Did a new round of delightful chats with on the Hope in Source podcast.
In this first one we dabble in technology as an embodied process, how our cultural aversion to deleting data is a mortality issue, and lamenting the protestant work ethic.
Conversation
We also touch on digital gardening and the burden of maitenance.
Just like code needs to be maintained, what happens when your public knowledge base always needs tending?
In a real garden plants die (or you eat them). How might blog posts "dieโ or fade over time?
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What about a system where if you donโt update a post for 20 years, and no one reads it in that time, it deletes itself.
The degrading web? Decomposition organically built into the database?
Replying to
It's it what fleets are about, in 24h?
Regarding posts you don't update, standard do their job well and most of ours posts won't be readable before 20 years.
Forgetting is by design
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24 hour fleets feel like they're serving a very different purpose to posts in a personal knowledge base though.
Thinking of how posts with a relevancy timeline of 10-15 years could be designed...
IMHO if standards do their job well our posts better be readable in 20 years
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Replying to
We already have a self-degrading web. What we donโt have is a web that surfaces what we need to know in place of what we want to know.
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