Posts Tagged ‘internet’

The Future Will Be Hand-Made – William Kamkwamba – TED Talk

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

William Kamkwamba is a young Malawian innovator who gained attention through the simple act of crafting a windmill to help irrigate his family farm and to generate a basic supply of electricity – at the age of 14.

I’ve posted before about how the future is being invented in garage laboratories and there is plenty of talk flowing through the interwebs about shit like steampunk, makers, hackerlabs and other cultural shifts that are seeing people become more than mere consumers of technology. The tech has become so ubiquitous in our lives we are now dissembling it, re-arranging it, renovating it, re-purposing and innovating tech products and tech knowledge to build the world we choose to live in.

DNA sequencing in the basement – next to the home brew kit – is not only inevitable, it’s already happening. Robotics, tesla coils, hovercraft, solar arrays, radio astonomy observatories, high altitude photography experiments – you name it and someone is yanking apart an old appliance and building something that is righteous, bizarre and absolutely necessary.

Kamkwamba built his windmills from necessity – he needed water to grow food – he needed electricity to communicate and see within the darkness. The materials he used were cobbled together from a junkyard. The most valuable resource he had at his disposal was knowledge.

We do well to remember we are not just living in a knowledge economy but also a knowledge culture. As the economic shit continues to hit the fan – and it will – and empires collapse in upon themselves and the comforts of consumer culture wane it will be replaced with knowledge – the knowledge that we can make whatever we need in order to survive and thrive and keep in touch with each other. Knowledge can cure hunger – that’s a cool concept – and if we stay connected with each other we will always have access to knowledge – we shall never be ignorant, unless willfully so.

Cheers.

Dr. Horrible On The Emmys

Monday, September 21st, 2009

Neil Patrick Harris did a great job as host of last night’s Emmy Awards broadcast but the highlight was clearly the appearance of Dr. Horrible.

Update: The folks at YouTube pulled the original posting of the video so I’m providing my own copy here – which is a legitimate fair use of the material since it’s being presented as a cultural critique of the event. That’s my fancy way of saying that any brown-nosing legal interns should just fuck off and leave this alone unless you want to get counter-sued for abusing the DMCA.

There were a number of cracks made about the death of broadcast television and while the whole event was obviously a cheer leading session in defence of a dying industry – including this clip mocking the net – it was clear that what was happening to television had to be acknowledged.

Television has followed the course proscribed by McLuhan when he said old media would become the content of new media. The best television programs now are comprised of film content which no longer gets made for theatrical release – cinema, true cinema, is now the content of television. Television itself is being subsumed within the growing influence of the net. The broadcast industry (which includes the caretakers of the pipes – the telco & cable industries) are actively seeking to control and restrain the net to become merely another form of television but that denies the obvious. The internet is not television – but television can, and will, be contained within the internet.

The internet, as a medium, far surpasses the limited abilities of broadcast television.

As for reality television, which had it’s own full category last night, I made the comment on Twitter that reality tv used to be called “The News”. This explains why the nation has such a tenuous and slender grasp on reality itself.

Enjoy how the story of our disrupted culture unfolds. If it’s too much to bear – hide in the basement, sofa monkeys, and make a freeze ray.

Cheers.

P. S. If the audience numbers for last night’s show are any indication – only 12 million viewers, the lowest ever for an Emmy broadcast – the industry is indeed undergoing a significant seachange. Even taking into account Tivo or other time-shifting measures we’ll soon see the day when a simple clip like this garners a larger number of views than the entire audience for broadcast itself. Thanks for watching.

CRTC Hearings On Net Neutrality Begin

Monday, July 6th, 2009

Michael Geist reports on the CRTC’s network management hearings which begin this week.

good_dog_bandwidth1

Geist has always been great at pointing out the inconsistencies in the arguments of the telecoms and cable companies who have already proven they will say anything to retain what they believe is their rightful control and ownership of the internet.

This from Geist’s post:

The telecom and cable companies will likely maintain that managing their networks, which may include using “deep packet inspection” to identify subscriber activity and limiting available bandwidth for certain applications (a practice known as throttling), is essential to ensure optimal access for all subscribers. Consumer associations, independent Internet service providers (ISPs), broadcasters, creator groups, and technology companies are likely to warn against network management practices that raise competition, privacy, and consumer rights concerns.

My weekly technology law column (Toronto Star version, homepage version) notes that as the Commission weighs the various claims, it would do well to consider the testimony it heard just a few months ago during the February new media hearings. The issue at play at those hearings was whether ISPs should face a levy to fund new media or be required to prioritize Canadian content (the CRTC declined to do both in its decision released last month). Interestingly, the same telecom and cable companies that will now argue that managing their networks is essential, offered a somewhat different take when confronted with the prospect of doing so in the name of supporting Canadian content.


Everyone should keep an eye on Geist’s continuing reportage on these hearings as they will directly affect the future of our internet use – indeed, of the internet itself – not just here in Canada but with subsequent reverberations beyond our borders.

I told you never to call me here.

Net Neutrality equals Free Speech.

Pass it on.

Cheers.

In Teh Toobs – Coverage Part Deux

Tuesday, May 26th, 2009

Woosh!  Pew!  Pew!My dear friend Mark Achtenberg has posted on his Achtenblog about In Teh Toobs.

I want to thank you, Mark for your kind words about the show, my work and myself. And, yes, I will admit I used to work out of my home office in my bathrobe – and I used to direct in the studio wearing my slippers. I am built for comfort not for speed.

Speaking of which, I am woefully late in getting the next episode of In Teh Toobs online but that’s because — oh wait, I said no more excuses, didn’t I?

Okay – no excuses. You’ll just have to wait until the end of this week to see what I’ve been up to.

Cheers.

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.

Happy WWW B’Day! – 20 Years Of The World Wide Web

Friday, March 13th, 2009

It’s hard to reconcile the passage of time whenever these sort of benchmarks come along. Today marks the 20th anniversary of the inception of the World Wide Web.

A lot of people are jumping around today and shouting: “Happy Birthday, Internet!” – which is wrong. The origins of the Internet stretch back to 1957 with the launch of Sputnik. The internet is as old as me.

Here’s a cool animated video which summarizes the entire history of the internet and the web:

The World Wide Web is a completely different animal altogether. Tim Berners-Lee was the key figure responsible for finally putting together all the pieces of text, images and hyperlinks which created this vast – and exponentially growing – shared mind of the world. It has, within 2 short decades, transformed how we communicate with each other, how we do business, how we conduct our politics, how we see the world and the universe beyond our reach, and how we behave as human beings.

Big stuff.

And – like the growth of the web itself – those responsible for its origins, growth and development are thinking of and crafting the next level of our shared technological future.

Here’s Berners-Lee speaking at the most recent TED Conference about these anticipated developments which will prove to be just as transformative for our world as the web has proven to be over the past 20 years:

Thank you, Tim Berners-Lee.

Happy birthday interwebs!

Cheers.

UPDATE: Bryan left a comment in which he mentions:

I have to add in one man, who worked with Tim at CERN, who was pretty fundamentally involved with the Web as well. Sadly, he gets little of the credit. Robert Cailliau, take a bow.

Thanks, Bryan!