Two sides to the coin.


Not too long ago, quite a number of researchers were studying online discussion forums. They may even still be doing so, though these seem to have dropped out of the limelight as newer interactive tools have upstaged them. Many of these studied noted a distinction between two different elements of the postings in these forums - content elements and process elements. Researchers emphasized that successful online forums were able to blend these two elements, such that a posting not only conveyed information about the subject under discussion, but also information about the person who wrote the post and about his or her relationship to the group and the way it was developing. An entry in an encyclopedia, by definition, strives to convey only content elements. That's totally legitimate. After all, we're dealing with an encyclopedia and not with a personal blog. But that's precisely why, if I can choose to write in only one of these frameworks, the supposedly neutral voice of the Wikipedia loses out. Without the other, process-side, to the coin, it's simply not that interesting.



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