Date archives "September 2009"

Top-down and bottom-up design as complementary

For certain situations, applying either bottom-up design or traditional top-down design is more efficient. Traditional top-down design gives consistent, predictable results, whereas bottom-up design gives unexpected, more novel configurations. The price for novelty and greater freedom is a larger number of steps, and consequently more time invested in the project. An essay on p2p design… Continue reading

Open Process academic publishing: towards the peer production of academic peer review

Open access, which only considers the availability of the final product, is not enough to insure true openness, the process of peer review itself needs to be made open, participative and transparent, argue the authors. Toni Prug (with assistance from Benjamin Geer) (excerpts): “Publishing and peer review processes in academia are currently closed models. In… Continue reading

Passionate creatives and their long march through the institutions

Instead of pursuing scalable efficiency, institutions must learn how to pursue scalable peer learning. On U.S. Labor Day, John Hagel calls for a unified movement of passionate creatives, in order to change human institutions, from the edge to the core. John Hagel, excerpts: “Why will more and more people evolve into passionate creatives? Because we… Continue reading