Posts Tagged ‘TED’

Celebrating Work - Mike Rowe TED Talk

Saturday, March 21st, 2009

The name of my website is millsworks - as in: As little as possible. I have been described by those close to me as the world’s busiest lazy man. I’m built for comfort, not for speed. I prefer being horizontal.

Mike Rowe is the host of the television series Dirty Jobs where he explores (so we don’t have to) the filthiest crappiest jobs on the planet. I’m sure he’s only just begun to scratch the surface of the myriad of human toil considered to be less than worthy for the rest of us wallowing in this declining mess once called Western Civilization.

I’ve had my share of shitty gigs. I won’t bore you with the alleged street credentials of my god awful, mind numbing and soul destroying minimum wage days. Been there, done that, don’t want to go back.

Please understand - I’m not completely adverse to hard work. I have often worked myself sick doing the very things I love so dearly. Finishing a production and ending up in hospital as a result is not a rare experience for me. I just figure if I’m gonna wear myself to the bone for something it had damn well better be something I actually care about. Finding that sort of thing these days seems to be getting harder but that’s territory for a different blog post.

I like watching Rowe’s show and I enjoy his take on the gritty realities of life around us that we choose to ignore or separate ourselves from on a daily basis. The very things that make our lives of comfort possible are based upon the backs of those who do the work the rest of us so assiduously avoid.

In this TED Talk from last December, Rowe explores his experiences and comes to some common sense conclusions about the nature of hard work and why we need to support it.

Now if you’ll excuse me - I gotta get busy with my own shit.

Cheers.

Sixth Sense - Patti Maes TED Talk

Wednesday, March 11th, 2009

Patti Maes from the MIT Media Lab - that nifty place full of really smart people who invent a lot of the future - gave a TED Talk about a new system Pranav Mistry and others have developed to allow us more direct and intuitive interaction with our expanding infoworld. It’s called: Sixth Sense.

This dovetails nicely with what Ray Kurzweil and Kevin Kelly have been going on about - the eventual meshing and merging of ourselves with our technology, becoming ubiquitous users of and used by our toys and tools. Kurzweil speaks of the Singularity. Kelly speaks of the One Mind. I think they’re both right and at some point in our lifetime we”ll get to see just how wrong Azimov’s robotic vision was, along with the Terminator and the Matrix dystopias.

We aren’t going to get saved or oppressed by the technology of our future - we’re going to become the technology; which only makes sense when you look at it from McLuhan’s perspective that any tech we create is a mere extension of ourselves.

Will we change? You bet your ass we will. Will it be for the better? Well, looking around at this piss poor excuse for a brutish, nasty, sociopathic monkey world we’ve created I’d have to say - it can’t make it worse.

Will we survive? Ah - there’s the rub.

Let’s see what Susan Blackmore has to say about it in her TED Talk on memes and temes:

And if that doesn’t stoke your imagination - or make you run around screaming - about the future of human beings becoming one with their tech, don’t forget to consider the recent news story on the UK geezer with his bionic eye, the Canadian filmmaker who plans on shooting a documentary with his camera eye and the amazing Aimee Mullins and her talk at TED where she shows off her 12 pairs of staggering (please pardon the pun) prosthetic legs:

Are we going to change?

God, I hope so.

And when we do - we’ll be beautiful.

Cheers.

P. S. I wanted to post about this yesterday but my site was down so all I managed was this Twitter post.

TED Talk - Evan Williams on Twitter

Friday, February 27th, 2009

Evan Williams, co-founder of Twitter speaks at TED about how the users of Twitter are finding unexpected ways of using their ability to tweet which, in turn, is driving the explosive growth of what many are discovering to be a highly addictive, dynamic and (I suspect) life changing way of communicating with our fellow human beings.



Neat stuff.

After a full day of disheartening and frustrating effort, I’m not holding out much hope now for being able to reconstruct the old pages of this blog. That’s a shame but I can’t dwell on trying to rebuild it - there’s new stuff I have to concentrate on completing. If anyone wants to search for specific posts feel free to visit archive.org and use their Wayback Machine and see what you can find.

Cheers.


Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 Canada
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 Canada