…nge in the face of other types of online cooperation. Here, the main example is Wikipedia. Although Wikipedia is no panacea (in the end, there is always an editor who controls what is pub- lished), it allows us to speculate about the possibility of a radical wiki-an- thropology, …
…\, YAv. visa’d, Gr. Dor. piKax\i\, Lat. uiginti, OW uceint, Ann. k'san, Toch. A wiki 100. *kintom < *dkmt-o-m ‘hundred’ (p. 34) > Ved. satam, Gr. |e|koix6v, Lat. centum, OCS sbto, Lith. simta\s\, Goth, hunda, CIb. kantom, Toch. B kante 1000. *ghesl- ‘thousand’ > Ved. \sa\-hdsram,…
…ilitate continuous and interactive discussion among group members, we created a wiki (a collaborative website that allows visi- tors to add, remove, and edit content) on which we posted notes, articles, outlines, and comments. Although our team was limited to five participants du…
…coil/knowledge-garden/kd/index.shtml. http://www.transitiontowns.org. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Citizen_science. http://www.softopia.demon.co.uk/2.2/creative_democracy.html. Architectural growing trellis by Loop.pH. http://loop.ph/bin/view/Loop/BioWall. http://www.un.org/sg/ar…
…es the electromagnetic force. The best description I’ve found so far comes from Wikipedia: viz., photons are ‘chunked ripples in a field, or “excitations”, that “look like” particles’ (Wikipedia s.v.; emphasis added). That is, a photon can be considered as a discretely located (w…