Archive - 2007

May 17th

"Hyperlinks subvert hierarchy"

Be subversive, click here.

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Conference Fugues

At the final wrap up of the Media in Transition conference, David Silver made a couple of interesting comments that seemed in contradiction with one another. He spoke about how the conference was too traditional in its format. You had your keynote speakers. You had your panelists and you had ten minutes at the end of each session where others could add their own brief thoughts in the form of questions. The conference wasn’t enough of a conversation. It didn’t reflect the way the transitioning media was changing the way we communicate.

At the same time, he bewailed the large number of people using email, twitter and other online tools during the conference. In this world of constant or continuous partial attention (CPA), it means that speakers only get partial attention. In an old media view, this isn’t desired. I remember teachers often asking for our total undivided attention, yet for those of us who probably would have been diagnosed with ADD, that was pretty hard. There was always a squirrel running by some window outside.

Most people tend to speak of CPA negatively. People are distracted from the keynote speakers. I would like to challenge that. Twitter, email and blogs are some of the tools that can be used to make the conference much more of a conversation. A few conferences I attend have a chat room which anyone can join and share their thoughts. These chat rooms are often projected on the screen behind the speaker or panelists so even those without a laptop at the conference can at least see what everyone else is writing.

Personal Democracy Forum has done this very effectively, yet it points out a problem. Sometimes the chat can be more interesting than the speaker, and if you aren’t an interesting speaker, this can be particularly threatening.

As people start doing mixed reality conferences that take place in part in Second Life, where the people in the audience can see what is going on in Second Life, and the people in Second Life have their chat going on, as well as seeing a video stream of the conference, the distractions can get even more confounding. A person can chose an avatar of a squirrel and go running across the virtual stage. “Look there goes a squirrel”, takes on a whole new meaning in these contexts.

Yet there are good reasons to include these sorts of tools for making conferences more participatory. First and foremost, there is Dan Gillmor’s old saying about the audience knowing more about the subject than the journalist. It seems to apply well to audiences and speakers at conferences. Then, there is another aspect, what I think of as the art of the fugue.

I think it is damaging to suggest that we should live single threaded lives, giving our undivided attention to one topic and then another. Life is more complicated than that. It is a fugue, a tapestry, with many themes or threads weaving together to create a beautiful picture. It is counter point.

So, tomorrow, I’ll attend Personal Democracy Forum, and I look forward to the whole event, the speakers, the chatting between sessions and the backchannel, not only for the information that I’ll get but also for the chance to participate in a fugue, a tapestry which celebrates the many voices, the point and the counter point of our political dialog.

(Tags: pdf2007, MIT5).

May 16th

Wordless Wednesday



Miranda at bat, originally uploaded by Aldon.

Interaction and interactivity

On a mailing list about media education, I got into a discussion about my post, Videoblogging as an antidote to too much TV. I spoke about the interaction that our time in front of computers engenders.

Some people spoke about the interaction that television engenders, whether it be kids yelling out answers to Blue’s Clues, or adults cursing pundits on the Sunday morning political talk shows. One person drew an interesting discussion between interaction and interactivity. He included the examples above as examples of interaction, and also mentioned the intellectual engagement. Yet he reserved the word interactive for iterative exchanges.

This morning, I read through the emails that piled up since last night. So far today, I’ve gone through 87 emails. Two of them I responded to, and three of them resulted in me visiting a website and taking action. Some of the other emails caused me to stop and think and may feed into some sort of action in the future, but weren’t all that interactive.

I think this ties nicely into my blog post yesterday about Keeping Personal Democracy Personal. It seems as if so much of the online political actions is focused on either fundraising, where the only interaction is writing a check, list building, where the only interaction is signing up on a website, or at best, getting people to contact there elected officials to express the view supported by the email blaster. There is almost no interactivity.

To a certain extent, this makes sense. It is a lot of work to develop and maintain a truly interactive online presence. There are many emails to be responded to. Many comments on webpages to process. Yet without this, we are missing the power that online communications can bring. Instead we end up with responses like I received to my blog post:

I am sick and tired of being treated as an internet cash cow. So annoyed that I have absolutely given up giving or responding. Their total lack of interest in anything but money or their own egos leaves me stone cold.

What can we do to promote interactivity?

(Tags: PDF2007)
(Cross posted at Greater Democracy)

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May 15th

Keeping Personal Democracy Personal

This Friday, I will attend Personal Democracy Forum. This is its fourth year, and I’ve made it every year so far. In 2004, I had been doing a lot of volunteer work with Gov. Dean’s Presidential campaign. When Gov. Dean ended his campaign, my wife decided to run for State Representative and I was her campaign manager. Democracy was all very personal to me.

By 2006, I had gone from a volunteer through being the paid BlogMaster for John DeStefano’s gubernatorial campaign and then technology coordinator for Ned Lamont’s U.S. Senate bid. It seemed like all of my friends from the Dean campaign had gone through similar, or even more profound changes as they all worked in professional roles with campaigns or with vendors servicing campaigns. Somehow, it all started to seem a bit less personal.

People that lived in Connecticut became records in one database or another. They became donors, volunteers, and voters. They were categorized, high dollar, or low dollar, super volunteers, or volunteers that love to offer advice, but not work. They became likely voters, ones and fives.

After last year’s conference, I spent a bit of time pondering how to keep Personal Democracy Forum personal. My thoughts never solidified enough to become a blog post. Thoughts revolved around the contrast between broadcast politics and networked politics. After all, with broadcast politics, the viewer is nothing but a viewer to be categorized, but with networked politics, everyone is an important part of the network, right?

Well, as I listen to so many online campaign strategists, I wonder how many people are really recognizing the importance of every node on the network, other than its ability to generate cash or message.

Perhaps some of this comes from a hierarchical view of networks, sending out messages to various nodes, but not encouraging communication back, or lateral communication between nodes. Or, perhaps, it comes from looking at the nodes on the network as nodes.

We are talking about real living people. People who have feelings, hopes, desires, fears; people trying to figure out how to pay for health insurance, college, or even food and housing. We are talking about people worried about a sick relative, morning the death of a loved one or celebrating a new birth, a graduation or a wedding.