We are calling our web log, Forging the Future, because that is the business we are all in “here’ at The IEUC.
Of course, for us, “here” is a state of mind, because it doesn’t make sense for us to try to package our quest as a drive to create yet another brick-and-mortar lab. One day, perhaps, we will enjoy a level of support that will make it feasible to build, rent, or lease such a physical plant in support of a residential program like that of the Stanta Fe Institute.
Indeed, it would unquestionably be a good thing to dedicate a substantial facility to furthering research into End User Computing, so there would be a neutral site at which visiting researchers could collaborate on such issues. But there are already labs a many chipping away at different facets of the technological problems facing End Users. The real problem lies in breaking down disciplinary boundaries and figuring out the best ways to put all the pieces together, and that won’t be happening any time soon at an established lab, since all of these organizations have a primary interest in maintaining support for their own site. This is why collaborations among such peer labs tend to fizzle out in a few years when most participants start to fear that the fruits of any initial success are disproportionately accruing to the host site. In other words if a distributed project is administered from Lab A, in time its partner Labs B, C, and D will fear that Lab A is getting more money and prestige from the project than they are so they will start to pull back and the project will die. This same dynamic also dooms most interdisciplinary and interdepartmental projects within a given institution.
Thus for now, we need to run a lean operation and channel our resources into Forging a non-threatening network of colleagues from all labs and requisite fields of endeavor who care about breaking this vicious cycle and are in a position to make things happen. Indeed, as we embark on our quest to reboot the computer sector and knit together the many critical strands of relevant research, our not being attached to an existing institution or trying to compete with any of them in the brick-and-mortar building game will be absolutely critical.
If and only if we can draw on public support from enlightened computer users like YOU, will we be able to do what others can’t and make it possible to leverage each of our supporters’ contributions and undertake the needed work that wouldn’t otherwise get funded.
Alas, there is a tremendous amount of inertia centered around maintaining today’s desktop computing platforms. Whole careers have been built around mastering the quirks of yesterday’s hardware and software. Decades old decisions based on then appropriate technology tradeoffs have become ossified into bad designs that make our lives miserable, but the risks of trying to make a clean break and offer a real alternative are too great to be undertaken in the commercial sector.
We all know that today’s operating systems are sources of endless frustration and that it doesn’t matter which one we are talking about in this regard. Apple’s OS X works smoothy out of box and looks gorgeous, but even if you are a single user using your machine in the total security of your own home, there is no way to escape being forced to “prove” your identity by retyping your password thousands of times over. Despite their rapidly improving user interfaces, the many flavors of Windows remain subject to constant worm and virus attacks that make them a security nightmare. Likewise, while Unix and Linux may well have the potential to do anything an end user could ask for, often at little or no cost, unlocking that potential requires a deep immersion in highly arcane knowledge much of which is grounded in historical accident. Moreover, none of these environments makes coherent use of the many advanced technologies and common sense insights accumulated since the dawn of the personal computing revolution.
But despite these clearly manifest and utterly pervasive failings, just image going to your friendly local bankers and asking for funding to start from scratch and design a real alternative to ALL of these platforms – not just some sexy looking veneer grafted on top of Linux or some other current offering, but a REAL alternative. We all know it is needed, but from a commercial standpoint it is untouchable. That is why we have formed The IEUC to do what needs to be done in the not-for-profit space.
We all need this to work. You need us to succeed. There is a silver bullet, and YOUR Support is it!