Of particular interest are two questions for Baby Boomers:
How do you help yourselves as the digital era
accelerates?
(Think of the starship blurring away from you)
How do you help your partent and their generation as the digital
era accelerates?
(What starship? What are they
talking about?)
(optional) How do you link to (communicate with) the younger
generations?
(Mashup? What's that?
It sounds messy. It sounds dirty.
Web 2.0? What's that?
It includes Mashup? That sounds sticky.
That's a good thing?
Really? Why?)
In
this age of digital, a critical design point is the architecture of
systems (socio-economic, technological, political). If everything
can become digital (can be represented as a number) then the relation
of that thing to other things becomes very abstract. We begin to think
in terms of classes and instances, and how they could interact with
other classes. And we risk losing track of the fact that we're thinking
abstractly about things that affect real people in this real world.
This blog is about the architecture of systems.
And how architecture affects the real world. Some currently important
architecture issues: