Revision of Applied Mechanics in the Age of Web 2.0 from Thu, 2006-09-21 00:51
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The ASME International Applied Mechanics Division has about 5000 members. The number is too large for us to know each other individually, but too small for CNN to cover us in the Situation Room.
Then came the Internet. We have since been in touch through emails, and looked up each other on the Web. Many web pages created in 1990s, however, are static. For such a web page, the bottleneck is often the webmaster. He or she gets a request each time anyone wants to post anything. It is more like a broadcast than a web.
In recent years, there have been waves of new internet phenomena, such as Wikipedia, Real Simple Syndicates (RSS), open-source movement, and web logs (blogs). They are collectively known as Web 2.0.
At the meeting of the Executive Committee of the Division on 8 November 2005, in Orlardo, Florida, the Committee discussed how to exploit Web 2.0 to engage members of the Division. As the new member of the Committee, I was assigned to look into the matter.
Did I just use the word “engage”? This sounds prohibitively Web 1.0 like. The Excecutive Committee is in no position to create an attractive web page to engage you. The solution is you, everyone in the community of Applied Mechanics. A key attribute of Web 2.0 is participation.
In front of you is an experiment: Applied Mechanics News (AMN), a blog of news and views of interest to the international community of Applied Mechanics. Everyone can be a contributor. All you need to do is to register. As most news and views in AMN are not restricted to a single country or a single organization, the contributors will be international, and need not be ASME members. At the end of the post, you can add comments.
As a reader, you can display the latest headlines of AMN, along with the headlines in New York Times, Science, Nature, etc., using a start page. No more email spam. You can glance at the headlines of sources of your own choice, whenever you like, using any computer around the world. Each headline also links to a full article.
This blog uses an open-source software called Drupal. I was introduced to it by my teenage sons. Teens are the pioneers of new technology adoption. Soon we will all use Blog, just as we have been using Word. Once this simple tool is in the hands of everybody, the only thing that really matters is content. And that means you. You are both the producer and consumer of a valuable thing: the content that is of and for the internationl community of Applied Mechanics. Teens cannot do this for us. Nor can CNN.
Notes
- This entry was adapted from an early one posted in January 2006.
- Web 2.0 according to Tim O’Reilly, the founder and CEO of O'Reilly Media, a publisher of computer books. He coined the term Web 2.0 in early 2004.
- We are the web. Each time we post an entry, or just make a hyperlink, we help to create a dynamic web. A perspective on the history and future of the Internet by Kevin Kelly, the founding executive editor of Wired magazine.
- Zhigang Suo's blog
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