Tag Archive: Wikipedia

SETI@home – The First Real Global Social Network

We’re still all a flutter with the concept of “social networks.”  Facebook, MySpace, Twitter, YouTube, and Flickr generally get the most attention.  They’re well known and are the household names that even your mom knows.  Last night I watched an episode of Numb3rs that referenced the famous Seti@Home project.  For those that don’t remember SETI is an acronym for the Search for Extra-Terrestrial Intelligence.  It’s a volunteer based social computing project that launched in May 1999.

There are all these conversations taking place in space.  Some are simply noise, but some could be evidence of life beyond this planet.  Someone needs to make sense of the noise.  It takes an inordinate amount of time and effort to sift through and make sense of the information.  For years special large super computers were used to analyze very narrow band radio frequency from outer space. Relying on just the limited number of super computers was a slow time consuming approach.  The Seti@home project was designed to eliminate that problem.

By  downloading the Seti@home software any computer anywhere in the world could help make sense of the noise coming from space.  In essence the Seti@home project combines the power of all the computers participating in the program to decode the data from space faster.  The more people who download and participate, the faster we’ll discover life beyond Earth.  Talk about joining something for a higher order of reason. 

I remember when Seti came on the scene.  I was working at Fallon and learned about it from a colleague.  He explained to me that every person who signed up for the program was helping to find Extra-Terrestrial Intelligence.  He demoed the software for me and I was hooked.  I downloaded the software and started trying to convince all my friends and family to do the same.

To date the Seti@home project has over 5 million members in more than 200 countries.  This is amazing considering the original goal for the program was between 50,000 and 100,000 members.  In total this community has contributed over 19 billion hours of computer processing time.  Unfortunately, the project hasn’t uncovered any Extra-Terrestrial Intelligence, but it has identified several candidate targets (sky positions).  In 2004, the astronomer Seth Shostak indicated a conclusive signal from Extra-Terrestrial Intelligence would happen some time between 2020 and 2025.  That’s an amazing amount of progress for a program that’s only 10 years old.

Brining this back to social networking, the buzz topic du jour.  The Seti initiative has all the underpinnings of what a defines a great social network:

  1. Limited barriers to join
  2. Gender and age agnostic
  3. A real reason for joining – a greater good
  4. Sense of being and purpose
  5. Like-minded individuals
  6. Connected to a common goal
  7. Constant feedback
  8. Measurable results
  9. Authenticity…
  10. …and yes even Transparency
  11. The ability to opt out easily

This isn’t to say that Seti@home is perfect. In truth, it’s a social network that’s showing its age. In today’s new and ever evolving landscape where we’re all hyper-connected to the internet it seems like they’ve passed on serious opportunity. For example, how hard would it be to have an iPhone app that leverages the 3G network to compute the information a Facebook/iGoogle widget that basically is the software? Given all the people we’re connected with and the ease/efficiency to grow networks today, why haven’t they invested in leveraging those connections?

As the web evolved the program remained virtually stagnant…trapped in 1999. If ever there were an initiative that could really harness the power of today’s social web this is it. Seti I want to help. Let’s talk.

The Pure Genius Of Elmo

 Whoever created the concept for the Sesame Street character Elmo was a genius. Elmo appeals to kids and adults (usually in a parody or humor based environment). Since Elmo was first introduced in 1985 he’s graced the covers of books, starred in movies, interviewed Robert DeNiro, and even been a talking – laugh happy toy.

Elmo

Elmo

A quick search of Amazon.com will show you that there are over 20,000 Elmo related products in their inventory. I probably own 50 of them. My daughter loves Elmo. He’s been responsible for her wanting to learn to read, knowing her shapes and colors, and even learning to potty. Probably too much information in that last example. But, seriously, Elmo has become an integral part of our lives. It’s scary on some level.

There’s such passion for the Elmo brand (I think he’s bigger than a character) that people have taken to creating mashups of Elmo. Here’s a great example.

Elmo has helped extend Sesame Street and Walt Disney into markets like Indonesia, Brazil, and India. As their presence has grown so has the revenue. Elmo has single handedly generated millions of dollars in revenue for Walt Disney. But, hear is the genius of Elmo. Rarely does Walt Disney or Sesame Street actually produce any of the items that are created and sold. All Disney does is license out Elmo’s rights. Companies like Hasbro, Fisher Price, and P&G are actually taking on the responsibility, overhead, and risk. Brilliant! Or Genius, if you prefer. You could make the argument that Elmo doesn’t even really belong to Walt Disney anymore, he belong to all of us.

Don’t believe me? After this vide launched, Wired ran an article questioning if robots (Elmo TMX would qualify) should have rights.

This is the quote that sticks out to me:

I’ve seen videos of the incineration of T.M.X. Elmo (short for Tickle Me Extreme); they made me feel vaguely uncomfortable. Part of me wanted to laugh—Elmo giggled absurdly through the whole ordeal—but I also felt sick about what was going on. Why? I hardly shed a tear when the printer in Office Space got smashed to bits. Slamming my refrigerator door never leaves me feeling guilty. Yet give something a couple of eyes and the hint of lifelike abilities and suddenly some ancient region of my brain starts firing off empathy signals. And I don’t even like Elmo. How are kids who grow up with robots as companions going to handle this?

Elmo has gone from a leftover prop that showed no promise to multi-million dollar industry that has us questioning if the Elmo robot toys deserve human-like rights. That’s Genius.

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Head of Social Media at Walgreens. Interactive marketer, innovator, boat rocker, continuous learner, movie lover, risk taker, dad and all around good guy. I'm always up for a spirited conversation. These are my thoughts and ramblings, not those of my employer.
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