EVERYBODY,
This material is way too good to be packed down into the midden of old email. SO! Once again, I am going to ask this group a question I have asked before: how can we develop conventions (or write a software program) that will turn email correspondence into readable text. The three main problems are (1) headers (2) redundancy and (3) larding (which Steve Does here). Larding is the practice of distributing ones response in the text. I suspect some simple conventions and a word macro would do the trick, but believe me, if you try to rescue one of these interchanges, it is VERY hard work. Nick -----Original Message----- From: Friam [mailto:[hidden email]] On Behalf Of Steve Smith Sent: Saturday, January 19, 2013 12:54 AM To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group Subject: [FRIAM] Cliques, public, private. Glen wrote (in response to my recent massive missive) - > I will briefly match your story with one of my own, then jump to a > conclusion. I used to do more tunneling than I do now. All growing > up I maintained (almost disjoint) sets of acquaintances. In high > school they had names: heads, jocks, brains, etc. Somehow, I managed > to float easily between them, controlling information flow so that any > antipathy one group had for another didn't bleed into an antipathy > toward me personally. In elementary school and college, there were > fewer names but sharper incisions. In elementary school, they were very temporary. > In college, they were very long-lasting. E.g. if you "collapsed" into > a Republican or perhaps a fan of Ayn Rand, you stayed there until long > after college had ended. I parallel your experience here. I grew up isolated from people in general and peers in particular. I had one sister 2 years older, my parents with a father who worked long hours. We mostly lived further from other people than I could walk easily alone. When I arrived at public school (a 2 mile walk, uphill each way, often in the snow) at age 6 I had very limited social experience with anyone much less children my age. I became very good, very quickly at integrating with any group. There weren't many, it was a small school in a small town. But I was so curious about other people and the dynamics of 3 or 5 or 9 boys running like a pack of wolves in the playground that I had to join in. I did not distinguish gender and was happy to sit and make mudpies with the girls, and many of them were as at home "roping" my heels as I ran past (yes, the school toys included lariats as well as kickballs) as the boys. By high school I was in a large town, small city where I could know all of my classmates (eventually a graduating class of 300) but not well like I did with a class of roughly 20. I knew how to kick shit with the stompers, I was clever enough to hang with the honor society kids, I was "hip" enough to hang with the drama kids, or the dopers if I wanted. I was not a team-sport kindof guy but was physical enough to hang with the jocks. But I was never really "in". I was invited in. But being fully "in" meant excluding members who were not "in". So the Stompers had to pick fights with the Jocks and the Stoners and tease the Drama and Band and Honor Roll kids. Similarly the Jocks and Stoners would pick on the "good kids" and pick fights with the other "bad kids". When I would stand up for the good kid they were picking on or refuse to join the rising rumble amongst bad kids on any side, I was marked... I must be "one of them". It never really caused me much trouble except that it was clear that I wasn't one of them and would never be even though I shared many of their interests and attitudes. I was as tough as most of the jocks or cowboys and the Stoners could be pretty mean but well, they were always stoned, so... whatever... but I was also a good student and *liked* most of the band/drama/smart kids even though they could be tweaks. But I also *liked* and identified with the cowboys (grew up pretty much as one), and the jocks (liked being athletic) and even the stoners (had my own outlaw side). So what was all the clicquing and intolerance about? Really? And why was I one of the few who could cut across those picket lines? And one of the few who didn't want to be a member of any one enough to reject the others? Later it was politics... I knew I didn't want to hand my body and soul to the US military under the circumstances of the Vietnam War... I wasn't sure it was a bogus war as many of my peers seemed to be, but I wasn't sure it was righteous as the remaining peers seemed to be. My leftie friends were sure I was a rightie and my rightie friends were sure I was a leftie and since I'd read too much Ayn Rand and Bob Heinlein before I had matured, I should have been a Libertarian but damned if they didn't all seem like arrogant, selfish pricks to me. This holds with me to today. I voted for Obama twice for reasons which probably don't fit those of anyone else who voted for him (hyperbole) and I would have voted for McCain when he was going up against Bush but not after he picked up Palin... I am a big Gary Johnson fan on many topics, but couldn't stand to throw my vote this time just to make a point. As for public/private, I didn't hide my affinity with these groups in high school... but they played "don't ask, don't tell" right up until I had to confront someone(s) about their exclusive (and abusive) behaviour of my friends who might not be "inside". I wasn't afraid the jocks would find out I got good grades or that the stoners would find out that I rode horses, or that the goodie two-shoes would realize that I was willing to break school rules or even real laws if it suited me enough. But I also had and required a private life. I spent hours of my time alone, enjoying the privacy of my own thoughts and actions. If anyone had insisted on taking that kind of privacy from me, I would have been furious. My parents, my teachers, my bosses, my friends all managed not to conspire to invade my private spaces, private times. Yet I had acquaintances who endured close supervision to the point of parents or teachers or bosses practically expecting to be able to read their minds. I watched people trade their privacy of thought and action for acceptance and approval. > I maintained my cross-group faculties until long after college. I > think it's what allowed me to successfully transition to the SFI from > Lockheed Martin. It served me well at LANL, even after it became somewhat of a hellhole (apologies to Marcus and others still there, I'm not saying it is that for you, just that it became that for me after 20 something years). > Nowadays, however, I have > grown impatient with entertaining others' stories and ideas. Then I am honored that you have entertained mine so far with some superficial level of patience <grin>. > When/if I > deign to argue with someone, my rhetoric is (seemingly) full of non > sequiturs because I want to skip to the end ... and having made a > lifetime out of arguing, I believe myself to be capable of predicting > where an argument will end up. You don't hold a candle to my wife who is twice as smart as I ever will be, but also not particularly linear. She doesn't just skip steps she makes 270 degree turns while I'm not looking without deigning to bring me up to speed. I take a lot of beatings when I argue with her, but I think I'm a better listener and thinker for it. > That impatience has seriously damaged some of the relationships > I've had with people who _thought_ they liked me. >8^) But, in the > end, I remember the quote from FDR (I think): "I ask you to judge me > by he enemies I have made." Well, it is probably auspicious that I started out thinking I *didn't* like you. I didn't like Doug when I met him the first time... but "curmudgeon" grows on me I guess. > Anyway, because I am a professional simulant Wow, that sounds like a line right out of Bladerunner... did you say Simulant or Replicant? > , I still have to maintain > an ability to tunnel in and out of gravity wells. When I engage a new > client and go through the requirements extraction process, my old > facility with perspective hopping revives and I end up having fun. Yup, I know the game, and play it well (enough). > Conclusion of this silly missive: I'd like to be able to run some > experiments like the following. Take all the guns from all the gun > advocates and hand them to the gun controlists. Force them to use and > abuse the guns for a significant amount of time. I was thinking impregnating every man who was anti-choice and forcing them to birth and raise the babies. It might not change their mind about abortion (I actually hope it wouldn't) but it might make them a lot more sympathetic and nurturing toward the women who *do* choose abortion. And it would also keep them off the streets in the meantime. > Then compare surveys > taken before and after the experiment. A similar experiment with any > given tool would be interesting. You'll have to pry my cordless drill and oscilliscope from my cold, dead fingers! > I know I'd like a few months to play with our army of drones in > foreign countries, for example. And I'd like to watch a few third world countries play with our army of drones in our country for a few months. Well, not really. I suppose I'd rather see what a few dramatic performance and guerilla artists did with them instead. -Steve ============================================================ FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College to unsubscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com ============================================================ FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College to unsubscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com |
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I doubt if it could be automated without one of
1 - Serious obeying of an agreed upon structure of the emails
2 - Serious machine learning algorithms Instead, there are lots of tools that make it easier for you to do it by hand. An example is the class of "productivity tools" called outliners. Here's a discussion of a set of them.
Don't worry about their being mac oriented, there are web versions and versions for every computer.
Another approach would be for us all to stop using mail and instead use something that lends itself to different "views" .. like outliners do. Using social media like Google+ etc help because they are designed to be "mashed up".
Tom may have a handle of several such tools.
-- Owen
On Sat, Jan 19, 2013 at 10:35 AM, Nicholas Thompson <[hidden email]> wrote: EVERYBODY, ============================================================ FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College to unsubscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com |
Or pay an editor to do it. Is the dollar value of Nick's desire to see this properly recorded and archived greater or less than an editor's fee?
Let's watch the free market in action.
—R On Sat, Jan 19, 2013 at 10:46 AM, Owen Densmore <[hidden email]> wrote: I doubt if it could be automated without one of ============================================================ FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College to unsubscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com |
Guarantee that it would cost less to have an editor do it than it would take in developers time to implement a software system to do even part of it. There are no existing language processing systems that could do it all. And Nick, I can hear you thinking, "Why can't you just..." Probably don't want to go there until after you've designed, implemented, tested, put into production, and maintained your first software system.
--Doug On Sat, Jan 19, 2013 at 11:02 AM, Robert Holmes <[hidden email]> wrote:
Doug Roberts [hidden email] [hidden email] ============================================================ FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College to unsubscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com |
In reply to this post by Nick Thompson
On 1/19/13 10:35 AM, Nicholas Thompson wrote:
> This material is way too good to be packed down into the midden of old email. I know someone who is a good programmer. He's generally better than the people around him and among other things he has been accused of being purposely uncommunicative. He's smart. He has said things like "If you want to know what's going on, read the commit log and read the source code diffs." Other people felt that he should write high level documents, give talks, and so on. He felt it was not his problem if people were not willing or were not able to bring themselves up to speed. To him, they just would not engage. He was interested in the problem and not in educating people. He had no problem educating himself. There's a similar situation here. A goal a person can have from a conversation is to extract some information from another, as if acquiring an asset. Another goal a person can have is to just have a conversation or argument for its own sake. A slightly motivated person can handle some headers. Marcus ============================================================ FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College to unsubscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com |
In reply to this post by Nick Thompson
Nick/All -
I'm happy with some conventions. As for "larding" (inlining text point by point), I use it because it works for me, both as a writer and a reader, but I know it carries hazards as well, especially when done sloppily (which I may well be guilty of). I agree with Owen that this is a harder problem than it might seem and the more effective answers involve using a different medium which effectively establishes and enforces some conventions. My most useful contribution to keeping things sane has been that despite the length and complexity of my commentary here, I often actually delete and/or rewrite large chunks seeking brevity and precision. My next step is to let one of my pithier personalities take over when I'm at the keyboard, at the risk of sounding sarcastic and cynical. - Steve > EVERYBODY, > > This material is way too good to be packed down into the midden of old > email. SO! Once again, I am going to ask this group a question I have asked > before: how can we develop conventions (or write a software program) that > will turn email correspondence into readable text. The three main problems > are (1) headers (2) redundancy and (3) larding (which Steve Does here). > Larding is the practice of distributing ones response in the text. > > I suspect some simple conventions and a word macro would do the trick, but > believe me, if you try to rescue one of these interchanges, it is VERY hard > work. > > Nick > > -----Original Message----- > From: Friam [mailto:[hidden email]] On Behalf Of Steve Smith > Sent: Saturday, January 19, 2013 12:54 AM > To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group > Subject: [FRIAM] Cliques, public, private. > > Glen wrote (in response to my recent massive missive) - >> I will briefly match your story with one of my own, then jump to a >> conclusion. I used to do more tunneling than I do now. All growing >> up I maintained (almost disjoint) sets of acquaintances. In high >> school they had names: heads, jocks, brains, etc. Somehow, I managed >> to float easily between them, controlling information flow so that any >> antipathy one group had for another didn't bleed into an antipathy >> toward me personally. In elementary school and college, there were >> fewer names but sharper incisions. In elementary school, they were very > temporary. >> In college, they were very long-lasting. E.g. if you "collapsed" into >> a Republican or perhaps a fan of Ayn Rand, you stayed there until long >> after college had ended. > I parallel your experience here. I grew up isolated from people in general > and peers in particular. I had one sister 2 years older, my parents with a > father who worked long hours. We mostly lived further > from other people than I could walk easily alone. When I arrived at > public school (a 2 mile walk, uphill each way, often in the snow) at age > 6 I had very limited social experience with anyone much less children my > age. I became very good, very quickly at integrating with any group. > There weren't many, it was a small school in a small town. But I was so > curious about other people and the dynamics of 3 or 5 or 9 boys running like > a pack of wolves in the playground that I had to join in. I did not > distinguish gender and was happy to sit and make mudpies with the girls, and > many of them were as at home "roping" my heels as I ran past (yes, the > school toys included lariats as well as kickballs) as the boys. > > By high school I was in a large town, small city where I could know all of > my classmates (eventually a graduating class of 300) but not well > like I did with a class of roughly 20. I knew how to kick shit with > the stompers, I was clever enough to hang with the honor society kids, I was > "hip" enough to hang with the drama kids, or the dopers if I wanted. I was > not a team-sport kindof guy but was physical enough to > hang with the jocks. But I was never really "in". I was invited in. > But being fully "in" meant excluding members who were not "in". So the > Stompers had to pick fights with the Jocks and the Stoners and tease the > Drama and Band and Honor Roll kids. Similarly the Jocks and Stoners would > pick on the "good kids" and pick fights with the other "bad kids". When I > would stand up for the good kid they were picking on or refuse to join the > rising rumble amongst bad kids on any side, I was > marked... I must be "one of them". It never really caused me much > trouble except that it was clear that I wasn't one of them and would > never be even though I shared many of their interests and attitudes. I > was as tough as most of the jocks or cowboys and the Stoners could be pretty > mean but well, they were always stoned, so... whatever... but I was also a > good student and *liked* most of the band/drama/smart kids > even though they could be tweaks. But I also *liked* and identified > with the cowboys (grew up pretty much as one), and the jocks (liked being > athletic) and even the stoners (had my own outlaw side). So what was all > the clicquing and intolerance about? Really? And why was I one > of the few who could cut across those picket lines? And one of the few > who didn't want to be a member of any one enough to reject the others? > > Later it was politics... I knew I didn't want to hand my body and soul to > the US military under the circumstances of the Vietnam War... I wasn't sure > it was a bogus war as many of my peers seemed to be, but I > wasn't sure it was righteous as the remaining peers seemed to be. My > leftie friends were sure I was a rightie and my rightie friends were sure I > was a leftie and since I'd read too much Ayn Rand and Bob Heinlein before I > had matured, I should have been a Libertarian but damned if they didn't all > seem like arrogant, selfish pricks to me. > This holds with me to today. I voted for Obama twice for reasons which > probably don't fit those of anyone else who voted for him (hyperbole) and I > would have voted for McCain when he was going up against Bush but not after > he picked up Palin... I am a big Gary Johnson fan on many topics, but > couldn't stand to throw my vote this time just to make a point. > > As for public/private, I didn't hide my affinity with these groups in high > school... but they played "don't ask, don't tell" right up until I had to > confront someone(s) about their exclusive (and abusive) behaviour > of my friends who might not be "inside". I wasn't afraid the jocks > would find out I got good grades or that the stoners would find out that I > rode horses, or that the goodie two-shoes would realize that I was willing > to break school rules or even real laws if it suited me > enough. But I also had and required a private life. I spent hours of > my time alone, enjoying the privacy of my own thoughts and actions. If > anyone had insisted on taking that kind of privacy from me, I would have > been furious. My parents, my teachers, my bosses, my friends all > managed not to conspire to invade my private spaces, private times. > Yet I had acquaintances who endured close supervision to the point of > parents or teachers or bosses practically expecting to be able to read > their minds. I watched people trade their privacy of thought and > action for acceptance and approval. > >> I maintained my cross-group faculties until long after college. I >> think it's what allowed me to successfully transition to the SFI from >> Lockheed Martin. > It served me well at LANL, even after it became somewhat of a hellhole > (apologies to Marcus and others still there, I'm not saying it is that for > you, just that it became that for me after 20 something years). >> Nowadays, however, I have >> grown impatient with entertaining others' stories and ideas. > Then I am honored that you have entertained mine so far with some > superficial level of patience <grin>. >> When/if I >> deign to argue with someone, my rhetoric is (seemingly) full of non >> sequiturs because I want to skip to the end ... and having made a >> lifetime out of arguing, I believe myself to be capable of predicting >> where an argument will end up. > You don't hold a candle to my wife who is twice as smart as I ever will be, > but also not particularly linear. She doesn't just skip steps she makes 270 > degree turns while I'm not looking without deigning to bring me up to speed. > I take a lot of beatings when I argue with her, but I think I'm a better > listener and thinker for it. >> That impatience has seriously damaged some of the relationships >> I've had with people who _thought_ they liked me. >8^) But, in the >> end, I remember the quote from FDR (I think): "I ask you to judge me >> by he enemies I have made." > Well, it is probably auspicious that I started out thinking I *didn't* > like you. I didn't like Doug when I met him the first time... but > "curmudgeon" grows on me I guess. >> Anyway, because I am a professional simulant > Wow, that sounds like a line right out of Bladerunner... did you say > Simulant or Replicant? >> , I still have to maintain >> an ability to tunnel in and out of gravity wells. When I engage a new >> client and go through the requirements extraction process, my old >> facility with perspective hopping revives and I end up having fun. > Yup, I know the game, and play it well (enough). >> Conclusion of this silly missive: I'd like to be able to run some >> experiments like the following. Take all the guns from all the gun >> advocates and hand them to the gun controlists. Force them to use and >> abuse the guns for a significant amount of time. > I was thinking impregnating every man who was anti-choice and forcing > them to birth and raise the babies. It might not change their mind > about abortion (I actually hope it wouldn't) but it might make them a lot > more sympathetic and nurturing toward the women who *do* choose abortion. > And it would also keep them off the streets in the meantime. >> Then compare surveys >> taken before and after the experiment. A similar experiment with any >> given tool would be interesting. > You'll have to pry my cordless drill and oscilliscope from my cold, dead > fingers! > >> I know I'd like a few months to play with our army of drones in >> foreign countries, for example. > And I'd like to watch a few third world countries play with our army of > drones in our country for a few months. Well, not really. I suppose I'd > rather see what a few dramatic performance and guerilla artists did with > them instead. > > -Steve > > ============================================================ > FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv > Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College to unsubscribe > http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com > > > ============================================================ > FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv > Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College > to unsubscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com ============================================================ FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College to unsubscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com |
In reply to this post by Robert Holmes-3
My time is worth a great deal less than an editor’s. [sigh] One of the hardest things about being a former academic is the discovery that nobody needs what you do. N From: Friam [mailto:[hidden email]] On Behalf Of Robert Holmes Or pay an editor to do it. Is the dollar value of Nick's desire to see this properly recorded and archived greater or less than an editor's fee? Let's watch the free market in action. —R On Sat, Jan 19, 2013 at 10:46 AM, Owen Densmore <[hidden email]> wrote: I doubt if it could be automated without one of 1 - Serious obeying of an agreed upon structure of the emails 2 - Serious machine learning algorithms Instead, there are lots of tools that make it easier for you to do it by hand. An example is the class of "productivity tools" called outliners. Here's a discussion of a set of them. Don't worry about their being mac oriented, there are web versions and versions for every computer. Another approach would be for us all to stop using mail and instead use something that lends itself to different "views" .. like outliners do. Using social media like Google+ etc help because they are designed to be "mashed up". Tom may have a handle of several such tools. -- Owen On Sat, Jan 19, 2013 at 10:35 AM, Nicholas Thompson <[hidden email]> wrote: EVERYBODY,
============================================================ FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College to unsubscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com |
In reply to this post by Steve Smith
All -
In defense of Nick, I appreciate how he could come to "why cant we just...". As a systems developer with a little experience around natural language processing, I agree with Doug and Owen that it is a naive question with only extremely complex answers. I understand why Nick asks these questions and value the naivete that he is willing to expose to us. I also appreciate Marcus' point. I've been on both ends of the system development question around documentation and helping others understand what I've done or trying to understand what others have done. I'm often eclipsed by highly efficient and capable (usually) young programmers who are (naturally) impatient with the rest of us for asking them to explain what the've done. I'm also often frustrated by others who want me to walk them through every detail of something that is "obvious" to me, despite realizing it wasn't obvious to me until I'd gone through the steps of creating it. Their ignorance is often no greater than mine was when I started, and asking them to essentially re-develop the same algorithm or code is possibly the only way they will come to my level of understanding. I can guide them through the shortcuts, but ultimately there is hard work for them to do. As I remember it, Nick tried to coin a Wiki based conversational forum I think he called "Noodles" a number of years ago. I don't remember the details, I do remember being compelled by his conception of it. I do remember trying to participate with him (and maybe a couple of others?) in using it, following the conventions. I guess I could probably dig it out of the archives, thanks to Owen, et al. who have made sure we even *have* archives. Lacking brevity as usual, - Steve ============================================================ FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College to unsubscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com |
In reply to this post by Marcus G. Daniels
Marcus,
As you may remember, I have conducted a few informal seminars out here in which email and forum conversations were crucial and voluminous. Two of those conversations have metamorphosed into publications. So I think I have passed the criterion of being at least "slightly motivated." Early in the days of the Santa Fe Complex I tried to move email into a wiki format in order to get the group writing up its ideas about Complexity. This generated some very interesting material, but never crossed the bridge into publication. Chatting amongst ourselves is fine, and I enjoy it, but I like to see good ideas developed, organized, and published. Let me just say that moving email into readable text is harder than it seems. Nick -----Original Message----- From: Friam [mailto:[hidden email]] On Behalf Of Marcus G. Daniels Sent: Saturday, January 19, 2013 11:40 AM To: [hidden email] Subject: Re: [FRIAM] WAS:: Cliques, public, private. IS: Preserving email correspondence On 1/19/13 10:35 AM, Nicholas Thompson wrote: > This material is way too good to be packed down into the midden of old email. I know someone who is a good programmer. He's generally better than the people around him and among other things he has been accused of being purposely uncommunicative. He's smart. He has said things like "If you want to know what's going on, read the commit log and read the source code diffs." Other people felt that he should write high level documents, give talks, and so on. He felt it was not his problem if people were not willing or were not able to bring themselves up to speed. To him, they just would not engage. He was interested in the problem and not in educating people. He had no problem educating himself. There's a similar situation here. A goal a person can have from a conversation is to extract some information from another, as if acquiring an asset. Another goal a person can have is to just have a conversation or argument for its own sake. A slightly motivated person can handle some headers. Marcus ============================================================ FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College to unsubscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com ============================================================ FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College to unsubscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com |
In reply to this post by Douglas Roberts-2
Despite protestations of others, and being only a mediocre programmer myself... I don't imagine it would be too hard to write something that would make a "master discussion" document, combining all of the comments. The big problem is that the finished document wouldn't be very useful in itself. Nothing about how an email conversation like this unfolds is designed for a simultaneous, straight read. Such a document might, however, save someone a lot of time if they wanted it as a first step for hand editing the conversation into something more useful. There is a lot of plagiarism detection software out there which is good at finding text matches between different documents. The main problem of integrating the threads can't be too much more difficult, if one just does it step-by-step (like an iterative regression problem). The biggest dilemma I could see is in representing the asynchronous nature of the communication, which would require representing the order in which comments appeared.... and just putting a date and time before each comment will not capture that well for a reader. Eric P.S. I am envisioning something that turns a string of email texts into something like a GooglePlus document (blessed be its soul), or a string of comments on a blog. There would of course be some weird errors when people use very atypical means of responding to an email... but it shouldn't be too hard to get most of the thread into readable form. For the very atypical replies, you just do something with them, and let the editor figure it out later. -------- Eric Charles Assistant Professor of Psychology Penn State, Altoona From: "Douglas Roberts" <[hidden email]> To: "The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group" <[hidden email]> Sent: Saturday, January 19, 2013 1:10:15 PM Subject: Re: [FRIAM] WAS:: Cliques, public, private. IS: Preserving email correspondence Guarantee that it would cost less to have an editor do it than it would take in developers time to implement a software system to do even part of it. There are no existing language processing systems that could do it all. And Nick, I can hear you thinking, "Why can't you just..." Probably don't want to go there until after you've designed, implemented, tested, put into production, and maintained your first software system.
--Doug On Sat, Jan 19, 2013 at 11:02 AM, Robert Holmes <[hidden email]> wrote:
Doug Roberts [hidden email] [hidden email] ============================================================ FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College to unsubscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com ============================================================ FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College to unsubscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com |
P.S. I meant, "GoogleWave document (blessed be its soul)". -------- Eric Charles Assistant Professor of Psychology Penn State, Altoona From: "Eric Charles" <epc2@psu.edu> To: "The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group" <friam@redfish.com> Sent: Saturday, January 19, 2013 2:34:10 PM Subject: Re: [FRIAM] WAS:: Cliques, public, private. IS: Preserving email correspondence Despite protestations of others, and being only a mediocre programmer myself... I don't imagine it would be too hard to write something that would make a "master discussion" document, combining all of the comments. The big problem is that the finished document wouldn't be very useful in itself. Nothing about how an email conversation like this unfolds is designed for a simultaneous, straight read. Such a document might, however, save someone a lot of time if they wanted it as a first step for hand editing the conversation into something more useful. There is a lot of plagiarism detection software out there which is good at finding text matches between different documents. The main problem of integrating the threads can't be too much more difficult, if one just does it step-by-step (like an iterative regression problem). The biggest dilemma I could see is in representing the asynchronous nature of the communication, which would require representing the order in which comments appeared.... and just putting a date and time before each comment will not capture that well for a reader. Eric P.S. I am envisioning something that turns a string of email texts into something like a GooglePlus document (blessed be its soul), or a string of comments on a blog. There would of course be some weird errors when people use very atypical means of responding to an email... but it shouldn't be too hard to get most of the thread into readable form. For the very atypical replies, you just do something with them, and let the editor figure it out later. -------- Eric Charles Assistant Professor of Psychology Penn State, Altoona From: "Douglas Roberts" <doug@parrot-farm.net> To: "The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group" <friam@redfish.com> Sent: Saturday, January 19, 2013 1:10:15 PM Subject: Re: [FRIAM] WAS:: Cliques, public, private. IS: Preserving email correspondence Guarantee that it would cost less to have an editor do it than it would take in developers time to implement a software system to do even part of it. There are no existing language processing systems that could do it all. And Nick, I can hear you thinking, "Why can't you just..." Probably don't want to go there until after you've designed, implemented, tested, put into production, and maintained your first software system.
--Doug On Sat, Jan 19, 2013 at 11:02 AM, Robert Holmes <[hidden email]> wrote:
Doug Roberts [hidden email] [hidden email] ============================================================ FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College to unsubscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com ============================================================ FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College to unsubscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com ============================================================ FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College to unsubscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com |
In reply to this post by Marcus G. Daniels
I'm pretty solidly in the same came as Marcus' programmer acquaintance. The working philosophy in my case being, "Shit: if I can do it, how hard could it be? You must want someone to spoon feed you." I've got relatives who fall squarely into the polar opposite camp, that of studied naivete. They are so good at it, if fact, that it comes clearly across as studied stupidity. This approach didn't serve either of them very well throughout the course of their now, in both cases, nearly finished lifetimes.
To be fair to Nick, however, once you realize that he uses his big, bold naivete as the vehicle to get others to expound on why <whatever is the current topic of interest>, then it's all ok again.
--Doug On Sat, Jan 19, 2013 at 11:40 AM, Marcus G. Daniels <[hidden email]> wrote:
Doug Roberts [hidden email] [hidden email] ============================================================ FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College to unsubscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com |
Doug said:
> To be fair to Nick, however, once you realize that he uses his big, > bold naivete as the vehicle to get others to expound on why <whatever > is the current topic of interest>, then it's all ok again. I c(w)ouldn't have said it more succinctly myself! ============================================================ FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College to unsubscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com |
In reply to this post by Steve Smith
I don't think I ever said, "why cant we just...". Did I?
I had forgotten about "noodles". I can't even remember how it worked. Or where it is. N -----Original Message----- From: Friam [mailto:[hidden email]] On Behalf Of Steve Smith Sent: Saturday, January 19, 2013 12:23 PM To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group Subject: [FRIAM] Preserving email correspondence All - In defense of Nick, I appreciate how he could come to "why cant we just...". As a systems developer with a little experience around natural language processing, I agree with Doug and Owen that it is a naive question with only extremely complex answers. I understand why Nick asks these questions and value the naivete that he is willing to expose to us. I also appreciate Marcus' point. I've been on both ends of the system development question around documentation and helping others understand what I've done or trying to understand what others have done. I'm often eclipsed by highly efficient and capable (usually) young programmers who are (naturally) impatient with the rest of us for asking them to explain what the've done. I'm also often frustrated by others who want me to walk them through every detail of something that is "obvious" to me, despite realizing it wasn't obvious to me until I'd gone through the steps of creating it. Their ignorance is often no greater than mine was when I started, and asking them to essentially re-develop the same algorithm or code is possibly the only way they will come to my level of understanding. I can guide them through the shortcuts, but ultimately there is hard work for them to do. As I remember it, Nick tried to coin a Wiki based conversational forum I think he called "Noodles" a number of years ago. I don't remember the details, I do remember being compelled by his conception of it. I do remember trying to participate with him (and maybe a couple of others?) in using it, following the conventions. I guess I could probably dig it out of the archives, thanks to Owen, et al. who have made sure we even *have* archives. Lacking brevity as usual, - Steve ============================================================ FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College to unsubscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com ============================================================ FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College to unsubscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com |
In reply to this post by Nick Thompson
On 1/19/13 12:29 PM, Nicholas Thompson wrote:
> Two of > those conversations have metamorphosed into publications. So I think I have > passed the criterion of being at least "slightly motivated." Who is the audience for such a publication? I think there is no audience except the crowd that has already assembled. It's not a new widget that's been built, and it does not include a new fact or measurement about the world. It refined talk that doesn't talk back. Marcus ============================================================ FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College to unsubscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com |
Marcus, are you trying to suggest that we are not as fascinating as we think we are? On Sat, Jan 19, 2013 at 2:21 PM, Marcus G. Daniels <[hidden email]> wrote:
Doug Roberts [hidden email] [hidden email] ============================================================ FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College to unsubscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com |
No, he's saying we're exactly as fascinating as we are, and not a jot more. -- rec -- On Sat, Jan 19, 2013 at 2:24 PM, Douglas Roberts <[hidden email]> wrote:
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I see your point. On Sat, Jan 19, 2013 at 2:36 PM, Roger Critchlow <[hidden email]> wrote:
Doug Roberts [hidden email] [hidden email] ============================================================ FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College to unsubscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com |
In reply to this post by Nick Thompson
So, the thread exists in the archives at redfish, or where ever, and will continue to exist there for quite a while. The first tool is one which given a mailing list archive and a thread "subject" extracts the messages posted on the "subject".
The second tool would take the raw messages in the thread and arrange them as a tree of replies to the original posting. Both of these are part of every existing program that displays mailing list archives by threads.
The third tool is one that identifies quoted material and replaces it with a reference to the original text or to the previous level of quotation. This is where it gets hairy, but for any section that's marked as quoted there either will be a successful identification of the source or there won't.
At this point you can view the thread as a sequence or tree of original contributions with all quoted material represented as ellipses, which may render the original contributions unintelligible, but that's Nick's problem.
-- rec -- On Sat, Jan 19, 2013 at 1:14 PM, Nicholas Thompson <[hidden email]> wrote: I don't think I ever said, "why cant we just...". Did I? ============================================================ FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College to unsubscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com |
In reply to this post by Marcus G. Daniels
Marcus wrote Who is the audience for such a publication? I dunno. One's in a collection of essays on the writings of E. B. Holt and the other is in the journal, Behavior and Philosophy. I would guess that the readership is somewhat less than the circulation of the FRIAM list, but still, it’s DIFFERENT people. People care about stuff other than new widgets, and they are interested in other people’s thoughts on The Big Questions. Despite the fact that the US is kind of a cess pit of anti intellectualism, books do sell and people do read them. Nick -----Original Message----- On 1/19/13 12:29 PM, Nicholas Thompson wrote: > Two of > those conversations have metamorphosed into publications. So I think > I have passed the criterion of being at least "slightly motivated." Who is the audience for such a publication? I think there is no audience except the crowd that has already assembled. It's not a new widget that's been built, and it does not include a new fact or measurement about the world. It refined talk that doesn't talk back. Marcus ============================================================ FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College to unsubscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com ============================================================ FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College to unsubscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com |
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