Archive for the 'Identity' Category

Inherent skills?

Johnnie Moore’s Weblog: Inherent qualities

Well first things first - congratulations to James and his wife on the birth of Maggie, may she always bring you joy.

Secondly congratulations to Johnnie and James on their recent success.

Lastly - inherent skills? I think it is defintely a frame of mind that allows people like James (and outwardly) Johnnie to move forward in life. Johnnie’s point:

we have a huge amount of inbuilt talent that is ready to emerge when needed

may well be true but you have to believe that to be the case. If you doubt your ability, if you lack confidence then it restricts you.

Despite being happliy married with three children - I still don’t think I am any good at any of those things and worry constantly about how to get better. Perhaps that is why I don’t and others simply do?

BTW I know I can pass exams but its not quite the same thing :(

BARC, BARC and Buzz, Buzz

Following up on some thoughts from last night.

I notice Suw has published her mindmap notes from last nights talk and her own notes on the event at Strange Attractor.

Suw takes issue with Johnnie’s view on speakers:

I disagree, however, with Johnnie’s dislike of having speakers. Yes, having speakers stand up in front of an audience does create an us-them dichotomy which is especially false when you are in a room full of your peers, but in an ideal world that’s because the speaker knows something the audience doesn’t, and the audience wants to find out what. As a speaker, I don’t feel that I seize the authority to stand up in front of people talk about the stuff I talk about, I feel that I am granted grace to do so by the audience and that I had better damn well say something interesting.

On this point I agree with Suw that a speaker doesn’t seize authority and I also agree with Johnnie that engagement and involvement are what more speakers should try and do. Its difficult when you are brought up on a diet on lectures and yet move into a world of blogging. Perhaps when I get up next to do a talk I should remind myself of this.

The aspect of authority itself though is most telling. The different definitions of authority being traded with both Johnnie and Adriana using the same dictionary.com reference to multiple meanings of the same word - just like blogging offers you multiple views of the world. Authority comes when we allow it to, whether internally from being the author of your own life to giving legitimacy to speakers, bowing to greater experience.

The emergence of this authority in blogging and of etiquette and behaviour modes is fascinating - at one point someone (apologies as to who) said that we have a means of dealing with other people, its called politeness. Well yes but then as James pointed out subversion is fun too.

So is questioning and so is storytelling. Right now blogging is interesting and fun and cool and disrupting and as Alastair Shrimpton and others suggested, going to be so not cool when it hits the real mainstream and yet still full of authority because we will give it to ourselves as affirmation and to others as little dances, with passion and with enthusiaism.

The blogtrain is running, some have seats, some will stand, but we are all going to get there, because the network and linkages are king.

It reminds me of the old adage ‘content is king’ - is it more so now that personality with content and linkages are king? Or is it interativity - the ability to have somenthing to do when you get to the endof that link i.e. post comments in a blogging context?

This is one conference that actually has me thinking more after the event than during it and that’s good. Maybe it engaged me more than I thought, maybe it affirmed and empowered me more than I thought.

The one thing i wanted to say last night and didn’t manage to get it out was that people long to make connections, and last night I made some relationship connects and some intellectual connections.

If I had a moodometer on the blog it would say VBG.

Hola!

After being abducted by aliens (well my family who sometimes feel alien) I find myself in the beautiful surroundings of Nerja on the Costa del Sol. I’ve been here several times before but not since the introduction of the Euro and the cost of things have changed quite significantly (being more expensive). Interesting that it is probably just as costly to live here now as the south of England, which is quite a shock.

The benefits of Spain or at least Andalucia are the pace of life, the weather (if you like sun) and the people. Everything is so much slower, less worry and what appears to be genuine warmth towards others. I am talking generally of course but it has held true over about ten years of visits. While I appreciate that almost everyone I interact with here is part of a service sector compare to the Uk- in Nerja people are often versed in at least 3 if not more languages, try to help ignorant foreigners (i.e. me) with Spanish language and culture and are very welcoming to children. In the UK most people can just cope with English, dislike children and dare I say it dislike anyone foreign (they certainly couldn’t help with translation).

Is there a point? Well I guess two key areas that the English (if not the rest of Britain) need to focus on are increasing the language ability of its workforce and developing the customer service element especially when dealing with those not of our own background or having English as a first language.

And I think an element of both aspects is about an change in the way the 1nglish view the world. An acceptance of lack of control and have a sense of alternate points of view. Of course some relaxation couldn’t hurt either. Intereted in people’s views on this as it links into some aspects of branding and psychology that I’m thinking about.

On past experiences

Lots of thinking going on over the last 48 hours. Johnnie and James’ Open Sauce Live was well worth attending, not only to listen to the guys themselves (and the walk up the stairs - all four flights) but also to listen to the other attendees. A genuine connection in any situation happens so rarely that it is worth remembering. Open Source in a marketing context feels very much that it is about nurturing connection with customers, stakeholders and using that to add value, to benefit the people involved should be the goal all the time. And I really don’t mean purely numbers or money.

On this note and Johnnie’s recent postings on experience I met an old friend, a guy who used to work for me at ntl today. He is a wonderful guy who really knows his stuff (web development) and is incredibly genuine. We started talking about ntl and the old times. It made me realise just how much the organisation had changed and how much it had impacted me. When we worked together there was a desire to ‘do good things’ not a fixation with numbers and it made the place wodnerful to work and led to sme extraordinary things being achieved. I rarely saw this in my last couple of years at ntl when most people really looked like they were having their souls bleed away. Strong words? Absolutely and it isn’t a criticism of ntl per se, just of the way the business world has developed and the impact of an adverse situation on me.

I’ll post something more positive on Monday.

Quote thought

M. Scott Peck

“Real love is a permanently self-enlarging experience.”

Just read this and struck me in two ways:

  1. Relationships - both sexual and plutonic platonic, friends and family
  2. Interests / Hobbies - ideas that capture your interests more than simply that’s fun

Assuming that ‘Enlarging’ is equivalent to growth in this instance then I am a very lucky bod, as I love and am loved by some wonderful people and I have a number of interests which I love and which sustain me (of which one is of course blogging!!)

VBG :)

Goodison misses out on Sailing medal

BBC SPORT | Olympics 2004 | Sailing | Goodison misses Laser medal

My namesake (Paul Goodison) missed out on a medal in the sailing (Laser class apparently) which is a shame because I can’t now go around telling people I have won…

Earliest form of Branding?

BBC NEWS | Science/Nature | Cave colours reveal mental leap

Early humans used a red ochre (?) colour to symbolise burials. Is this the earliest form of Branding?

Answers via the comments form :)

Ubiquitous Computing - Implications

[purse lip square jaw] anne galloway

UbiComp Reflections I - context awareness and privacy

A recurring claim is that security and privacy are central to viable ubicomp. Since security requires the collection of huge amounts of data - think what is necessary for user authentication alone - we are faced with how best to collect, store and administer these data. For example, who will have access to this information? How long will it be stored?

While certainly these are questions of social importance, I don’t think it is reasonable - or responsible - to continue developing and deploying these technologies with the attitude that these are purely “social issues” or “policy problems” that have nothing to do with the research and development of ubiquitous computing.

Technology does not exist separately from these issues and problems, and neither do those issues and problems arise only in the use of these technologies. We need to find ways to integrate these concerns into the research and design processes …

The always interesting Anne Galloway (Now why did none of my University Lecturers look like that?) providing some excellent points on problems of identity, privacy and security within a Ubiquitous Computing Environment. She is currently attending UbiComp 2003, an annual conference on the topic. Ubiquitous computing BTW is about computers being ‘everywhere’ and doing pretty much everything to do with everyday life. And guess what ladies and gentlemen? We aren’t that far away from this. Its looking more sci fact than sci fiction.

Anne points to some good reads from the conference (also prior to this posting). I was particularly interested in this one on Trust in Ubicomp (note its a link to a PDF file).

Good stuff!

Smart Screens sample DNA

BBC NEWS | Technology | Smart screens sample DNA

The TFT will have an intelligent chip inside programmed to do a set job, be it reading people’s fingerprints or telling a person’s blood type in the future.”

The chip technology behind the display will be able not only to store but also to analyse information.

It means in the future, police equipped with mobile devices could take DNA fingerprinting samples from people when they are on the beat.

This could make it is a lot easier for samples to be recorded and stored, and raises the possibly of using wireless technology to compare database information with samples.

Technology takes us ever forward. It can protect us and it can put our freedom at risk. Which this will be remains to be seen. The danger with any of this type technology or thinking is that we assume its fool proof; we place trust in machines which while powerful cannot truely be described as smart.

In DNA fingerprinting there is the possibility of errors, there is the posibiity of getting it wrong. Not only that but couldn’t this type of technology be used to track my movements, my associations, the things I have handled. Will this type of data, transferred into information be responsibly stored and ethically maintained? What are the safeguards?

Digital Identity - PeopleAggregator (again)

Marc’s Voice

My blogging Marc is a bit like Buses in the UK, none are around for ages and then two come along at once:

Despite the obvious shaping of one’s digital identity within a social network context, there are consistent aspects of one’s personality that shine through - whether it be you the Dad, you the business guy or you the weekend Paintball warrior.

What we want to provide is a way of not only aggregating your various ‘personalities’ (or facets as danah calls it) - but also of connecting your various ‘accounts’ of your digital on-line presence - whether they be MeetUp, Ryze, Tribe, ODDpost or ecademy. It seems to me that one well thought out system, based upon FOAF (and open sourced) is the way to go. We call it the PeopleAggregator.

I’m really interested in seeing how this works. I want to play with it, use it and I think make my life easier. I really perceive that my digital life needs this badly.

I also think its an excellent idea for a product an ISP could offer its customers, and for some, that couldn’t come soon enough, especially if it is built for the non-techie person.