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In a computer system, there are three components: hardware, software and orgware. But what exactly is this orgware.

2006-10-28 01:35:58 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous in Computers & Internet Other - Computers

4 answers

An ORGware community is designed to be "Dean Done Right". It includes the specific policy formulation tools that Robin seeks, plus a way to bring others into the active community of thought and power:

Anyone who registers at an ORGware site can form their own sub-site (team) spontaneously, which inherits all the capabilities of the main site: they get their own Dean-Campaign-in-a-Box."
Members invite friends to join their team, which has a main page, a shared blog, an "About Us" area and a "What's New" area. There are invitation links everywhere, so members of the team can invite friends to comment on a blog post, come to a meetup, collaborate on a project, come vote on Tuesday, etc. There they discuss what's important to them, the best ideas etc. We think we can do this more elegantly than others, but those two steps get us no farther than the current tools do: All hat and no cattle:


"A vision without a task is but a dream,
A task without a vision is drudgery,
A vision and a task is the hope of the world."
Here's where (we think) the going gets interesting: an ORGware shared blog is also displayed as a threaded discussion forum, to facilitate the transition from group blather to focused work.
All posts and comments can be rated by any member of the site. After a while, the community identifies which of its members are contributing the best thinking.
The team can morph at will into a focused policy development project, with postings limited to the most highly-rated members. In policy development mode, these newly-designated "elites" are charged with transforming the values of the group into specific policy, platforms, ballot initiatives, etc. Their work is still public and the public continues to grade their work and comment on their posts.
After specific policies and plans are agreed on by the community's anointed experts, the community puts its political muscle behind their shared vision.
They declare, publicly or privately, that they have an appointment to vote for the measure on election day, at a known place at a specific time.
They agree to respond to an audit of who is committed to this measure or candidate.
A public accounting firm queries the committed supporters by email and publishes the tangible evidence of the community's commitment.
I call it the Vote Delivery System. It's a set of straightforward tools by which people who are seriously pissed off or slightly uneasy add their little bit of thought or hope or evangelism or money and then watch every little expression spin the flywheel of extreme democracy (PDF) just a little faster:

Copied from the site listed below ......

2006-10-28 02:05:49 · answer #1 · answered by ? 6 · 0 0

1

2017-02-20 10:04:49 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

There are 2 types of componets: hardware and software
Software is divided in:
-freeware
-adware
-abandonware
-etc

2006-10-28 01:42:31 · answer #3 · answered by George C 2 · 0 0

Orgware is what you use to attract members and attention to anything you care about. In another word orgware is an organization methods.

2006-10-28 01:44:30 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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