Archive for the 'Culture' Category

Inappropriate Mobile Experiences

This clip appeared on YouTube about a month or so ago, being a loyal fan of David Lynch I tend to agree with his point of view. If you watch a movie on your telephone, you’re really just watching it, you’re not experiencing it. It’s not possible for a little touch screen to compete with the big screen theater, the phone completely negates the cinematic experience. News, video podcasts, a music video, maybe… but to try and experience a feature film on your phone is completely ridiculous.

In what ways can mobile devices actually enhance our real world experiences? Some mobile applications, for example the Google Maps iPhone app, enrich my real world on a daily basis. It enhances my reality by adding an instantly relevant layer of location information based on where I am. Its great, simple and useful. Currently there are very few mobile applications that successfully enhance real world experiences. I look forward to the days when augmented reality concepts like this become commonplace… but until then, if I want an enhanced real world experience, I’ll stick to the big screen.

Related Clips:
“Futuregazing” 4G augmented reality concept ;)
David Lynch on product placement.

Re-Democratizing the Third Place

In the 1989 book The Great Good Place, sociologist Ray Oldenburg mounted a best-selling advocacy of the Third Place. He argues Third Places, semi-public places where people can voluntarily gather beyond the realm of home (first) and work (second), are the heart of a community’s social vitality and the grassroots of a democracy. For example the corner coffee shop or the neighborhood pub. Oldenburg denounces the exclusion of such spaces from the gated cul de sacs, strip malls and suburban residential sprawl of post war America.

Over the past 2 decades Oldenburg’s lament has been heard. Third Spaces have re-emerged on the other side of suburban flight, but singing to a different tune. Realizing the benefits, mainstream marketing has energetically embraced the Third Place concept. New Urbanist developments have written semi-public gathering places into their manifesto for city renewal. These New Third Spaces masked by brandscaping have arrived. Coffee shops masquerade as art galleries, trendy retail stores pose as museums and markets have morphed from mandatory stopping points into social rendezvous points. Additionally corporations such as Starbucks and Whole Foods have openly adopted the “Third Space” as a part of their brand. Largely concerned with extracting dollars, New Third Spaces are intentionally designed so you will feel comfortable for a short time, but soon you’re compelled to buy or consume something. New Third Places, under the corporate eye, successfully achieve the ambiance of a genuine Third Place, but don’t assume the responsibility of building community or enabling relationships.

Truly healthy Third Spaces offer a safe haven for community to thrive. They act as a catalyst for new acquaintances and tend to widen ones social spectrum beyond the standard circles established by profession and class. Oldenburg states that in a healthy Third Place, a newcomer feels at home, and is often engaged in easy dialogue with others. True Third Places offer an informal, comfortable, non-assuming and democratic mixing of ages and classes to form the heart of healthy communities.

Piazza Campo dei Fiori, one of Rome’s many Third Spaces.

My formative years were spent deep in the circa 1980’s suburbs absent of place-based community. Since then I have felt thirst for community around place that just didn’t exist. Now, one of the things I enjoy about living in an urban environment is the intimacy and variety of semi-public spaces, but I still feel a general lack of place-based community. For a portion of graduate school I lived in Rome. One wonderful aspect about this city is the plethora of public piazzas. Residents here seem to have an innate understanding of public space and the importance of community around it. I spent countless nights in the piazzas hanging out, talking with strangers, making new friends, etc. Never was there pressure to consume or buy anything, never was I bothered for loitering. Unfortunately many US cities are not designed with great egalitarian social spaces. As a result the importance on place and community together is fundamentally different, and somewhat dysfunctional. So..

Can we use technological innovation to create, reclaim, and re-democratize Third Spaces?
Is it possible to create an egalitarian layer upon which Third Space community can thrive?
Is it possible for this layer to stand side-by-side and/or in opposition to the structured corporate interior?

We believe so.

Brightkite at the Denver Art Museum

Tomorrow night our service will be a featured evening exhibit at the Denver Art Museum! They’ll be displaying a large projected Brightkite Satellite during their monthly Untitled series event. The Brightkite Satellite will display messages sent from users who are “checked in” at the Museum. We’ll have instructions telling people how they can check in and how they can post messages.

This officially marks our first client for Brightkite so we’re very excited. A few of us are planning to go over there tomorrow night to get feedback from people using it. If you’re in the Denver/Boulder area you should swing by and check it out. The event runs from 6pm to 10pm on Friday July 27th. If you haven’t been to the museum then you’ve got to come. The Architecture is breathtaking and the exhibits are pretty good too. My favorite is the temporary exhibit called Radar.

We’ll be posting pictures from the event on this blog.

The museum is located here.

Denver Art Museum

Technology changing culture or vice versa?

I like reading things like this over at 37 Signals that make me think about the impact of technology on our culture. Matt comments on a new book by Andrew Keen titled The Cult of the Amateur: How today’s Internet is killing our culture. Matt gives a few specific examples from the book then goes on to say that Keen is kind of overreacting.

I’ve been thinking about this a lot lately. We really want to change the way people communicate with each other and how they engage with ideas when in physical locations. Is that just more useless noise or does it actually add something meaningful to our culture? I don’t know, but I think successful ideas are concepts that are well aligned with a momentum of change in our society. Whether they create something good for humanity vs just extra noise is up to the individuals using the technology. Personally, I have a lot of faith that there are always creative and talented people that use technology in positive ways that add to our understanding of humanity.

Oh, I also really like this statement of Matt’s: “commenting on the news is a lot different than discovering it, we all suffer when reporting disappears”

I’m definitely commenting here…

Last thing; another piece about usefulness vs meaningfulness talking about Twitter on Wired. Wired says Twitter creates a kind of sixth sense… Very interesting…