Where does stuff come from, how does it get made, where did all this CONSUME CONSUME CONSUME madness come from?
This might be the best online video I’ve seen all year.
Where does stuff come from, how does it get made, where did all this CONSUME CONSUME CONSUME madness come from?
This might be the best online video I’ve seen all year.
I’ll try to get to the 2008 Virtual Worlds predictions here in the next couple days, but I can’t move on to 2008 until I’ve given some thought to the grand ole year of 2007. As I mentioned earlier, in 2006 I set a goal to figure out this blogging business and I think I’m doing ok in that regard. But there were a number of tools that profoundly influenced the way I experience the web, Second Life, and even have changed how I think about people and communities and society in general. So here they are, my Top 10 Tech Tools of 2007:
10. Ning and AirSet and Google Groups – All three allow you to connect with communities of interest and provide a suite of tools to keep in touch, share resources, and network with one another. All three have some features I like, none of the three do it ALL for me, but one way or another, I’ve connected with a bunch of good people through these sites.
9. StumbleUpon – I hate the name, forget to submit stuff, and don’t have any friends there, BUT! When I’m in mega procrastination mode and want the internet to entertain me, StumbleUpon is like channel surfing with the the TV remote, but on the internet instead. Flip, hmm interesting, flip, that’s stupid, flip, neat video! Caution, stumbling videos can be addictive at 3AM.
8. HUDDLES Landmark Pal – Second Life residents, if you don’t already have a landmark HUD solution for your most visited locations, this little HUD is simple, easy, and fabulous. It minimizes (TRUE minimize, not phantom) to take up less screen real estate and I love not digging in inventory to go to frequently visited places.
7. Google Web History – I avoided this tool for a while because I thought ew how creepy, a history of everything I browse! Then as I kept losing links or forgetting to tag stuff or needing to find that one website I saw that one day.. it turned into oh how neat, a history of everything I browse! I figure, google already has the data, I might as well have it too. Also neat to see my surfing trends.
6. ScriptMe! – This Second Life scripting tool is the cat’s pajamas for newbies or those with no programming experience. Hilary Mason aka Ann Enigma coded this tool to make simple scripts for those who have no programming experience. It’s simple, intuitive, and opens up worlds of possibilities for those who have never explored scripting their own objects in SL. Thanks Hilary!
5. Scobleizer – Scobleizer isn’t a website or a web app or a tagging service but he does all those things, and no I am not calling Scoble a tool. Robert Scoble is a human processor of amazingly enormous amounts of information. I think he has a real job too, but he digests a lot of info and shares the good stuff on a number of platforms and I think has such a large following that he becomes a high-end-user test case for a lot of webapps that don’t scale well, so he can point out shortcoming and flaws that other people might not notice until it’s too late. I’ve become a big fan and thanks to @Spin/Eric Rice for introducing me to @Scobleizer.
4. WordPress – I tried a zillion blog packages and after all of the trial and error came to a simple conclusion: If you’re blogging and not using WordPress, you’re nuts. WordPress has zillions of themes, zillions of widgets, EVERY webapp with a blog tie in is WordPress compatible, if you host your own, upgrading is simple.. I <3 WordPress. Bye bye Livejournal, Blogger, Typepad and others. Oh, and if you aren’t blogging but want to, it’s free. Go do it.
3. Google Feed Reader – Google’s Feed Reader makes subscribing to blogs easy and portable. I was using Sage, then I tried Flock’s built in reader, but all of those are dependent on a local machine and I need to be mobile. It’s not perfect yet (get rid of duplicates pls!), but with the addition of sharing with your Gtalk friends just a few days ago, it beats the competition hands down. It also proves that Scoble really does read all those feeds. Impressive!
2. BlogHUD – My favorite Second Life tool of the year is without a doubt BlogHUD. I just can’t tell you how much easier it has made posting images and information from in-world to out. If you need examples, just check the BlogHUD category on this site. I think this is a terrific tool for educators in Second Life as well as anyone who keeps a travel log, reports on SL news, or just wants to share the cool stuff their doing. BlogHUD Pro has a bunch of other features, but the only one I use is the cross-post images to blogs and it is SO worth $900L. It is fabulous.
1. Twitter – Twitter is the glue that holds everything together. Twitter is a steady stream of information, help, and camaraderie. Twitter is better than Jaiku or Pownce. Twitter has changed my web surfing habits, my conception of online communities, my Second Life experience, and my blogging habits. Twitter is the ultimate “just in time” information source. Twitter. How I Love Thee. Ok enough gushing! I think Twitter works best when you find a combination of Twitter add-ons that work for you. I personally use it in conjunction with GTalk, Twittermail, TwitterTools for WordPress, and SLTweets in Second Life.
Honorable Mention: Flock – Flock is a Mozilla based web browser that integrates a number of tools to make social networking and browsing media online even easier. It’s pretty slick looking and has some great ideas, but it still seems really top heavy and a little crash prone when you get a zillion tabs going. But I’ll keep an eye on it in 2008 because it does some things really well.
Dishonorable Mention: Facebook – Facebook feels like evil to me. Maybe it’s because it sounds like the “creator” stole the idea. Maybe it’s because if you don’t pick a gender it assumes you’re a guy. Maybe it’s all the privacy breaching going on. Maybe it’s the cloudy chain of who all owns it and invests in it. Maybe it’s all the stupid spammy groups. I am there and I’ll add you, but I won’t accept any of your third party super poking super whatever invites, because I am not a Facebook fan.
And that’s it! Thanks to all who brought these great tools to my attention and thanks to the people who make them possible! So what did I miss? What tools make your top 10 list for the year?
Perpetually behind on my blog reading, but today I caught up with Intellagirl’s Ubernoggin and got sucked into her Response to Jenkins, Prenskey Regarding Digital Natives post.
Intellagirl’s analysis points to two key phenomena that differentiates the Digital Native from the Digital Immigrant – exigency (need) and medial hauntings (previous experience with earlier technologies that lingers on). Now “medial hauntings” doesn’t quite roll off the tongue and until I read further, evoked images of severed limbs screaming BOO! from dark closets (oh MEDIAL not MEDICAL), but I think she’s onto something there. Certainly she addresses the kind of fear that I’ve seen in so-called digital immigrants, who already have a community of people to share thoughts with at church or the bowling league or whatever, and who are afraid to press a button in case it breaks or click a link in case there’s no way to go back, that sort of thing. And it brings to mind my own complete aversion to all things web based for years – my command line BBS works just fine thanks, I don’t need any of this newfangled blog crap! I BBSed from 1994 to 2006 and largely ignored blogs and blog culture because I had an interface that I was comfortable with and a community to share my thoughts with and what _need_ was there to change? So in that example, Intellagirl’s analysis hits it right on the head – I had no need and the few attempts I’d made at blogging were painful because I didn’t know what the heck I was doing and I kept saying to myself, “Pushing the spacebar to get new content is so much easier!”
This Digital Native/Immigrant dichotomy has been sticking in my craw because it doesn’t quite explain ME. By age demographic, I should be an immigrant. By socio-economic background and access to technology and gadgets, I should be an immigrant. By all sorts of measures and characteristics used to describe the two groups, it seems as if I should fit squarely in the immigrant category, but clearly I do not. Intellagirl’s post is the first I’ve seen that begins to get at an explanation that makes sense, not just on a macro level, but on a personal level. My adoption and wholesale immersion into the BBS/MUD community in the mid 90s was born out of great need, I was away from home, poor as a church mouse, out of my social element, and desperately seeking to connect with other people, and that technology provided something that my limited social and financial circumstances could not – COMMUNITY. I was moving constantly, like a bag lady, from apartment to apartment and state to state, but with the magic of the intarnets, my friends traveled with me wherever I went. Further, limited experience with previous technologies left me with no old habits to break, at the time I discovered email and UNIX talk and telnet, I was a fairly clean slate and picked it up quickly.
OK, so finally an explanation that begins to make sense.. Hm.
But there’s something else about my own personal experience that has been ricocheting around in my head and always comes to the forefront when I listen to one of Philip Rosedale’s speeches about how navigating 3D virtual worlds is innately more intuitive than navigating word-laden webpages. I think there’s truth to that and it seems to me that we’re entering a new .. phase, era, whatever word you prefer. But let me go back for a moment to the ricocheting thought, which is that I think my digital native behavior was/is extremely influenced by my lifelong addiction to reading. I was the kind of kid that would rather read a book than do just about anything else. If I was in the middle of a good story, nothing short of prolonged shouting could break the spell, to the annoyance of friends and parents alike. Somehow I transcended mere “literacy” and I’m sure there’s some academic term for those of us who become immersed in the written word and visualize it with such clarity that the “real world” ceases to exist while we’re in it. (I bet Henry Jenkins knows that word.)
So, being such a reader, the world of BBSs and MUDs and entirely text based virtual worlds wasn’t just an easy transition to make, it was like the holy grail – an interactive story that I was part of, that I wrote and changed and played a role and wow, what a dream come true. Webpages didn’t interest me quite as much, except as an information source, because they were like magazine stories, way too short and eventually full of too many pictures, when what I prefer is a nice big meaty novel that will take at least two or three days to read. And so I stayed in my text based virtual worlds for a very long time. Long after other BBS friends adopted LiveJournal and Blogger and reveled in posting pictures and links and video clips that could never appear in the old telnet window.
Until EverQuest, that is. MMO + RPG + 3D = love at first sight. I still remember the thrill of it: the beautiful scenery, the long walks across unexplored territory, the adrenaline rushes, the late nights, the empty Mt. Dew cans. Then DAoC and WoW and various single player games in-between (NWN, Deus Ex, Sims, etc.). And somehow, between 1994 and 2006, I transformed into a Native butterfly, an advocate for technology in education, a creator of digital content, a camera, mp3-player, cell phone carrying junkie, a 1337 translator with some old skool credibility, tivo equipped and subscribed to so many blogs, and now tweeting my life away for all to see. Indistinguishable from a so-called Native, except that my text messaging thumb dexterity is woefully inadequate.
I hate these terms, Digital Natives and Digital Immigrants, because they imply all sorts of connotations that do more harm than good, and because my Women’s Studies 101 classes taught me to _always_ be suspicious of false dichotomies. It is not an either/or choice, rather there are continuums of related skill-sets and proclivities and if you look deeper under the skin of a Digital Native, you will find more complexity than a single word can possibly describe. Sure the 17 year old chained to his cell phone can text message while eating, driving, and talking, and sure his ipod seems to have grown fully formed out of his skull, but can he use a search engine effectively? Can he write a coherent paragraph with correct spelling and grammar to save his life? Increasingly, I think that answer is NO and that is worrisome.
At one time, the digital immigrant metaphor might have been helpful if it forced at least some adults to acknowledge their uncertainties, step out of their comfort zone, and adjust their thinking to respond to a generation growing up in a very different context than the realm of their own childhood. As Prensky concludes, “if Digital Immigrant educators really want to reach Digital Natives – i.e. all their students – they will have to change.” Yet, I worry that the metaphor may be having the opposite effect now — implying that young people are better off without us and thus justifying decisions not to adjust educational practices to create a space where young and old might be able to learn from each other.
So, what would digital multi-culturalism look like? Can we come up with a different set of metaphors to talk about these issues?
I say we MUST come up with a different set of metaphors, because to circle back to Philip Rosedale’s point about the intuitive navigability of 3D virtual spaces, if we don’t figure out a better way to talk about these concepts, the so-called natives will run so far ahead into the virtual world, that the wisdom of the text-based and physical world might be lost altogether. Don’t believe me? Take a look at this chilling report from the National Endowment for the Arts about current literacy rates. It strikes fear into the heart of this digital [whatever], because the power of all of this technology is tremendous, and while those who have accepted the term “digital immigrant” feel cut off or dismissive or frightened or too old or whatever it is are sitting around reading newspapers and drinking coffee at church and thinking that things like Second Life is just a game, the world is going to change around them, so fast it will make their heads spin if they’re still around to see it, and the certainty that this is coming fills me with such urgency, I just can’t shake it.
It keeps me burning the candle at both ends, and now we’re at the end of 2007 and my resolution in 2006 to figure out this blog crap, to bring Second Life to my campus, to work even harder to be the translator between the “immigrant” and “native” camps has been one of the most exhausting and stressful, yet wonderfully fulfilling years of my life. I’ll save the reminiscing for a different long rambly disorganized thinking-out-loud post, but at the end of all of this, I’m thinking we have a lot of work to do and we can’t do it fast enough. I don’t know if Digital Multi-Culturalism will cut the mustard, either, because that implies some acceptance of the status-quo that I don’t want to accept. I want to be intolerant of intolerance in the digital sense. I don’t want to just talk about it, I want to smack the hand that reaches for the phone book instead of a search engine. As I reach the ripe old age of my early 30s, I finally have come to understand that not all old people are wise, but there is wisdom in age and experience, and frankly, I fear we’ll lose that wisdom when the “natives” put down their video games and start harnessing this technology to change the world around them.
I think, moving forward, that we need to challenge those words wherever we see or hear them, because they are perpetuating a concept that we can’t afford to continue.
I wrote a bunch of things, but I think I’ve shared enough about me today. Thanks to whomever sent this over twitter, it was very timely.
Gigs Taggert announced a great new tool to track the top issues and most wanted features in Second Life by aggregating a bunch of data from the JIRA system.
The address is: http://www.sljirastats.com/
I know many folks either feel overwhelmed by the JIRA interface or just simply don’t have time to dig around to find all the bug reports they are also experiencing, but this site makes it very simple to see top issues and link directly to bug reports so you can vote. Great work Gigs!!
[Edit: Good grief, it’s the State of the University, not State of the Union. (!!) Recovering political junkie reflex.]
Interesting article in the Christian Science Monitor about big business and Second Life. Tackles the interoperability-slash-walled garden issue, and quotes Metanomics series host Professor Robert Bloomfield of Cornell University, who I recently met during the discussion on Higher Education in Second Life for the program.
The article states that 20 major technology firms, including IBM and Microsoft, have agreed to explore ways to connect virtual worlds. My thought, is Google on that list?
On another note, I was talking with a couple of long time SL residents who didn’t know about the existence of the SL-DEV listserv. Now I am not a scripter or a coder or any label that would imply I could program my way out of a paper bag, but if you want to know where the technology behind Second Life is heading, there’s no better source for info. Sure half to two thirds of the posts zoom right over my head, but even scanning the subject lines tells me what’s the Hot New Topic with the opensource/dev community, and that’s good to know.
Next up, I finally got a chance to view University of Cincinnati President Nancy Zimpher’s State of the University 2007 address. Since she came to UC, her focus on how the university integrates with the local and regional community has resonated with my own sense of priorities, and I am pleased to see that continue to be her focus, in addition to the Master Plan and UC|21 goals for academic achievement. I lived in Clifton for 6 years, and while I miss the convenience of walking to work very much, I don’t miss the noise, the crime, and the grit nearby. As long as economic redevelopment doesn’t just mean shifting vulnerable populations further away from a walled-garden campus, then I am all for finding real, sustainable solutions. She also mentioned the Strive project, which aims to create an educational pipeline to ensure that students complete the _entire_ educational process, from pre-school through to college degree. Good stuff!
Also from President Zimpher’s speech, the Brookings Institute: Blueprint for American Prosperity: Unlceaning the Potential of a Metropolitan Nation. I confess, I haven’t read it yet, but her talk seemed quite apropos considering the recent conversations I and others have been having about what makes a community work in the virtual world, and I think there is much to be learned from real world examples too.
Finally, any SL residents, I beg of you to please vote for the JIRA issue to increase the 25 group limit in Second Life. Even if you haven’t hit that ceiling yet, it is a major major obstacle for those of us who have, and I can’t believe it has less than 400 votes. Sheesh.
Now this is something interesting. I don’t know what to call it other than a gadget, but I can see how something like this might be fun to play with.