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Five Years Ago Today, I Started Blogging

Five years ago today I started my blog. Lilia Efimova and David Gurteen encouraged me to do so because they thought it would fit my way of working. They were absolutely right.

In the past five years I have found myself on an accelerated path of learning. The world turned out to be full of interesting, inspiring, challenging, warm, and fun people, that I shared a lot of interests with.

In the past five years I have been privileged to witness ideas turn into companies, the writing of books, the coalescense of ideas into research and PhD's, all as result of the tremendously engaging conversations we build through our blogs. Being witness and part of that journey is an invaluable learning experience.

The past five years have helped earlier ideas and notions on learning, collaborating, creativity (some of those ideas dating back to primary school), take shape and actually turn into practice.

In the past five years the way I make sense of the world has changed dramatically. The number of connections to other people multiplied (and still does), the speed of change increased, and the volume of information exploded. But it is that same multitude of other people that keep that manageable.
You all are my filter, my outside-in lens that helps me make sense of the world. As a result newscasts seem late getting 'breaking news' to me, papers have lost the right to call themselves newspapers. As a result I started sharing more and more info about myself, my behaviour, my patterns. Because it is that sharing that helps make feedback loops, because sharing makes you part of a living network, because it makes both me and you better social filters for eachother.

And we are all still only playing with prototypes, when it comes to the tools we use to enhance our scope, our reach into the world, our ability to be in touch with eachother. I am sure these are still prototypes. When I look at tools like Jaiku, Plazes, Imity to bring our on-line social interaction into our physical environment. When I see how RFID, and its precursor the barcode (e.g. as in Aura) can help create a web of things. When I see the forays into ambient devices and displays, with digital photoframes, ambient lighting, and Nabaztag wifi-bunnies. When I see the incredibly fascinating attempts to lower the barrier to entry for production with e.g. FabLab, as much as we have done for sharing and publishing with social software. When I see that video and photo use is still in its infancy, with things like Photosynth, and multi-touch screens around the corner. When I see how we are making our first baby-steps into 3D environments. Then I see prototypes.

In all this I see prototypes that spell the evolutionary acceleration of diversity that comes with the discovery of a new unfilled realm of possibilities brought to us by digitalization and the increased levels of complexity of systems possible because of the increased connections between us. What cities did for us on regional and geographic scale, digitalization and internet are doing to us all over again. Globally. And it's starting to show.

I can't wait for what the next five years will bring us.
As a three year old I saw the world as an exciting place where treasures and wonderful things were hiding behind each tree and around each corner. I had lost that feeling for a long time, and refound it some eight years ago. For the past five years that sense of wonder was being fed by the cascading effects of this blog. It was and is being fed by you. You're to blame.

In random order: Lilia Efimova, David Gurteen, Jim McGee, Ross Mayfield, Gary Murphy, Jon Husband, Nancy White, Elmine Wijnia, Bryan Alexander, Roland Tanglao, Boris Mann, Felix Petersen, Sebastian Fiedler, Martin Roell, Thomas Burg, Phil Wolff, Marc Canter, Dave Pollard, Jack Vinson, Lee Lefever, Lee Bryant, Riccardo Cambiassi, Anne Bartlett-Bragg, Jyri Engestrom, Thomas Madsen-Mygdal, Colby Stuart, Jonathan Marks, Howard Rheingold, Sebastian Paquet, Stephanie Hendrick, Miguel Cornejo, Fernando Tricas, JJ Merelo, Anjo Anjewierden, Luis Suarez, Bev Trayner, Stuart Henshall, Dina Mehta, Barbara Ganley, Andy Boyd, Chris Messina, Johnnie Moore, Jack Yan, David Wilcox, Barbara Kieslinger, Ralf Klamma, Marc Smith, Denham Grey, Earl Mardle, Ed Mitchell, Gunnar Langemark, Henriette Weber-Andersen, Mark Wubben, Pierre Gorissen, Frank Meeuwsen, Peter Rukavina, Robert Paterson, Martin Dugage, Flemming Funch, Piers Young, Ralf Beuker, Gerrit Eicker, Gerrit Visser, Suw Charman, Stephanie Booth, Tim Bonnemann, and many many many many many more.

You're all to blame for this. You all rock. Thanks.

(This is the cake Elmine baked for me to celebrate ;) )

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Great list of bloggers, several of whom I've only met because of this medium. Lilia's writing was key in my own adoption of blogs. I never considered before your comment that sharing helps to improve one's feedback loops. This is a good point to emphasize for non-bloggers, or those considering the medium.

I too, hope to hit the five-year mark some day myself. Thanks for sharing.

Posted by: Harold Jarche at November 4, 2007 2:46 PM

Congratulations Ton.

Thanks for the 5 years up till now.
I hope you will go on and on and on getting inspired and inspiring us!

Posted by: Fred Zelders at November 4, 2007 3:01 PM

It has been a pleasure (and still is) to have been part of that filter. And unlike a regular filter, you yourself are also part of the filter of each and every particle that make up your filter. So thank you for that!

Posted by: Pierre at November 4, 2007 11:36 PM

Happy Blogthday, Ton!

Posted by: Phil Wolff at November 5, 2007 5:56 AM

Happy Blogaversary, Ton! I totally agree with your sentiments - they speak well for me (at just under 3.5 years on my latest blog!)

Posted by: Nancy White at November 5, 2007 6:58 AM

I wish I had a word for that "knowing of someone" through reading their blog, seeing them log in on Plazer and all the rest.. and sometimes meeting them in surprise places. It was mostly through you that I learned that new type of familiarity with "online people". It's great, isn't it!

Posted by: Bev Trayner at November 5, 2007 10:41 AM

@All, thanks!

@Bev, I call it 'contactivity' (the word is not coined by me but by Ron Dvir, but my use for it is different)

Posted by: Ton Zijlstra at November 5, 2007 11:38 AM

The blogosphere is richer for your work. Happy blogoversary, and many fine returns!

Posted by: Bryan Alexander at November 5, 2007 2:22 PM

Well done Ton, you and Lilia really helped turned me into Blogging.

Here's to the next 5

A

Posted by: Andy Boyd at November 5, 2007 2:22 PM

All the best Ton!

Posted by: jlori at November 5, 2007 5:44 PM

Congratulations Ton. Keep up the good work :)

Posted by: fernand0 at November 5, 2007 6:00 PM

Another anniversary down. Happy blogiversary, Ton!

Posted by: Jack Vinson at November 5, 2007 10:21 PM

Hi Ton,
Congratulations. What's so amazing to me is how so many of us approx five or so years ago started blogging and all connected. My post on the same subject will go up in hours. I too expect to watch the next five years with interest and with the use of my blog!
Cheers
Stuart

Posted by: Stuart Henshall at November 6, 2007 6:13 AM

Congratulations with this milestone Ton. You have been a source of inspiration to all of us. Thanx of being the role model that you are !!!

Posted by: Gerrit Visser at November 11, 2007 10:09 PM

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ton2small.jpg Weblog by Ton Zijlstra,
Enschede, Netherlands
I write about knowledge work and management, and the tools and strategies that help us navigate the networked world.
Contacting me is easy and appreciated:
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