Archive for the ‘People’ Category

Practical Imaginings Symposium – Learning in the Digital Age

Thursday, February 23rd, 2006

Last weekend, I was privileged to participate in a weekend Symposium in Waiheke. It was convened by Lisa Galarneau and John Eyles of the EON Foundation to further the Neosophy notion that they have been exploring. It was a delightful and stimulating experience. The venue, setting and food were wonderful and the participants were diverse, stimulating and lively.

The question that we explored was the relevance of the digital age to the five competencies that have been cooked up by the OECD and are being adopted into the NZ curriculum.

Here are some things that I learned on this weekend…

Not everyone is as optimistic about the online world as I am. To some people, the idea of deep human contact occurring online just doesn’t make sense. To them, the idea of people substituting online relationships for physical ones is appalling. Collaboration in MMORPGs seems like people “ganging up and killing things”.

I got to thinking about the notion of positive feedback received from a computer (say in a single player game) being somehow as nourishing as that received from people. It seems slightly shocking, even to me. What about the self-esteem building that can occur shooting baskets in the yard or hitting a fence-post with a stone? Of course, the inanimate objects are simply mediating social phenomena. Stone-throwing was once (and in many places still is) a highly valued survival skill. Shooting baskets can provide entry to the good team which then gangs up to try to beat the others.

Have you ever noticed how cut-throat sport is? Sure there’s collaboration within each team but there is no second prize at the end of the game. It often horrifies me how even kids’ teams will keep racking up goals when they are obviously mismatched with their opponents. And it horrifies me, the callousness with which players sacrifice pawns and even bishops in the abstraction of war on the chessboard.

To me, the gore of killing monsters in a computer game is actually less shocking than some of those things.

I am not an unqualified optimist, however. I know that psyberspace is a boundaryless and uncertain place. I know that inhumanity can occur here as much as humanity can. One area that particularly concerns me is the shortage of public space on the Web. OK, I can blog here and you can come and go. This is pretty close to public. My photos, however are on flickr and I don’t know that I could get them out. OK, I’ve got copies but not of my tags. My daughter spends lost of time on MSN where she has photos, blog posts and message archives (though I don’t think she can access those). To her it’s all free and just works. What is the price that she pays?

I want to use our software to build public spaces, a commons on the Web. I want it to be as easy to take your content out as it is to put it in. I want people to stay because they want to and not because they are locked in.

OK, there are ideas for some other posts here but this is what I have returned from the Symposium thinking.

Jane Kirk Spears 1960-2005: Goodbye, My Love

Monday, August 1st, 2005

My partner Jane died in her sleep on the 23rd of July. The evening before, we saw a movie and then surfed its reviews online, ate and talked and shared our love together until we slept. We had been together only two years and our love was growing every day. They were the happiest two years of my life. This last week has been the saddest. At the same time, it has been an exultant celebration of love, the love between Jane and me and the love of all my family, friends and workmates and all of Jane’s family, friends and workmates both for Jane and for me.

Today, I ease myself towards work. I can remember some of what I am doing here.

There are many photos of Jane. I am writing a little about my process in my personal blog.

Jane, your love of people will always be an inspiration to me in my work here. Your commitment to adult learning and literacy, and Treaty-based organisation, and the vitality that you brought to all your relationships, will resonate on in me. As I experience the pain of your loss, I continue to feel the warmth of your love inside me. Your love and your life will be resources to me as I continue to risk building new relationships and new love in this World.

Collaboration Software Clients

Monday, September 6th, 2004

Thank you for the mention in Shared Spaces, Michael – and for the link to your white paper on Collaboration Software Clients. It accurately describes the frustrations that I experience daily as I juggle the multiple clients I use for collaboration.

I await your proposed architecture for a super-client with interest. How can such a thing achieve sufficient interoperability with server-side collaboration technologies?

Is it not more likely that persistent collaboration contexts will be constructed organically out of ad hoc connections made using heterogenous clients? The skills and administration overheads of selecting and running multiple clients are high but so is the flexibility.

eDemocracry

Friday, July 16th, 2004

Some eDemocracy links from Tom Smith’s blog:

Designing for Civil Society – David Wilcox on technology, engagement, governance.

Reengagea blog written by Jonathan Briggs and Seb Dance about UK politics, citizenship and participation.

Tom Smith

Friday, July 16th, 2004

I just had a meeting with Tom Smith of Other Media has been working with Ultralab to facilitate online collaboration between folks in NZ and in the UK using blogs.

Other Media are website builders who get involved in a variety of projects such as Hyper Island School of New Media Design in Sweden.

Tom has worked on think.com and spinalot and an online living newspaper project.