Ever
wonder why “Big Data” is referred to in terms of somebody’s solution, tool, application,
utility?
And
why that doesn’t offer much value to you?
You
know there must be some value...otherwise why all the noise?
The
best way to define Big Data is in terms of how you are currently
using it. You aren’t? Bugger!
In
that case, “Big Data,” like the blind guy said, “is like a
wall.”
Like
the blind guys and the
elephant, we
are going to have to construct a model that is useful and
entertaining for you. Here goes:
Web
1.0 was that gray background on your computer screen with black type,
“Hi, I’m computer programmer. Here is a picture of me and my
dog!” That was 1995. I was artsy, so I had flaming letters, proving
I had more research than taste.
Today,
Web 1.0 continues on corporate websites with tabs like, “Our Team,”
“Vision,” and “Shopping Cart.” A billboard in cyberspace, hiding the countryside above the big
tubes
.
Web
2,0 is adding two-way conversations, the back and forth, often with
hilarious or cringey results. From trolling right up to creating new ideas, organizations, and
things.
The
Cluetrain Manifesto
alerted us to the coming of Web 2.0, with the first thesis, All
markets are conversations. If
you've staked your claim on Google
Plus or
LinkedIn, you
are a Web 2 resident.
Web
3.0 is repurposing what has already been loaded into the web.
For
Web 3.0, the words, pictures, and ideas have often already been
loaded into the Internet. Not all, but the ease of using existing
data makes gathering whatever else is needed much lower cost.
Repurposing existing data creates another round of value.
Examples
are pictures of winsome cats and a caption, “I
can has cheezburger?” to all the privileged and then stolen boilerplate
in the legal universe, to everything everyone knows about our health,
wealth, and happiness. That whole pile is big data, and the people
telling you about
it have clever
hacks to connect
pieces of that data into useful piles.
Scary?
Could be.
Miraculous?
Sometimes.
Will
people be swindled? Always.
Will
people be helped? More.
But
the work of making it work is not magic. It is figuring out what goes
where.
Doc
Searls, an author of the previously mentioned Cluetrain,
has been working on Vendor
Relationship Management (VRM).
Customer
Relationship Management allows siding salesmen to know what time you
sit down to dinner so they can call. VRM allows you to make the best
choice when you want something, and not spend time with it when you
don’t.
Thankfully,
Big Data and VRM are largely an open source collaboration, so you can
find it and see what others are doing.
And
yes, it’s bad what fast buck artists, lawyers, and legislators are trying
to do to you. But yes, it’s good how you’ll be able to improve
your life with the resources that are available to you.
The
internet is so big it creates an opportunity for advantage
from scaling
and
availability that we
have never seen
before. Sturgeon’s
Law (Ninety
per cent of everything is crud)
notwithstanding, there are tremendous opportunities.
What
we learned from the App Economy is:
- First in gets the biggest reward,
- Nothing is ever so completely finished that it can't be radically improved, and
- Collaboration outproduces closed systems.
Be
on the lookout for a use of Big Data/Web 3.0 that will help you a
lot.
Open
Source Leadership – A useful way of seeing the world
Join
us on Monday
July 15th
for The
Changing Social Paradigm - How It Affects the Job Market,
for details about this free presentation: 40Plus
Washington, DC.
2 comments:
I love how you make me turn my thinking on its edge. Someone asked me recently whether I make up the fun/educational activities for grandchildren that I write about weekly. "No, I find them." I realize now that I'm using the big data of the Internet, with my own value add standardizing the format and making sure I include, drawn from several sites, how the underlying math or science concept is applied in the real world. Thanks, Dick for this new way to think about how to add value.
Yow, Carol!
If I was wondering about the value of my blogging, you just established it!
I'll keep on keeping on.
Many, many thanks!!
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