18 March 2008

Brian Eno & Clay Shirky: The Power of Networks

Please excuse me while I have a little tidy up. This blog post is in the process of being shunted over to my company blog.

Please head over there to read & comment on this post:
www.theawesomeweb.co.uk/blog/brian-eno-clay-shirky-the-power-of-networks.

Brian Eno & Clay ShirkyMy take on Monday’s Power of Networks talk at the ICA.

Some other documentation that I’m aware of:

Mark AM Kramer recorded it!
Blackbeltjones’s notes

Also these people blogged about Shirky’s talk at the RSA on Tuesday:
The Guardian blog
Joshua March

Brian Eno: We are much less informed now than we were in the 60s.

Clay Shirky: We’ve replaced planning with co-ordination.
e.g., ‘txt me when you’re nearby’

Brian Eno: Surely the government is spending millions figuring out online communities, assessing the risks and generally monitoring them.
Me: [chuckle]

Clay Shirky: In high-freedom environments, people use social tools for fun. In low-freedom environments they use them for political action.
Me: This is the stuff that gets me really excited. I’m going to write a dedicated post to do it justice. Watch this space :)

Clay Shirky: ‘Everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows’ is the key to producing a political movement…
‘Everyone knows’ = well, I know about it at least
‘Everyone knows that everyone knows’ = wow, other people DEFINITELY know it too
‘Everyone knows that everyone knows that everyone knows’ = now it’s in the public domain we’d better do something about it!

Brian Eno: The Microsoft model will fail. The Linux model will succeed.

Clay Shirky: A new corporate law is required. One that follows the creative commons principal that defines groups that are not commercially motivated.
Me: Also, a new approach to the concept of shareholders. Shareholders as taking a creative rather than financial interest somehow perhaps.

Brian Eno: We live in a much more dangerous and oppressive climate than we think. In a few years we will expect for Government to have access to our Facebook profiles.
Me: [more chuckles]

Clay Shirky: ‘Transparent conspiracy’ is a political tool of the future. In other words, you may as well announce collective action on a blog cos the authorities will find out anyway.
Me: Love the phrase ‘transparent conspiracy’.

Clay Shirky: The Masai all carry two things: a spear and a cell phone.
Me: !!!

Both agreed that the BEST thing about the web is it gives people a voice.
Before the mid-late 90s if you wanted to say something in public you couldn’t. There was no voice for the citizen. Now there is. So there.

7 March 2008

The end of email?

Please excuse me while I have a little tidy up. This blog post is in the process of being shunted over to my company blog.

Please head over there to read & comment on this post:
www.theawesomeweb.co.uk/blog/the-end-of-email.

Could we be witnessing baby-steps towards more appropriate personal communications methods?

We can spend up to half our working day going through our inbox, leaving us tired, frustrated and unproductive.

A recent study found one-third of office workers suffer from e-mail stress.

E-mail is ruining my life! (bbc.co.uk)

The article refers to Deloitte’s short-lived ‘no-internal-email-Wednesday’ which it reckons has made staff think more carefully about the email they send and whether there is a more appropriate communication method such as picking up the phone or talking face-to-face.

I agree, we should be more considered in our communications but our places of work on the whole haven’t even begun to embrace tools like IM, RSS, collaborative working, online project management, social networks etc etc.

My personal email traffic (both in- and out-bound) has significantly decreased since engaging with some of these tools. I refuse to subscribe to email lists – choosing RSS instead, and I use IM (if I can) to have quick conversations with friends. I use Google Groups to manage extra-curricular projects, Twitter keeps me in touch with friends and acquaintances and I use Facebook to organise my social life.

If only I could (or, more appropriately, was allowed to…) work more like this in my 9-5!

31 January 2008

How Facebook Exposed Us All as Freaks

Please excuse me while I have a little tidy up. This blog post is in the process of being shunted over to my company blog.

Please head over there to read & comment on this post:
www.theawesomeweb.co.uk/blog/how-facebook-exposed-us-all-as-freaks.

A beautifully written, funny, cynical take on how social sites are ripping apart our carefully constructed online personae.

The Internet permits the happy fracture of our messy selves into more acceptable (or at least internally consistent) personae…

Soc-sites are in the business of assembling a full picture of the meatspace you, using the crumbs you’ve dropped on MySpace, Match, and Megarotic until Humpty Dumpty is put together again.

Wired

I say embrace the concept of meatspace you online, surely it’s only us digital immigrants who feel so uncomfortable about it?

16 January 2008

Facebook asked to pull Scrabulous

Please excuse me while I have a little tidy up. This blog post is in the process of being shunted over to my company blog.

Please head over there to read & comment on this post:
www.theawesomeweb.co.uk/blog/facebook-asked-to-pull-scrabulous.

Facebook has been asked to remove the Scrabulous game from its website by the makers of Scrabble…

“I didn’t have any Scrabble sets when I started playing Scrabulous a few months ago. Since I got hooked on that I have bought two sets.”

bbc.co.uk

Sounds like a case of sour grapes on the part of Hasbro and Mattel if you ask me.

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