Habitability of the software (where users live), habitability of the code, habitability of the organization. Not a case of pick one (or even two).
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(And that’s the trouble with working on a talk design/iterating content anywhere near twitter :)
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VisArch Retweeted VisArch
It’s a riff along the lines of:https://twitter.com/ruthmalan/status/885512655036928001 …
VisArch added,
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VisArch Retweeted Lynn Langit
Which is a riff onhttps://twitter.com/lynnlangit/status/694592783516958720 …
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Nothing is a beginning
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Other beginnings for habitability of code include Richard Gabriel,
@rebeccawb and@sarahmei and the current flush of Marie Kondō applied to code tweets :) As for habitability of software, Christopher Alexander’s OOPSLA keynote made an impression on me https://www.patternlanguage.com/archive/ieee.html …2 replies 2 retweets 6 likesShow this thread -
What’s the distinction between habitability of software vs code? I heard
@sarahmei on Tech Done Right discuss the the latter. Curious because I’m super interested in the topic and want to make sure I’m getting the language right!1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes -
I needed a way to talk about what users experience (working software) and what we experience immersed in code. Christopher Alexander, in that keynote, is inviting us to really think about software in terms of something users inhabit, in a sense, too. It threads through lives,
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enables and constrains/frustrates/thwarts, channels in good and bad ways...
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