Categories
Net Culture

How micro-fame will make people undertake more tiny miracles…

Why would someone built a model of the Enterprise out of Lego? Or perhaps I should ask (because I spent most of my early teenage years building Lego models of TV and movie space-crafts and vehicles) why would anyone decide to make a scale model of the Enterprise, investing considerable money and effort in the process and putting detailed pictures of the whole process online? I think the answer would be something like micro-fame.

Before this weird online culture fusion called the internet happened, individuals were forced to seek the approval of their peers by conforming or by accomplishing things that their real-life friends and family thought were valuable. This low-level success was based on a narrowly focused set of criteria set by your upbringing, your neighbourhood, your school or job… And if you wanted to take it further then you were forced to somehow breach the membrane that separated the ‘ordinary’ from the ‘famous’ – something that only the incredibly talented or incredibly lucky could do…

This made the world relatively predictable – relatively safe. Ideas were constantly created and constantly abandoned as ever, but there was the continual encouragement of environment not to be one of the people who did anything ‘odd’. The internet has changed all that. There’s now an audience for the strangest and smallest little projects. All the disconnected people around the world who might find a Lego Enterprise cool are suddenly connected up. It’s worth making that tiny little thing you thought would be quite cool once, it’s worth writing the dumb ideas down that you thought no one would ever listen to. Because the odds of finding people who will care about them, will gel and relate to you, will celebrate your idea or project and make you famous (tiny-fame, micro-idol), is radically improved. The future will be full of dumb projects, tiny ideas, silly concepts – each celebrated by their own bespoke fan-base… And human creativity will have taken a massive leap forward…

Categories
Random

Bottle-necking and diseconomies of scale….

Here’s a not-particularly-good example of how diseconomies of scale can interfere with the practices of those who would abuse the network and transform it into something it was never supposed to be – a broadcast medium… The BBC News article Computer viruses face slow down (a couple of days old now) talks about how creating bottle-necks in the network can interfere with the spread of computer viruses. A virus is – I suppose I could argue – a weird entity that changes bits of the network into broadcast nodes, eventually bringing it all down as a direct consequence…

Categories
Social Software

On democracy and online community…

Here’s a really useful piece of writing by Robert Putnam, author of the astounding Bowling Alone about the decline in social capital in America:

Anonymity and the absence of social cues inhibit social control – that is, after all, why we have the secret ballot – and thus cyberspace seems in some respects more democratic … Research has shown that on-line discussions tend to be more frank and egalitarian than face-to-face meetings … Some of the allegedly greater democracy in cyberspace is based more on hope and hype than in careful research. The political culture of the Internet, at least in its early stages, is astringently libertarian, and in some respects cyberspace represents a Hobbesian state of nature, not a Lockean one. As Peter Kollock and Marc Smith, two of the more thoughtful observers of community on the internet, observe, “It is widely believed and hoped that the ease of communicating and interacting online will lead to a flourishing of democratic institutions, heralding a new and vital arena of public discourse. But to date, most online groups have the structure of either an anarchy [if unmoderated] or a dictatorship [if moderated]”

This is particularly relevant to the ongoing debate I’m still having with Cory Doctorow and to my thinking about the inherent politics of message-boards and online communities.

Categories
Random

A picture of Tom, yesterday…

My friend Fenner is getting married, and he’s having a stag weekend abroad that I can’t go to. So he and I met up with mutual friend Nick yesterday to kind of see him off. We went to Nick’s club, which was closed. And then to a restaurant that Nick chose, but then rejected because there were no hamburgers. Eventually we found a Mexican place with cocktails. So I drank quite a few, and we talked of lasers in the Antarctic, mermaids with irritated nipples and the benefits of the “Breakfast Margarita”, a glorious concept that puts pink grapefruit juice into the standard recipe making it eminently suitable for calming the nerves before that early-morning meeting. Not that I’d ever do that, obviously.

When we finally parted company four hours later, I was a little drunk and excitable. I met another Nick in Soho and we wandered up to the Yard, where this photo was taken. Then it was off to the cinema to see L.I.E. where I managed to embarrass Nick by pointing at people (before the film) and saying in a stage whisper, “Do you think he’s a paederast? No? How about him? He looks like a paederast…” Some people have no sense of humour… Oh and I saw a guy in a bar who made me double-take. So if you were out in Rupert Street yesterday evening and you were wearing a grey t-shirt with a kind of laced-up front and you have a little beard tuft in the middle of your chin, then Hello, my name is Tom – can I buy you a drink? is what I meant to say…

Tom Coates 2002

Categories
Random

The XML feeds of everyone I read via NetNewsWire…

For anyone who uses NetNewsWire or a similar rss/rdf reader or is interested in the sites that I read on a daily basis – here’s a complete list of the feeds that I check each day: ( blogdex: recent ), BBC Technology, Ben Hammersley, BlackBeltJones Work, BoingBoing.net, CityofSound, diveintomark.org, ext | circ, Google Weblog, Google News Search: Gay, Hypermedia and Virtual Communities, iamcal.com, Interconnected.org, kottke.org, LinkMachineGo, LoFoTo, maccentral, megnut, metafilter, minor 9th, Mo Morgan, Radio Free Blogistan, Rushkoff.blog, Scripting.com, tomalak.org, Wired, Write The Web. Or you can download the whole list.

Categories
Random

Found images… One for the geeks…

The first in a series of found images – stumbled upon without significant context… This one being for the geeks in the audience…

Categories
Random

What was said… And what was meant?

I met someone for lunch today. And he said I wasn’t like he was expecting at all. He said I seemed more naive than he’d thought I’d be… Which I think was a compliment, but I’m not quite sure… He said I was taller than the person he’d mistaken for me in the pub with the barbie-dolls on the walls, which I think was a compliment but I’m not quite sure… He wasn’t quite like I thought he’d be either. But he was charming, intelligent and very good company.

Categories
Random

Oh the humanity…

I work with this guy. He’s wearing a jelly ring on his nose. It’s got “Lord of the Rings” branding on it. Earlier today I tried to draw a little red patch on his hair with a white-board marker when he wasn’t looking.

Categories
Random

Two Lord of the Rings links before bed…

Right-ho. I’m off to bed in a minute, but before I go I thought a couple of nice Lord of the Rings links might compensate for all the obsessively technical stuff I’ve been forcing down your throats recently. So let’s start with a fascinating article about the CGI involved in producing a cinematic version of the Battle of Helm’s Deep and end with the first review I’ve seen of the Two Towers – and it’s a five-star one at that…

Categories
Random

On the differences between syndication and publishing…

I’m partly linking to Mark’s article about the differences between syndication and publishing on my site so that I don’t forget to read it tomorrow when I’m more conscious.