140 lines
7.7 KiB
Plaintext
140 lines
7.7 KiB
Plaintext
Numb. --> 5
|
||
Title --> What is the ENA?
|
||
From --> RICK
|
||
Left --> 28-DEC-85 11:33 PM
|
||
|
||
THE ENA VISION:
|
||
What IS ENA?
|
||
Edited by Stefanie Kott
|
||
|
||
ENA is an organization that grew out of the First Intersystem Symposium
|
||
conducted by Lisa Carlson, during which Lisa took ("pmrted") comments from on
|
||
network to the other until, finally, people from many places began to feel they
|
||
knew each other. In April 1985, 50 of those people representing MANY networks
|
||
came from all over the country to meet in NYC. And ENA was born. Since then,
|
||
although the organization officially "meets" on Unison, a growing number of
|
||
systems get reports of ENA activities through a growing number of "porters," who
|
||
download items considered interesting and then upload them to the system they
|
||
call "home."
|
||
|
||
As is expected in a diverse group of people, some of whom have never met,
|
||
there are differing notions of an organization and what it should be and do.
|
||
|
||
When, in a discussion on Unison about what ENA is (in "ENA Organization
|
||
Talk"), Victor Carson suggested that it is a SIG (Special Interest Group), a
|
||
number of explosive responsive followed.
|
||
|
||
For some if not all of the people who met in NYC in April, ENA is a rather
|
||
serious venture to promote the new medium of computer conferencing (cc) and t
|
||
deal with the problems inherent in it now. To many it is important to deal with
|
||
substantive issues--such as transmission problems, protocols, software,
|
||
intersystem links (either software or human)--at the same time that we
|
||
accomplish the first online intersystem network, intended to serve as an example
|
||
of the potential of this medium to facilitate global communications o
|
||
associations, movements and business groups.
|
||
|
||
For people who were not in NYC in April--people who became curious either
|
||
through Mike Greenly's "Face To Face" conference on Parti on The Source, or
|
||
through some reference to or conference about ENA that they found on one of the
|
||
many online networks represented by ENA members--there were varying ideas about
|
||
what ENA is. Some newcomers put their "own personal vision onto it," as Paul
|
||
Bunnell said, but even the "Original 50" had different ideas.
|
||
|
||
Paul explained what he feels "is a dichotomy of background here," which he
|
||
thinks "puts a strain on direction, purpose, interaction, organization, etc.
|
||
There are the business-oriented, independent telecommunications
|
||
corporate/government consultant types --- and there are 'the rest of us.' This
|
||
is not necessarily good or bad."
|
||
|
||
In his own personal vision of ENA, it never occurred to him "that the ENA's
|
||
intended focus was primarily to serve the business and 'professional' networker
|
||
community." To this Stefanie later responded that she doesn't "thin we formed
|
||
just to serve the business and professional communities, tho I do think that is
|
||
important." She said, "I think we formed to help any online organization
|
||
accomplish its goals through networking. That could be a peace movement, a
|
||
research team worldwide, a business thinktank, a select society, or a social
|
||
club."
|
||
|
||
Susanna Opper referred to a comment by Victor Carson's that ENA members are
|
||
the 'power users' of CC," and she agreed. "BUT," she said (comparing what ENA
|
||
is doing to a SIG), "the ways in which we use the technology differ radically
|
||
It's like trying to get a teenager and a telemarketer to agree on an association
|
||
for telephone users."
|
||
|
||
Sherwin Levinson then pointed out that SIG is a fine acronym for what we ar
|
||
doing, but that the name has received bad press (sometimes deserved). He
|
||
suggested that in one fell swoop ENA could be serious, respected AND a SIG
|
||
(which is an interesting challenge for those inclined to bring SIG the
|
||
credibility of a "lobby").
|
||
|
||
Susanna then shared her hopes for the medium with us: "I think we're on to
|
||
something revolutionary here. Not CC or EN [Electronic Networking] or whatever
|
||
by itself, but the whole concept of communicating electronically. W take it for
|
||
granted, but remember that most of the rest of the world can't even imagine what
|
||
is commonplace to us.
|
||
|
||
"My call is for a new type of organization that will allow vendors and users
|
||
to work together to represent this new technology to the world," Susann said.
|
||
|
||
Stefanie supported Susanna's notion of "allowing vendors and users together to
|
||
work to represent this new technology to the world." She told a "parable" that
|
||
led her to think that if ENA is going to get business support and fundin so that
|
||
we can do the things we hope to do, we'll have to appear reasonably serious.
|
||
The parable is this: "The issue of making the [ENA] newsletter an attractive
|
||
venture that would merit business support has come up [on EIES]. W were told
|
||
that in the minds of businessmen with venture capital, many of our goals appear
|
||
to be in the "hobbyist" realm."
|
||
|
||
Stefanie then pointed out that there might be may far-flung benefits for those
|
||
of us who take ENA seriously when she said, "In the long run, once conferencing
|
||
is recognized by business as a viable future medium of communications, I _think_
|
||
transmission and protocol issues ought to be even more seriously addressed . .
|
||
. and telelaw [legal issues that impinge on cc] issues ought to gain wider
|
||
attention. I also think people who are currently involved in today's issues and
|
||
technology should find new job paths down the line, if interested. And once we
|
||
have massive usage of the medium, I think online and transmission costs ought to
|
||
go down."
|
||
|
||
She also said that "as big business gets involved, an organization that
|
||
includes experts and people in touch with the central issues within the mediu
|
||
(ENA) should prove attractive to businesspeople as an information and resourc
|
||
group."
|
||
|
||
Paul pointed out that ENA "should exist to serve the cause of *NETWORKING*,
|
||
not networking for a particular category of people." Stefanie added that "no
|
||
matter what side of the fence you're on [no matter what you use cc for], this
|
||
venture (ENA) could be challenging, fun and/or future-important to everyone, and
|
||
this medium could be fruitful for just about anyone who wants to communicate
|
||
about anything."
|
||
|
||
Paul said, "Who would have thought, back when the the telegraph was invented,
|
||
that one day the world would by 'wired' and a voice-terminal installed in almost
|
||
every home in the industrialized world? Most of that wor has been done for us.
|
||
I think we're trying to push the system up to the threshhold of the next quantum
|
||
leap." (Well said, Paul!)
|
||
|
||
About the challenges that face us, Susanna said, "There _are_ some differen
|
||
interests here. I actually expected these differences to be very apparent at
|
||
the New York Symposium. But they weren't--probably because we were aligned o
|
||
the larger interest we held in common--that of the development and evolution of
|
||
electronic networking.
|
||
|
||
"Personally, I don't think these differences are trivial. My vision for EN
|
||
would be a place in which all could co-exist. But I think it will take some
|
||
skill in building an organization in which all can
|
||
|
||
so, but it will require (I think) an alignment on a vision--we will need to
|
||
find a destination which we are all interested in reaching. Can we do that?
|
||
Don't know, but I think it's worth a try."
|
||
|
||
Norman Kurland then reminded us that we have a lot of work to do, so we
|
||
stopped philosophizing and started moving on.
|
||
|
||
For those of you reading about ENA for the first time, be advised: There is
|
||
no one today more qualified to be in ENA than anyone else. We are all relativ
|
||
novices; who can be an expert pioneer? If you believe in the future of this
|
||
medium and want to work with an organization that can make a difference, please
|
||
join ENA and help us try.
|
||
|
||
Call The Works BBS - 1600+ Textfiles! - [914]/238-8195 - 300/1200 - Always Open
|
||
|