[An imaginary conversation, posted purely for entertainment purposes.]
MG: No, think about it. It'll be like a conceptual incubator - an
incubator for memes! We need an environment where they can grow,
propagate, evolve…
JW: But we already have that.
MG: The growth environment is too uniform - not enough competition.
We should get some contrasting viewpoints in here besides Hitchens - somebody
who can introduce some robust competition, or that might combine for some
hybrids.
JW: But what's wrong with leaving things the way they are now?
MG: As it stands there's not enough evolutionary pressure. We're wasting resources, because we don't know if they can survive
and propagate outside the lab. We should design it like each forum is culture,
though the memes can cross if they're robust enough. Think of a
collection of open petri dishes racked together in an incubator. We need
to do this, or something like it. People are demanding more consistent results.
JW: Dawkins would love it. I don't know, though. I don't
think Gates will go for it. There's a press liability issue, you know -
it's a company reputation thing. Too risky.
MG: Don't you have some contacts at the Washington Post? They don't
seem to care much about their reputation... [laughter]
JW: Maybe. But the IT people tell me data collection's a
bitch. Unless you can live with small samples, we'd need to redesign the
place from the ground up.
MG: That's actually a good thing. There are a few of the regulars
we’d be better off without. Like that
Ioz – it's like he's spreading bleach into the tide pool. We need to make the environment less "sticky" and shake a few of those old-timers off into blogland.
JW: Hey, you ever finish up with that special project you were working
on?
MG:
Yeah, it's done - interesting data. We’ve
got another underway though, and it has broader application. But if we're
in a hurry we could go ahead and, you know, "terminate" it... [laughter
fading off].