Wednesday, November 29, 2006

Reading List: The Starfish and the Spider

An afternoon in Bartlesville, before the rain come


Buku ini menarik dan membahas sesuatu yang menjadi keyakinan saya selama ini. Yaitu bagaimana gerakan Open Source telah mendobrak kebiasaan-kebiasaan lama di dunia ini. Prinsip kebebasan, kreativitas, berbagi, saling menghargai, ternyata mampu menembus batas komersial dan bisnis. Tulisan saya sebelumnya soal Big Bang Internet juga menyoal soal ini.

Tadinya mikir, beli ah bukunya. Tapi mikir lagi, kalau kira-kira isinya udah tahu, buat apa ya? Sok tahu banget hehehe ... :-P

Reading List: The Starfish and the Spider (Ori Brafman and Rod A. Beckstrom)
Review by Lucas Conley - fastcompany.com

It sounds like the opening line to a bad joke: What do the Apache Indians, Craigslist, Skype, and Al Qaeda have in common? The answer goes to the heart of a rewardingly simple new book: They're all decentralized organizations that have bedeviled the established hierarchy hell-bent on crushing them.

The Starfish and the Spider is about the open-source revolution, a trend that authors Ori Brafman and Rod A. Beckstrom demonstrate is simultaneously dismantling many established industries while harnessing the creativity of the masses to generate new ones. (The title refers to the authors' metaphor that a starfish and a spider appear to be structured similarly, but if you crush a spider's head, it dies. Cut a starfish in half, and you'll end up with two.) Open source has spread far beyond its recent successes with file sharing and software. You can now find cooperatively developed art, literature, even religion.

What Brafman and Beckstrom attempt to add to the discussion is a sense of how you can harness the power of leaderless, decentralized movements. Their effort has mixed results. The authors do an excellent job of illustrating how cooperative networks--such as the Apaches prior to the early 1900s, or Al Qaeda today--benefit from operating without a central hierarchy. But they can't exactly explain how you can do it. Ironically, the best they can do is explain how to interrupt or redirect a starfish network when it's chewing away at profits. The U.S. government finally bested the Apaches, for instance, when it provided its leaders with cattle, a form of wealth that reshaped the amorphous, nomadic tribes into easily manageable hierarchies.

Wealth, it turns out, is the elephant in the room. As the authors put it, "The moment you introduce property rights into the equation [be they intellectual, physical, or otherwise], everything changes: The starfish organization turns into a spider." As a consolation, they make a case for the viability of hybrid entities. Think eBay or Intuit --firms that channel customers' and employees' bottom-up efforts into hierarchical businesses. They may be the best one can hope for. Brafman and Beckstrom make this much clear: If you're the head of a spider, look out for the starfish.

Combine Cluetrain's storming-the-gates passion with… examples like Linus Torvalds's Linux and its place in the open-source revolution to get… Starfish, which needed more Linuxes but whose underlying ideas ring true.

2 comments:

silverring said...

waksss... jadi....?? oh "nasib"......

silverring said...

Bad news for me...
The Blogger in beta program is going to start out small, so only a low percentage of people who log in to Blogger will see the option to switch over. If you're one of them, you'll see a blue box in the sidebar of your dashboard highlighting the new Blogger in beta.

Unfortunately I'm not one of them. Bisanya create new acct. on Blogger Beta, which means new blog, which I don't think so... :(