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Author: |
barton |
Created: |
8/21/2005 |
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This is barton's aggregated blog - it contains both his music and computer science blog entries. If you are interested in one of these topics, you can select the blog you want to view from the menu on the left. |
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Collaborative Systems as Cultural Constructions |
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barton's computer science blog
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By barton on
9/7/2008
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Many companies are unaware how their culture creates material effects within the organization. Social conflict and the deployment of new technologies can produce positive changes within an organization by altering social dynamics and promoting new cultural models.
Culture, those patterns of human activity and symbolic structures that give such activities significance and importance, is not generally included as part of the design and deployment process when a company goes forward with a new technology. Many significant deployment failures are attributable to cultural issues (references to come). While we do not normally think of computer systems as part of our culture, the manner, dress, language, belief systems, and norms of behavior found within an organization clearly extend beyond the boundary of a computational system, especially one that is collaborative. People define the essential meaning and structure of these systems. This is why we say that they are cu ...
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Patterns of thought in software adoption |
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barton's computer science blog
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By barton on
4/16/2008
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We've been doing a lot recently supporting teams in deploying and / or
upgrading to Team
Foundation Server 2008. It's been a very interesting and
enlightening period of our work at Luminous because it is field testing
and reinforcing some of the fundamental ideas we have held
about the underlying patterns of thought people experience when
adopting software.
Software adoption is a complex cultural process that is often relegated
to a functional discipline that is ill-equipped to address the
organizational and cultural requirements that support
successful adoption. Adoption is not simply putting someone
new in front of someone. Optimally it addresses the notion of enhancing
the capability of the individual, which inherently is about changing
the way people think about the world and their relationship to it.
Software adoption always occurs as some substep to a larger p ...
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There's no stopping it now... |
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barton's music blog
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By barton on
9/22/2007
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The past couple of weeks have been an absolute whirlwind of activity
for me. It is an irony that in the release of Don’t Stop
it feels to me as if more obstacles have come up in its release than
any other. I am keenly aware that I was perhaps the greatest obstacle
and I owe a tremendous debt of gratitude to the amazing and supportive
team of collaborators & music industry people who have worked
tirelessly to help move this project forward to its ultimate release to
you, the world-at-large. I always want everything to be so perfect, and
this song has been a great lesson in letting go (a lesson I am
constantly learning). I am so lucky to work with such talented people -
the remix artists on this release are all so different and each has
something unique to say in their interpretation of Don’t Stop.
Jaimy, Josh Harris, and Manny Ward - thank you for working with ...
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Levelling The Playing Field |
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barton's computer science blog
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By barton on
8/29/2007
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While I am not an expert on the subject, in my tenure as a founder of the Bay Area .NET Users Group (Bay.NET), I am very much aware of cultural differences between programmers who work with the Visual Basic and C# languages. An excellent overview written by Nigel Shaw on these cultural differences can be found here.
Having lived in many places throughout the world I would consider myself as one who is most interested in culture and cultural differences. In my experiences, I have discovered in myself an inclination to find things I appreciate about other cultures (and people).
I think we all tend to look at differences, be they cultural, as in those who prefer Apple Computers to Windows or Linux and make some value judgments based on what camp we live in and what camp
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Hide and Seek – Imogen Heap |
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barton's music blog
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By barton on
8/19/2007
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Some songs are deeply personal and yet address experiences we all go through,
creating an environment for the listener to experience their own feelings intensely.
Imogen Heap’s “Hide and
Seek” is one of these. It is a song about a person involved in a moment in time
where she becomes aware that someone else is breaking up with her, apparently
brought on by a decision from the other person.
We start in Imogen’s head asking “Where are we?”, as if waking from a dream,
hearing her voice in a mixed with a vocoder, with thoughts of disorientation and
the key line “sinking feeling”. Whether we heard all of the words or not, if we
heard that phrase, it is something we can all identify with.
Her incredible sense of description, blending metaphors of movement with a sense
of awareness that something completely personal is happening within a larger
world ...
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Closer To Me |
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barton's music blog
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By barton on
7/23/2007
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I wanted to begin sharing some of my perceptions about music that I have been listening to recently that has been particularly inspiring to me.
One track that never fails to compel me is Chab's "Closer To Me (Alex Neri Vocal Mix)". Note the vocals are by JD Davis, not Alex Neri. The track's slow build and highly syncopated rhythmic intro gives the listener so many choices in the dance moves they might choose to act upon, a choice I feel is basic to a good dance track. There is a sense of mechanism and power that emerges with the arpeggiated synth that cuts through at about 1 1/2 minutes and carries the entire song with its melodic line. The line itself is the hook of the song, thr ...
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The illusion of the perfect computer |
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barton's computer science blog
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By barton on
7/15/2007
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I recently got a new computer preloaded with Windows Vista. I must say that when I got the machine I was extremely surprised at how well it worked and how easy it was for me to transfer my data to the new machine (Lenovo T60p). With all of the comments I had been hearing which indicated that many people felt that the Vista operating system was problematic, I was rather surprised at how smooth my transition was.
Alas, this was not to last, and what is rather ironic is that I have been subject to a number of issues in the past month that have been rather disruptive and taken some time to remedy and yet are not related specifically to any flaw in the operating system.
The first sign of trouble was when I shut the computer down after doing some work and found it would not start the next morning. I believe a file was (or files were) corrupted somehow on shutdown (although I do not know for sure) and were only able to get back to an operable state by restoring ...
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We're looking for a good record company |
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barton's music blog
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By barton on
5/21/2007
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We've decided to wait on the release of our next project "Don't Stop" in order to find a record company to work with who can help us with the marketing and promotion of our work.
"Don't Stop" is a great song and we really want it to reach a much broader audience than our previous singles so have taken the decision to wait on the release.
It has been really amazing to do all of this ourselves for the past four years, but the time has come to take things to a new level. Charlie has some great video ideas, and if we are going to shoot a video, I want to know with certainty that it will be seen. Sometimes you have to hold off in life for the things you want for them to come to you. This is one of those times.
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