When SdiDesk grows up, does it want to be MindRaider?

Interesting question. MR looks pretty advanced. And taking advantage of a lot of Java libraries.

I’m not sure I see myself wanting to compete directly with this. Expect SdiDesk to stay more closely wiki-oriented : emphasizing ease of use and the pages with concrete names.

On an impulse, I just created a new blog which may be of interest to readers of this one.

Platform Wars is a place for my comments on the ongoing struggle between different web and software companies. This isn’t meant to be a generic tech. news blog. (Of which there are more than enough.) I’ll try to give it a slightly different tone.

There’ll be more about strategy, and analysis using insights I’ve nicked from Clayton Christensen through Joel Spolsky, and possibly even to the real “war theorists” I’ve found myself following recently. Plenty of my more wild speculation. And maybe some other theoretical stuff.

Rick Segal’s post is a good snapshot of the response to writeboard.

Personally I love wiki. And I want to see the wiki idea and name become as widely known and adopted as, say, “blog”. So I’m not really into brushing “wiki” under the carpet as too geeky for ordinary people to understand. (Which is, naturally, why I named my program SdiDesk and not something obvious like wikipad, wikinotes or uga-uga – doh! 🙁 ).

37 Signals are a smart company. They have a genius for doing one little thing (that often seems trivially obvious) in a very usable and user-friendly way, and turning it into a massive hit. So it’s not surprising they’re coming in to disrupt wiki (and JotSpot) with a simpler-than-you-can-possibly-believe one page, wiki-like thing.

It will be interesting to see how it takes off. What strikes me, is that they’ve removed what seems to me to be the wiki “essence” : the ease of creating multiple pages and links between them via concrete page names. And, of course, what most people remember : unrestricted access.

What’s left is a little bit of wiki-markup. Plus versioning. And the fact that this is a collaboratively editable document.

I wonder if they’ll subtly introduce multiple pages with links between them at a later date.

There’s a discussion going on at John Robb’s Weblog about Web 2.0

I got inspired to write a couple of long comments. The first is about what I think Web 2.0 is a response to John’s request “What are the 3 big themes that undergird the upgrade?” :

    open data

    .

    You open whatever data you have, and positively encourage others to take it and “join” / “remix” it with their own. Plenty of people always understood this, but were probably swamped in web 1.0 by an influx from traditional media who tended to see data as something they created and sold access to.
    specialization.

    Open data allows more niche re-users. One company doesn’t have to do it all. It’s a distributed bazaar where you can get famous (and possibly rich) doing one thing really well, as long as you’re plugged into the ecosystem in the right way. Being well plugged-in is probably more important than having a stunningly good and original idea, or great execution. The irony here is that people who get famous doing one thing well, then get rich by being bought by a bigger conglomerate.
    automation.

    For now, RSS and search engines. I guess we’ll see further developments in crawlers, scutters, search and inference engines etc. With or without RDF. The important point is that integration doesn’t just happen in the brain of the user any more.

AJAX I’m ambivalent about. It makes cute interfaces, which seem like a big deal to some people. But if we didn’t have AJAX we’d probably be doing more with custom client software as was already happening with things like iPodder, Flickr’s Uploadr, RSS aggregators, Napster etc.

Of course, the smart people (like Dave Winer) could see all this years ago. But O’Reilly think of memes as platforms they can own. I guess this does help to get a bundle of ideas more widely distributed, and to a certain extent provides a shared vocabulary we can use to communicate more effectively.

Lots of people will misunderstand it all, though.

The second, in response to John’s mention of custom services, how I see the developer ecosystem.


I wonder if there’s really a continuum. At the far end we’re talking users doing their own customization and remixing, possibly with the help of GreaseMonkey or special purpose software. Maybe tagging goes on here too. These are the ultimate specialists, as they are specializing in something that’s only for themselves. (With possibly positive externalities)

Further along, we’re looking at nano-corps, micro-ISVs and one-(wo)man projects which provide either a service or tool to a narrow niche or geographically local area. (What Shirky calls “Situated Software”)

Larger companies provide more comprehensive or more general tools, or tools backed by more robust levels of service.

At the other end of the scale are the real internet players : Google, Yahoo, MS etc. who need to build platforms comprising seriously reliable and customizable service, and integrate dozens of applications.

The key for them is identifying deep commonalities between different applications. In Web 2.0 anyone should be able to plug the output of one application into the input of another. That’s for the end users and small-fry. Going beyond that requires owning some very generic infrastructure which can power dozens of applications, the way eBay does with online auctions and payments. Or Google does with search. Or Amazon does with recommendations.