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Social norms on teh internets

brad's picture

So, I have been on teh internets for a while, I have been a member of many mailinglists, chatted on irc, etc. etc. So maybe I have a more attuned sense of the social norms of the internet. Years ago a bunch of script kiddies had a mailing list called KiDDiESoc, KiDDiESoc was great, at it's peak it had traffic in the region of 100 messages per day. Between maybe 15 people. Many of these messages were what can only be called spam. Spam and baggy pantsing. We had arguments about top, bottom, and inline posting.

Successful web applications

brad's picture

I have a little theory I have been working on, it is probably dead obvious to some people, but it only crystalised in my head relatively recently. I have had a few ideas in my time (so far none have made it to the real world), and in mentally stepping through these ideas I have started to refine my methods of evaluating an idea. One of the mental tests I have been using recently is:

Does this idea:

  1. Help some business/cross section of people do what they do, more efficiently/economically?
  2. Would the technology associated to my idea help me act more efficiently in an environment of competition?
  3. Or, does this idea earn me income by facilitating other people earning income
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Whijo.net is the online internets of Bradley Whittington, Amanda Joseph, and our son Finley James Whittington. "Whijo" is 29% Whittington, 33% Joseph, and 37% Internet. Quite Web 2.0 of us.