Of course you all are welcome to conduct a discussion on any platform that you wish. I have used Discord in another project, and didn't see any wildly advantageous features. Seems to me the value of any platform like this is if there is a critical mass of people who are using it.
The group here is probably predisposed to trying new or different things. I can just about guarantee that the hairdressers and rowing club consortiums and watershed associations out there in the big wide world will not be adopting it very soon.
Maybe there should be a special Peeragogy task force for investigating new collaborative platforms?
But then I'm tired and cranky, so.
the hairdressers and rowing club consortiums and watershed associations
Maybe there should be a special Peeragogy task force for investigating new collaborative platforms?
Hi Charlotte and Stephan,Thank you both for sharing comments. It sounds like it's a "not right now" for making a trial of Discord, and that's totally fine with me -- maybe we would want to try it it sometime after the current session of work has ended. I appreciate Stephan's explanation of how Discord can be used as a learning environment! This resonates with Roland's earlier description of a large scale "Distributed, Decentralized MOOC" made up of lots of different small learning communities that don't have a lot to do with each other directly. Our reflection was that maybe the peeragogy project can contribute by weaving between them, finding patterns across them, and so on. Stephan's analogy between Discord and Stack Exchange also works for me. But happy to save these things for later.
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I guess there are two things that are on my mind about my experience with the system and our discussion about it. I brought up in the meeting the issue of discoverability. Keybase is useful as a back channel but for our main communications we need something public. The other issue is open source: if Sutra was open source we could jump in and fix any further issues! My feeling is that if Sutra was open source we might well make the jump over there. Since I haven’t yet tried Discord, I can’t compare it, but in general a fully open source solution would be far preferable. We seem close and Sutra could indeed be a big step forward if it goes this route. What we really need is something that can stitch together different communities and different streams of information.
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Pretty much only AGPLv3 + any later would be an option
and many resist that for obvious exploitive reasons, to no surprise.
There's nothing wrong with using or renting services if one has the option to export/migrate everything and set it up himself/herself (or find somebody else or another offer which does the same), or have a trusted friend of choice or an institution run such a service, or individuals/companies competing on quality of service, low prices, reputation, support/service, better solutions/functionality.
Discord and Slack are completely proprietary (the latter even applying questionable business practices), and yet that certanily didn't lead to disinterest in regard of potentially peer-learning about them.
as a software developer, I guess the lesson is that one can't assume/expect any media/digital literacy/interest at all, it's just way too much of a paradigmatic gap with very few attempts to educationally improve this, plus everybody is always totally busy with plenty of other, his/her own stuff.
Let's just consider for a moment the more recent talk about bridging several of such communication services: if a remote service is under the control of somebody else, what protects your work/investment/effort/solution from getting rendered void one day, if the external entity for whatever reason decides to deny you access, or change things in a non-standard, non-open way, or just change stuff constantly, or if the service with its code and data disappears entirely? Best of luck to you, whomever engages in these kinds of concepts :-) I personally find offers like these *way* to costly/expensive, even if they're gratis.
Lorenz had said that he was (potentially) interested in "going open source" at some point, so we can provide a use case and perhaps also help think through the business model as well.
What's needed for the peeragogy project is some kind of generalized widget that takes in information streams from various places, potentially does some processing, and relays them to other places. This is roughly what IFTTT promises, so maybe that's relevant, but I don't know (and presumably it's not AGPLv3). 'Open source' is most relevant here to the extent that we can make, share, and use customizations. Given that many of the services we'd want to interface with are still proprietary (Github, Discord, etc.) it's reasonable to think that we'd be working with APIs a lot of the time.
For Linode, Digital Ocean, Amazon, Heroku, etc., the business model is centers on computation.
I have a mail server so there's no real reason to continue using Gmail except out of habit and because Google is used as the SSO provider of choice for many platforms.
Making an exodus from non-free software would have to be pretty strategic.
If we wanted to build our own open source Sutra clone we could base it on Drupal or write it from scratch in some other language/framework. Person hours for this are a limiting factor.
Downstream analytics and processing on open source content stores and associated workflows (e.g. Wikipedia, Stack Exchange, Red Hat, Github) can provide us with plenty to do, and many others are engaged in such work.