Pages

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Books that the Bookaneers are reading

Before we split up fro the summer, we bookaneers discussed a reading list that we would all work on, so that we had something productive to talk about at our first meeting of the new school year. I can't remember what I agreed to read, but I brought a copy of The Future of the Internet and How to Stop it to New York with me, and I'm cracking through it. I wanted to share some of my impressions so far.

In the Winter, fellow bookaneers Rachel, Freeda and I, along with our buddy Caroline, worked on a project to study the Amazon Kindle as an educational delivery tool. (The video of a presentation that we did at the iEdge conference, along with a brief description of the project can be found here) As part of our research, we read a handful of books and articles that Tarleton Gillespie, a professor of communication at Cornell, recommended to us. (As another of many asides, we read the whole of Gillespie's Wired Shut for our reading group and loved it.) The Future of the Internet was part of that list.

For the Kindle project, we mainly focused on the chapter entitled "Tethered Appliances, Software as Service, and Perfect Enforcement" in which Zittrain talks through a number of examples of devices like the Kindle, TiVo or OnStar that have been designed to resist tinkering or repurposing, and the consequences and dangers of those devices.

This time around, I've started reading from the beginning, and I'm grasping more of what Zittrain sees as being at stake in that later chapter. According to his narrative of development and innovation, generativity--which he defines as the quality of an object to be built upon, adapted, and put to many different purposes--has been the distinctive quality of modern computing that has allowed for an explosion of development over the last 25 years. Zittrain describes play, cooperation and good faith as characterizing the communities of coding behind the internet, and how productive those communities have been as a result.

Unfortunately, generativity--which requires that a device be left open to change and therefore, in some ways, incomplete--has also been the quality that has made the modern computer vulnerable to exploitation from the outside. During the years when the PC was mainly the purview of the hobbyist, this vulnerability wasn't exactly dire. But, now that we live our lives largely mediated by computers, viruses, malware, bad code and a host of other vulnerability make the generative PC increasingly worrisome and unattractive.

This is Zittrain's explanation for why appliancized devices--computerized gadgets like the Kindle or the iPod that are designed for only one purpose and that are difficult to repurpose--are gaining in popularity. Zittrain is concerned about this trend for a number of reasons, which I won't go into until I've finished the book.

So far, friends, the book comes highly recommended. But why take my words for it, eh?

If you're interested in what else the bookaneers are reading, stay tuned, I'll post a reading list soon. And maybe by fellow bloggers can say a few words about what paper or ebook is on their bedside table at the moment.

1 comment:

  1. Althea,

    Thank you for your update, and for "rebooting" the bookaneers blog.

    Your comments on Zittrain's book have sparked my interest, and it is now on my short list.

    I plan to post what I've been reading in the near future.

    Ahoy!

    ReplyDelete