy Weather", which included one of the best bassists of all time, Jaco Pastorius (RIP). A real work of genius on that album is "The Juggler", which has my very favorite song ending - a single forlorn bass note giving an ironic twist to a complex song. Jaco later connected with Pat Metheny and you can still hear Jaco's influence in Metheny's later albums with Mark Egan on bass.

 

It's fascinating to trace these influences and their branches into other genres of music. At each juncture, a musician influenced another musician by participating in the creation of new music, but their influence continued well after they moved on.

 

Before open source, the ISV world was Borg-like, “resistance is futile. We had no choice but to absorb, regurgitate and attempt influence through traditional marketing, creating countless standards committees, and raiding each other's staff. Software is now growing up. Adding open source to the ecosystem creates the opportunity for collaboration between developers regardless of corporate affiliation. The resulting innovations can then be incorporated and used in powerful, sometimes unanticipated ways. Each participant in the process is affected.

 

I believe it is mandatory that anyone who calls themselves a "professional" developer must be able to show examples of open source contributions - and the companies they work for should encourage this participation. These contributions become the incubator of innovations that will later find their ways into commercial applications that will help change the world.

 

I’m proud to say that BMC’s permissive licensing is a potent enabler of rapid development and innovation in the systems management space. Permissive licensing incents developers to build on the baseline code provided and build commercial innovation. And I believe that as such developments become visible to the community there will be natural pressure to encourage contributions back to the community. A good name is still important in the industry. In addition to this, market demand has created the opportunity for enthusiastic partnerships in the new ecosystem to help fill existing and future software needs. This can be in the area of platforms, specialized applications, and variations of current applications. Just look at all the custom applications developers have done on the Remedy Action Request System. It's important to have the infrastructure for the market to express their needs and to have those needs met with either commercial or open source software - and they are not mutually exclusive.

 

We have all this with developer.bmc.com. Take a look.  Participate.   Give feedback. Check out the new podcast with whurley and me talking more about BMC Developer Network.

 

 

The postings in this blog are my own and don't necessarily represent BMC's opinion or position.
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Welcome to the Show!

Posted by Alena Hitzemann Jul 27, 2007

- By Fred Johannessen, Technology Alliance Program and Market Zone

 

 

Announcing BMC Developer Network (BMCDN) and Open Source offerings.


Welcome back my friends to the show that never ends


We're so glad you could attend


Come inside! Come inside!


~From Karn Evil 9: First Impression on Emerson, Lake, & Palmer's Brain Salad Surgery Album

 

 

 

ELP is one of the original progressive rock bands with the original likely being King Crimson (Greg Lake's original band). Prog music is fun to trace because you can see influences inside and outside the genre even into pop music. The music industry is an interesting ecosystem that is always riding an edge between IP protection and creative license. When does a technique or a riff or lyric move from protected property to open source? And as most would agree, the music industry does not deal well with open source. :-) However, there are many examples of modern music openly using classical riffs from greats like Beethoven and Bach - so it does exist. And so it goes with the software industry - there are fits and starts with ISV's incorporating, developing, and contributing to open source but it is happening and becoming a larger and larger factor in ISV strategies. And thus it goes with BMC - we actually have, since Y2K, incorporated, developed, and made open source contributions - but generally not in a strategic context. Now we are.

 

In my last blog entry, I mentioned; "Such a strategy requires an infrastructure that narrows the distance between the platform provider and the developer community". This was an allusion to our BMC Developer Network which whurley announced at OSCON this week.

 

We've actually been semi-live with BMCDN for a couple of months, migrating the Remedy groups and also creating new forums aligned with our BSM strategy. We are also in the process of migrating the DevCon (a.k.a.: PATROL Developer Connection) to BMCDN. But, as you can tell, our release Open Source adapters at BMC is significant and, I believe, helps complete our ecosystem approach.

 

BMCDN is by no means perfect nor complete. We had a choice to attempt sterile perfection or to get the word out and truly commit to having the developer community drive the structure and content of the BMCDN. We chose the latter. So we have an initial structure and we have some content, but I'm hopeful that a year from now we'll have something completely different that has been tailored and built in conjunction with our development community.

 

I would like to acknowledge the hard work over the past year by people on my team including Ken Beck, David Fiel, Joe Vodvarka, Scott Powell, and Luis Laborda in getting this BMCDN ready. This not only included development of the infrastructure, but also included getting the open source adapters built, licensing schemes debated and agreed, and coordination with R&D and Marketing.

 

I'm excited about what we have and more excited about where our development community will take it. Come and join the show -- the BMC Developer Network developer.bmc.com!

 

 

The postings in this blog are my own and don't necessarily represent BMC's opinion or position.
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