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        <title>ACCU  :: Thinking Aloud</title>
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<div class="xar-mod-head"><span class="xar-mod-title">CVu Journal Vol 12, #5 - Sep 2000</span></div>

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   <h1><strong>Title:</strong>&nbsp;Thinking Aloud</h1>
<p><strong>Author:</strong>&nbsp;</p>
<p>
<strong>Date:</strong> 03 September 2000 13:15:40 +01:00 or Sun, 03 September 2000 13:15:40 +01:00</p>
<p><strong>Summary:</strong>&nbsp;<p>Dot Coms as Twentieth Century Cargo Cults</p></p>
<p><strong>Body:</strong>&nbsp;<div class="sect1" lang="en">
<div class="titlepage">
<h2><a name="d0e18" id="d0e18"></a>Dot Coms as
Twentieth Century Cargo Cults</h2>
</div>
<p>The bursting of the dot com bubble is far enough away now that
it is easier to look at the whole thing dispassionately. One of the
curses (or advantages) of being trained as a sociologist is that I
tend to look past the techie aspects of issues to the social
aspect.</p>
<p>The whole frenzy reminds me a little of a university course case
study I was involved in of the Melanesian Cargo Cults. For those of
you whose geography is a little hazy, the Melanesian islands are in
the southern part of the Pacific.</p>
<p>Since most of you will not have studied anthropology, I will
explain.</p>
<p>Towards the end of the 19th Century there were outbreaks of
religious fervour lead by prophets claiming that they had received
a revelation. These disturbances ran through until the 1930s when
they finally died out. All had a common thread in that they claimed
that they proclaimed that a new age of plenty was imminent, and
that a special 'cargo' would be delivered by the tribal gods,
mythical heroes, or ancestors.</p>
<p>If the cargo were expected by ship or by plane then the cultists
would build symbolic wharves or landing strips. In any event, the
result was usually the failure to take normal precautions to
provide for the future. Crops were not sown, livestock was
slaughtered and used for feasting, traditional material resources
were abandoned and so on. An associated political agitation
claiming that the old (colonialist) order would be over thrown
frequently accompanied cargo cults.</p>
<p>At the time they started the cults were a novel phenomena, and
people had no idea what the cause was - there were the usual
banalities about the irrationality of the heathen mind, and the
colonial powers set about repressing the cults.</p>
<p>In fact, the cargo cults were a perfectly rational response to
what the tribes saw going on around them. They saw the colonial
officials not doing any work but receiving supplies from overseas
at regular intervals, and from this they constructed a mythos that
was perfectly rational. A myth of gods who provided their people
with plenty, even though those people planted no crops and raised
no livestock.</p>
<p>From this it was only a small step to the postulation that the
tribal gods would themselves soon start sending their own people
cargo to support a life of ease. Some went as far as to suggest
that the tribal gods were in fact sending the cargo, but that the
colonists were intercepting it and keeping for themselves!</p>
<p>I am embarrassed to say that at the time I was studying this, we
all thought it was amusing that these savages should make this sort
of mistake about the source of the colonist's goods. We were all
just out of school, arrogant teenagers who knew it all. People in
Western society, we knew, would not be so 'stupid'.</p>
<p>Sometimes I think sociology would be much better served if no
one were allowed to study it unless they were over 30...</p>
<p>But if you stop and think about it, the dot com mania of the
last few years has all the hallmarks of a cargo cult. There was no
shortage of digital prophets proclaiming the dawning of a new era.
There was the promise of plenty without having to work for it.</p>
<p>There was the abandonment of prudent provision for the future,
with companies eschewing any semblance of 'due diligence' as they
scrambled to get onto the dot com gravy train. There was the
abandonment of traditional material resources in favour of the new
as people double mortgaged their homes to fund the purchase of dot
com shares whose PE ratio indicated that it would take hundreds of
years to realise the initial investment.</p>
<p>And those involved all had the fervour of a religious cult - the
gurus of MIT's Media Lab at the pinnacle, shading down through the
seers of the stock broking companies' analysts to the individual
members who desperately believed that they were participating in a
revolution.</p>
<p>Most of the people involved were basing their beliefs on an
ignorance of the basic mechanisms of the market, and an inability
to learn from their own history. For, despite all the hype, this
was only a re-run of previous stock market frenzies. It has all
happened before, go and read up about the South Sea Bubble or the
railroad building mania of the mid-19th Century, to name but two
instances, if you do not believe me.</p>
<p>And, of course, the ultimate irony of this outbreak of faith in
impersonal, off stage, forces is the fact that it is all built
around one of the most significant technological advances since the
industrial revolution - the Internet!</p>
</div>
<div class="sect1" lang="en">
<div class="titlepage">
<h2><a name="d0e51" id="d0e51"></a>Stress and the
single computer</h2>
</div>
<p>I can remember a time when getting a new computer was like
Christmas and birthday all rolled into one. All the extra power and
new, cool applications that you could now run made the whole thing
very exciting. You copied the applications on your old machine
across to the new one and you were off.</p>
<p>Now a days, getting a new computer has become nearly as
stressful as moving house. Microsoft operating systems have become
steadily less stable and less usable since Windows 95, and most of
the newer applications have become more bloated and run slower, in
spite of the increase in raw computing power.</p>
<p>The crucial change was actually the introduction of Windows. The
key problem is that you now have to 'install' applications, instead
of just being able to copy them over. Of course, a substantial
number of programs that you have on your old machine will be small
utilities that you no longer have the source for.</p>
<p>Then there is the way the machines themselves (assuming that
they come with the operating system you wanted) are not set up the
way you want, and the set up utilities are completely different
from the ones on the old machine.</p>
<p>Finally, Installation of products is becoming so complex that
you have to be an expert just to get a reasonably complex program
installed. A lot of companies now have people whose only job is to
get new packages running on their employees' machines! What a waste
of money.</p>
<p>The net result of all this is a massive drop in productivity for
anyone changing to a new machine.</p>
<p>Companies often compound this drop productivity by imposing a
corporate 'one size fits all' mentality. 'There will be', so the
memo goes, 'a single computer model used by everyone in the
corporation. This will allow the MIS department to significantly
enhance it's support profile.'</p>
<p>The net result is that a lot of people get massively over
specified computers. Someone who just needs to send internal email
and look at the company's intranet web site gets a machine fully
capable of clogging up the company's Internet link with massive
porn downloads and the opportunity to fill their hard drive full of
all the latest viruses.</p>
<p>At the other end of the spectrum, the people who really need
computing power end up with a woefully under specified machine
which seriously damages their productivity. They spend most of
their paid time waiting for the computer to finish processing their
spreadsheet of whatever.</p>
<p>In the middle is the single person who dreamed up the idea, who
has a machine that exactly meets his (yes, it is usually a male)
needs.</p>
</div>
<div class="sect1" lang="en">
<div class="titlepage">
<h2><a name="d0e74" id="d0e74"></a>Maps and
mapping</h2>
</div>
<p>It was my intention to have the second part of the maps coding
stuff in this issue, but a combination of dead computers and the
agro of setting up new one, plus the problems of setting up Linux
on a Toshiba laptop have conspired to prevent me from properly
testing the code, so I am going to have to hold that over until the
next issue, I'm afraid.</p>
<p>Mea culpa - I should have know that it would take a loooooong
time to get anything out of the ordinary running on a laptop.</p>
<p>Have fun programming.</p>
</div>
</p>
<p><strong>Notes:</strong>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>More fields may be available via dynamicdata ..</em></p>
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