99 lines
6.0 KiB
Plaintext
99 lines
6.0 KiB
Plaintext
Protocol
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BICORDER
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[Protocol]
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[Analyst]
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[Standpoint]
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[Timestamp]
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DESIGN
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explicit < [|||||||||] > implicit
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precise < [|||||||||] > interpretive
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institutional < [|||||||||] > vernacular
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documenting < [|||||||||] > enabling
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static < [|||||||||] > malleable
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technical < [|||||||||] > social
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universal < [|||||||||] > particular
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durable < [|||||||||] > ephemeral
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ENTANGLEMENT
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macro < [|||||||||] > micro
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sovereign < [|||||||||] > subsidiary
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self-enforcing < [|||||||||] > enforced
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abstract < [|||||||||] > embodied
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obligatory < [|||||||||] > voluntary
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flocking < [|||||||||] > swarming
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defensible < [|||||||||] > exposed
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monopolistic < [|||||||||] > pluralistic
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EXPERIENCE
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sufficient < [|||||||||] > insufficient
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crystallized < [|||||||||] > contested
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trust-evading < [|||||||||] > trust-inducing
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predictable < [|||||||||] > emergent
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exclusion < [|||||||||] > inclusion
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Kafka < [|||||||||] > Whitehead
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dead < [|||||||||] > alive
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ANALYSIS
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hardness < [|||||||||] > softness
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polarized < [|||||||||] > centrist
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not useful < [|||||||||] > very useful
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GLOSSARY
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| Term | Description |
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| -------------- | ----------- |
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| abstract | Participants learn the protocol by studying it intellectually |
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| alive | Actively utilized by relevant participants |
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| centrist | The analyst tended toward readings at the middle of the gradients |
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| contested | Content and meaning are disputed or under debate |
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| crystallized | Content and meaning are settled and widely agreed upon |
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| dead | Not actively utilized by relevant participants |
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| defensible | Strong boundaries and protections against external influence |
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| documenting | The primary purpose is to document or validate activity that is occurring |
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| durable | Designed to be persistently available |
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| embodied | Participants learn the protocol by physically practicing it |
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| emergent | Produces unexpected or novel outcomes |
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| enabling | The primary purpose is to enable activity that might not happen otherwise |
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| enforced | Rules require external enforcement by authorities or institutions |
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| ephemeral | Designed to vanish when no longer needed |
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| exclusion | The protocol creates barriers or excludes certain participants |
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| explicit | The design is stated explicitly somewhere that is accessible to participants |
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| exposed | Weak boundaries and vulnerable to external influence |
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| flocking | Coordination occurs through centralized direction or direct mimicry |
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| hardness | The protocol tends toward properties characterized by hardness |
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| implicit | The design is not stated explicitly but is learned by participants in another way |
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| inclusion | The protocol reduces barriers and includes diverse participants |
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| institutional | Design occurs through processes that involve powerful institutions and widespread recognition as normative |
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| insufficient | Does not, on its own, adequately meet the needs and goals of participants |
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| interpretive | The design is ambiguous, allowing participants a wide range of interpretation |
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| Kafka | Fosters experiences of absurd complexity, alienation, and powerlessness |
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| macro | Operates at large scales involving many participants or broad scope |
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| malleable | Designed to be changed by participants according to evolving needs |
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| micro | Operates at small scales with few participants or narrow scope |
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| monopolistic | Excludes the use of other protocols that might be available to adopt |
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| not useful | The bicorder was not useful or relevant for analyzing this protocol |
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| obligatory | Participation is compulsory for a certain class of agents |
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| particular | Addressed to a specific community |
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| pluralistic | Interoperates with other protocols and does not exclude their use |
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| polarized | The analyst tended toward more extreme high or low readings |
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| precise | The design is specified with a high level of precision that eliminates ambiguity in implementation |
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| predictable | Produces expected and consistent outcomes |
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| self-enforcing | Rules are automatically enforced through its own mechanisms |
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| social | Primarily concerned with interactions among people or groups |
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| softness | The protocol tends toward properties characterized by softness |
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| sovereign | A distinctive operating logic, not subject to any other entity |
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| static | Designed to be as fixed and unchanging as possible |
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| subsidiary | An operating logic under the control of a particular entity |
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| sufficient | Adequately meets the needs and goals of participants |
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| swarming | Coordination occurs through distributed interactions without central direction |
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| technical | Primarily concerned with interactions among technologies |
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| trust-evading | Minimizes the need for trust among participants |
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| trust-inducing | Relies on or cultivates trust among participants |
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| universal | Addressed to a global audience |
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| vernacular | Design occurs through evolving, peer-to-peer community interactions in order to suit participant-defined goals |
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| very useful | The bicorder was very useful and relevant for analyzing this protocol |
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| voluntary | Participation in the protocol is optional and not coerced |
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| Whitehead | Enables participants to carry out desired activities with less work or thought |
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