RE: Synereo: The First True Social Computer?

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Synereo: The First True Social Computer?

in synereo •  8 years ago 

you could write a book @dana-edwards, publish it on Steemit, Synereo and all the others Amazon, iTunes, etc. Your book would be freaking amazing. I have a topic for you: Do an analysis of all the decentralized networks and break it all down like you do in this article. It would be fascinating. My only worry would be that not enough highly intelligent people exist to consume your writing. I think there's a way to make it easily understandable to a great audience. I conceived of writing a book like an onion, with each layer becoming more complex as you peel it back. The first chapter is written for 95% of the population, the second for 90%, third for 85%, fourth for 80%, fifth for 75%, etc. The last chapter's difficulty is reserved for the .001% population, or those rare geniuses who inhabit a small square piece of land on planet earth. I think you're the one to do this new type of book. You could even run tests on the readibility index for each chapter, so it could be done mathematically. I fear you might get bored with writing the first ten chapters though.

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I have material for a book but I lost the laptop, hard drive melted. Fortunately, I posted some of it onto Steemit. If I decide to do something like a book, it's sensible to put it on Steemit first, chapter by chapter.

If you want us to team up on a Steemit book we can do that over email or over private communication. I can contribute chapters or co-author chapters which require technical or philosophical detail.

I'm interested. email me at [email protected]
Also, I wrote an analysis of how Synereo has solved two problems that currently plague Steemit: https://steemit.com/synereo/@stellabelle/2-problems-plaguing-steemit-that-synereo-has-already-solved
I would be interested in your analysis and if I could improve my post in any way. Thank you.

You did a good job with the post on Synereo, actually your post was more successful than mine so I should be looking to you for tips.

Depending on what you mean by "decentralized networks", a lot of book content could be gleaned from The Peer-to-Peer Foundation