Posts Tagged ‘globe and mail’

A Decade Of Downloading

Tuesday, June 2nd, 2009

Michael Geist appeared on TV Ontario’s The Agenda last week, along with Bob Wiseman (formerly of Blue Rodeo), Matt Hartley of the Globe and Mail, Grant Dexter of MapleMusic, and Andy Maize of the Skydiggers and MapleMusic.

It’s a great discussion about the changes in culture and business wrought by digital downloading of music (in particular but other media by inference) with the clear emphasis being on how any business has to attend to the needs and desires of the consumers citizens who buy the products and services being offered for sale.

While the big attention being paid to the disruptive effects of digital media, commerce and accessibility invariably focuses on the music, film and television industries we can clearly see a rising tide of resonant effect in other industries as citizens become used to and insist upon having the ability to speak loudly and clearly about what they want and don’t want. This ripple-to-tsunami effect on the culture will touch more than industry, reaching deep into the processes of governance, law and how we share this planet with each other.

I’ve often been accused of being naive whenever I look past the current state of things and attempt to get a glimpse of the further consequences which await us. Naiveté connotes ignorance and while I might sometimes be admittedly dirt stupid about many things I’d like to believe I am far from ignorant. There’s a difference between naive and hopeful; and I am hopeful for what lies in store for us as we continue to embrace and use these new tools, these new extensions of our senses. It harkens back to Stewart Brand‘s arguably hubric “We are as gods … “ statement in the opening pages of 1969′s The Whole Earth Catalog:

We are as gods and might as well get good at it. So far, remotely done power and glory — as via government, big business, formal education, church — has succeeded to the point where gross defects obscure actual gains. In response to this dilemma and to these gains a realm of intimate, personal power is developing — power of the individual to conduct his own education, find his own inspiration, shape his own environment, and share his adventure with whoever is interested.

That’s not naive and it sure as shit is more than just being hopeful. It is a declaration of intent and one we would all do well to remember and embrace. The arguments of today in response to how our past is being changed before our eyes is, at best, a mildly interesting discourse.

The better conversation is: What do we do next?

Cheers.

P. S. And as we accelerate on our journey into the future-now we must still contend with the heavy clay-laden feet of the dying dinosaurs as they waddle behind us and eagerly copy each others lies to justify their indolence and greed.

The World In Our Hands

Tuesday, May 26th, 2009

girl_holding_worldThere was a great article in the Globe & Mail a few days ago that I wanted to point your attention to, about how mobile tech will be changing the world.

I know I tend to wax poetic from time to time on the coming evolution of humanity through the advent of our technological extensions of self – becoming better people in a better world – in spite of our basic primitive and pathetic human nature.

It’s not all gonna be sunshine and roses – I know that – but it sure as shit will be an interesting slow motion train wreck to watch; and we got ourselves the front row seats!

Here’s part of the article that caught my attention:

“The best parallel that I use is when they first came out with motion picture projectors, the whole thought of those was ‘Hey, now I can do a stage play and play it at a different location at a different time,’ ” Mr. Balsillie said. “The concept of a ‘movie’ wasn’t in anybody’s mind at the time because they couldn’t see how the media could change the nature of the entertainment, it was just time and place shifting the pre-existing entertainment.”

“In the case of smart phones, we’re just time and place shifting some of the applications. Will it actually change the nature of the application? Absolutely. Do we know exactly how it’s going to change it? I don’t think so.”

The whole article covers the range of changes that have already been wrought by the emergence of handheld connectivity to the growing wash of information and sensorial input available through the internet. It also points out that only one in six human beings on Earth has access to the Internet which, naturally, begs the question: What happens when the rest of the world starts coming online?

When the next billion come online, many of them will not experience the Web through a PC, but rather through smart phones and handheld devices. That new influx of ideas and perspectives is bound to have a profound impact on the next decade of Internet innovation and change how information is disseminated and consumed.

Over the weekend I had a great Twitter conversation with @michaelkinney about the “flow” of content on the web, feeding the insatiable maw of the all consuming interwebs and how that affects the creation of the content from a business perspective and from the position of the individual artists. This factor of how mobile devices are and will continue to impact the way we access that flow should also form a part of that discussion. We agreed that linear narrative will most certainly survive – it’s hardwired into our living experience as animals on this planet and until such time as we conquer death or the flow of time itself that narrative line will continue to play a role in how we define and express ourselves.

But just as the cinema transformed storytelling from the oral traditions of the theatre – time shifting the experience of performance with repeatable product, as well as playing with time within the structure of the stories themselves (for that I refer you to Walter Murch and his book In The Blink Of An Eye) – so too will we see the emergence of wholly unimagined forms of storytelling that will be born into existence purely as a result of the technologies that carry them.

Entertainment is but one small part of the larger puzzle of what lies in store for us as we become increasingly connected in every way possible; but it is safe to assume the world will indeed seem to be a smaller place when we can hold it in our grasp – and perhaps, in the process of that change, we’ll gain a larger sense of ourselves upon that very world and learn to cradle it (and each other) more gently than we have in past, knowing that every gaze and every whisper with which we grace that which we hold in our hands will be conveyed to everyone around us and back again.

Be kind to your neighbours. Shake hands. Gently.

Cheers.

P. S. The stunning image above has been culled from monti_84′s blog. Beautiful stuff. Thnx.