Pifò ekosistèm tankou magazen app yo se swa louvri oswa òganize. Men, poukisa pa nou ka gen tou de? Oke, nou kapab — tout sa ou bezwen se twa vèb: pibliye, jwenn, ak tankou. Ki ale pou teknoloji ak tout lòt bagay.
Anjeneral gen de chwa lè ou vle pibliye yon app: pibliye li nan yon bagay tankou iOS App Store la (kote moun ap jwenn app ou, men Apple generale kapab refize soumèt ou) oswa jis mete l 'sou sit entènèt ou (kote li fasil pibliye, men gen nan pa gen garanti nenpòt moun ki ap wè li.) Not the greatest set of options.
Isn’t there a way to combine the strengths of both of these to make for the best possible experience for both publishers and consumers? I think there is. It’s called an open and curated ecosystem. Let’s take a look at:
- What open ak curated ecosystems are
- Examples of open and curated ecosystems
- What you need to make an open and curated ecosystem
- Examples of these ecosystems beyond just technology
and see if we can discover something about the power of crowdsourcing, innovation, and the three verbs pibliye, jwenn, ak tankou.
Curated vs. open ecosystems
The iOS App Store and open internet, among others, yo se app ecosystems — places where apps can be published and found. And I think the big factors that differentiate one ecosystem from another are whether the ecosystem is open, where anyone can publish apps and whether it is curated, where the best apps rise to the top and users are assured quality apps. That’s the major difference between the iOS store and the internet at large, which I mentioned earlier.
Let’s look at examples of curated and open ecosystems and what differentiates them.