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August 2nd, 2005

Paul Graham on open source and blogging

Posted by Phil Windley @ 9:11 pm Categories: General, Open Source, OSCON Tags:
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In his keynote at the Tuesday night "extravaganza" at OSCON, Paul Graham made three points:

  1. People work harder on things they like
  2. The standard office is unproductive
  3. Bottom-up works better than top-down

I hope this becomes an essay because there’s lots in it that’s worth spending more time thinking about. Some of it is in Hiring is Obsolete. Here’s some of the more provocative things Paul said (not verbatim, but hopefully I got the ideas right):

Someone who proposes to run Windows on servers ought to be prepared to explain what they know about servers that Google and Yahoo don’t know.

What business ought to be getting out of open source isn’t the software, but the process.

Open source (and blogging) has a Darwinian approach to enforcing quality. The audience can communicate with each other and the bad stuff gets ignored.

Business must learn that people work a lot harder on things they like. That’s not news, but the structure of business doesn’t exemplify this.

People don’t switch to open source because they want to hack the code. People switch to Firefox because its better. Microsoft can’t pay people enough to build something better than the people who are building it out of love.

On the web, the barrier for publishing your ideas is even lower than spouting them in a bar: you don’t have to buy a drink and they let kids in.

We ought to call people who publish online "writers" not "bloggers." Now, you can read any writer you want. Print media isn’t competing against the average quality of online writing. They’re competing against the best. The same as Microsoft.

The NYT front page is a list of people who write for the NYTs. Del.icio.us is a list of people who are interesting. You can see them side-by-side. You can see how little overlap there is.

Blogs and open source software are made by people working at home. The average office is a miserable place to get work done. What makes them done are the very qualities we equate with professionalism. The average office environment is to productivity what flames painted on the side of a car are to speed. Start-up environments are more like home work environments. This is probably the most productive the company is ever going to be.

The reasons companies have fixed hours is that they can’t measure productivity. The idea is that if you can’t make people work, you can at least prevent them from having fun. If they’re not having fun, they must be working! If you could measure what people really did, you wouldn’t care when people worked.

The bigger problem is that the people pretending to work interrupt the people who are actually working. With so much time on their hands, they have to take up the slack with meetings. Meetings count for work, just like programming, but they’re so much easier.

Open source and blogging show us what real work looks like.

Good ideas flow up from the bottom rather than flowing down from the top. This is the market model. For all their talk about free markets, companies are run like communist states. In the "channel" era, ideas flow top-down assign a reporter, edit the work, publish it.

Business can learn about open source in the same way that the gene pool learns about new conditions: the dumb ones will die.

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  • Paul Graham on open source and blogging
    I posted some of what Paul Graham said on open source and blogging tonight over at Between the Lines....

    Trackback by Phil Windley's Technometria — August 2, 2005 @ 9:17 pm

  • >Meetings count for work, just
    Meetings count for work, just like programming, but they’re so much easier. Paul Graham is just great :-)...

    Trackback by Stefan Tilkov's Random Stuff — August 3, 2005 @ 1:08 pm

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