[Air-l] Community "Critical Mass"?
Hugemusic
hmusic at ozemail.com.au
Thu Dec 21 18:15:27 PST 2006
Yes, well, these issues are perplexing, but not insurmountable.
I'm sure the early scientists who wondered why trees burn but (some) rocks
don't thought they had a similar problem on their hands ...
Maths can help with anything that can be quantified - strength of
relationships, passion of the content, capacity for "leakage" of involvement
(the extent to which participants have a choice of fora) even "importance to
our lives" can be quantified ... it's a matter of coming up with imaginative
and reproduceable metrics, crunching the numbers and seeing whether anything
useful emerges.
I read this morning
(http://www.manchestereveningnews.co.uk/news/technology/s/231/231348_technology_could_spell_the_end_for_radio_djs.html?ref=emtaf&archive=archive)
about some people at Edinburgh who say they can replace DJs with a digital
agent to construct playlists tailored to your taste. I'd love to see the
maths behind that. No doubt it's a little primitive, but I also read
yesterday
(http://lefsetz.com/wordpress/index.php/archives/2006/12/20/the-man-from-google-returns/)
that Google can predict, based on seach data, the gross takings of a movie
with 82% accuracy - six weeks before its release! And no doubt they'll get
more accurate with refinement.
The numbers can tell all sorts of stories if we begin to explore them -
we're just blinded by the size of the task and the lack of obvious metrics.
Incidentally, a quick peruse of the groups in Myspace shows a similar
pattern to the one you observe in Yahoo! groups and as has been reported
concerning blog activity. Very Long Tail, all of them ... but wait - that's
a mathematical relationship!
Cheers,
Hughie
----- Original Message -----
From: "Mary-Helen Ward" <mhward at usyd.edu.au>
To: <>; "Hugemusic" <hmusic at ozemail.com.au>
Sent: Friday, December 22, 2006 11:01 AM
Subject: Re: [Air-l] Community "Critical Mass"?
>I realise that email lists seem a bit 'old hat', but I think that there is
>a lot to be learned from them about how communities form, fail or are
>sustained online.
>
> I've been a member of one online community (email list only) for ten
> years. It's shrunk a bit over the years - some members have died and some
> have lost interest - but it's still going and we still have a few
> postings most weeks. We are down to 29 members, but we all agree on the
> list's importance to our lives. I don't see any way that maths could help
> predict this kind of success. Many of the members aren't able to get out
> much; some are enormously busy working lives. We are a mad mix of people
> who just happen to get on and value each other's presence. Just like any
> friendship group really, except that we are on three continents.
>
> Another quite different international community that I have been in for
> about 8 years is extremely successful in another way. It has a much more
> mixed, lively and mobile membership; presently just under 200 with a core
> of about 50 regular posters. It also has a website with photographs of
> members and their projects (it is craft-based), lists of members'
> webpages and blogs etc, which is maintained regularly. Again, the list is
> very important to the people who subscribe to it.
>
> Neither of these groups is based at Yahoo, but a scan of the email groups
> that are based at there will show how many never get off the ground, but
> there are a few that do and remain hugely successfully, with many regular
> postings, pretty much indefinitely. I wonder if they have anything in
> common?
>
> M-H
>
> On 22/12/2006, at 11:22 AM, Hugemusic wrote:
>
>> Sorry, guys but I just don't agree.
>>
>> Sure, there's no hard and fast number that will indicate a critical mass
>> for
>> all, but there has to be some statistical indicator of probable
>> sustainability - we're just not exploring the relationships deeply
>> enough
>> yet.
>
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