The document discusses openness and sharing in technology and culture. It summarizes that people are freely sharing knowledge and connections online through social media and citizen journalism. It advocates for freely distributing your work online through various platforms to build an audience. It also promotes participatory group culture through open collaboration and sharing to empower communities.
Talk I gave recently for some senior execs on getting started in social media. Why we share, what to share and how. Won't make so much sense without the commentary but hopefully some interesting slides...
Talk I gave recently for some senior execs on getting started in social media. Why we share, what to share and how. Won't make so much sense without the commentary but hopefully some interesting slides...
The Tedium is the Message: Communicating and Creating with the New Social MediaFordham University
Winner 2012 Mary Shelley Award for Outstanding Fictional Work! Limited to 140 characters to confess his sins and meet his Maker, "tweeting" may not have been the best use of Willum Granger's final moments.
Executive Severance, a masterful work of Twitter microblogging fiction, is delightfully full of punny dialogue, clever character conditions, and a total lack of adherence to the old "rules" of
storytelling.
Executive Severance is a comic mystery created in Twitter that is compelling, entertaining and shows off what can be done in the 140-character form with style and mastery. With sendups of the mystery genre, social media conventions and cell phone behavior, Executive Severance is a cornucopia of word play and comic misdirection stuffed with punny dialogue and clever character conditions. ES has been called tight, tingling, and diverting.
What makes the print edition of Executive Severance truly exceptional is the amazing illustrations that accompany the story, produced by the acclaimed cartoonist, David Arshawsky.
Presentation on the Future of the Book,
The Amplified Author and the Local Unlibrary
by Chris Meade,
Director of if:book (London)
the think and do tank exploring the future of the book in the digital age
Technobiophilia: soothing our connected minds and easing our wired lives, Bi...Dr Sue Thomas
Published on 20 May 2015
Technobiophilia: soothing our connected minds and easing our wired lives
In her 2013 book Technobiophilia: Nature and Cyberspace, Sue Thomas interrogates the prevalence online of nature-derived metaphors, and comes to a surprising conclusion. The root of this trend, she believes, lies in biophilia, defined by E.O. Wilson as ‘the innate attraction to life and lifelike processes’. Working from the strong thread of biophilia which runs through our online lives, she expands Wilson’s definition to the ‘innate attraction to life and lifelike processes *as they appear in technology*’, a phenomenon she calls ‘technobiophilia’. Attention to technobiophilia and its application to urban design offers a way to make our digital lives integrated, healthy, and mindful. In this talk she outlines the key elements of the concept and shows how, even in an intensely digital culture, the restorative qualities of biophilia can alleviate mental fatigue and enhance our capacity for directed attention, thus soothing our connected minds and easing our wired lives.
Sue's website: https://suethomasnet.wordpress.com
YouTube video of this talk: https://youtu.be/yOrt8zINrnE
The Mozilla Developer Network is an open-source documentation wiki for web developers, which is written by really passionate, smart, and inspiring people. Most are not paid employees of Mozilla. All of them are helping make the web a better place by writing, editing, and reviewing articles. How do you support a diverse community, acknowledge many different voices and perspectives, be open and inclusive, and still get things done (especially when you can’t force anyone to do anything)? In this session, I’ll share what I’ve learned (and keep learning) by working with, in, and for volunteer communities; including how to be more transparent, create opportunity, and broadly share ownership.
The Tedium is the Message: Communicating and Creating with the New Social MediaFordham University
Winner 2012 Mary Shelley Award for Outstanding Fictional Work! Limited to 140 characters to confess his sins and meet his Maker, "tweeting" may not have been the best use of Willum Granger's final moments.
Executive Severance, a masterful work of Twitter microblogging fiction, is delightfully full of punny dialogue, clever character conditions, and a total lack of adherence to the old "rules" of
storytelling.
Executive Severance is a comic mystery created in Twitter that is compelling, entertaining and shows off what can be done in the 140-character form with style and mastery. With sendups of the mystery genre, social media conventions and cell phone behavior, Executive Severance is a cornucopia of word play and comic misdirection stuffed with punny dialogue and clever character conditions. ES has been called tight, tingling, and diverting.
What makes the print edition of Executive Severance truly exceptional is the amazing illustrations that accompany the story, produced by the acclaimed cartoonist, David Arshawsky.
Presentation on the Future of the Book,
The Amplified Author and the Local Unlibrary
by Chris Meade,
Director of if:book (London)
the think and do tank exploring the future of the book in the digital age
Technobiophilia: soothing our connected minds and easing our wired lives, Bi...Dr Sue Thomas
Published on 20 May 2015
Technobiophilia: soothing our connected minds and easing our wired lives
In her 2013 book Technobiophilia: Nature and Cyberspace, Sue Thomas interrogates the prevalence online of nature-derived metaphors, and comes to a surprising conclusion. The root of this trend, she believes, lies in biophilia, defined by E.O. Wilson as ‘the innate attraction to life and lifelike processes’. Working from the strong thread of biophilia which runs through our online lives, she expands Wilson’s definition to the ‘innate attraction to life and lifelike processes *as they appear in technology*’, a phenomenon she calls ‘technobiophilia’. Attention to technobiophilia and its application to urban design offers a way to make our digital lives integrated, healthy, and mindful. In this talk she outlines the key elements of the concept and shows how, even in an intensely digital culture, the restorative qualities of biophilia can alleviate mental fatigue and enhance our capacity for directed attention, thus soothing our connected minds and easing our wired lives.
Sue's website: https://suethomasnet.wordpress.com
YouTube video of this talk: https://youtu.be/yOrt8zINrnE
The Mozilla Developer Network is an open-source documentation wiki for web developers, which is written by really passionate, smart, and inspiring people. Most are not paid employees of Mozilla. All of them are helping make the web a better place by writing, editing, and reviewing articles. How do you support a diverse community, acknowledge many different voices and perspectives, be open and inclusive, and still get things done (especially when you can’t force anyone to do anything)? In this session, I’ll share what I’ve learned (and keep learning) by working with, in, and for volunteer communities; including how to be more transparent, create opportunity, and broadly share ownership.
The short outline of an ongoing argument I've been working on. Definitely a work in progress. Wanted to be able to share it around a little easier, though.
Nation Hahn (http://newkind.com/?page_id=1782#hahn) and Tom Rabon (http://newkind.com/?page_id=1782#rabon) delivered this economic development presentation to the NC Economic Developers Association.
The North Carolina Economic Developers Association (NCEDA) is the statewide association for professional economic developers and their allies in North Carolina. For more than 40 years, NCEDA and its members have led efforts to promote North Carolina as an ideal destination for business investment. NCEDA members help recruit investment to the state as well as support the growth of existing businesses and entrepreneurial ventures.
Economic developers using community building and social engagement in the social era can — and will — thrive.
Original title: Technology Transforming Media, Transforming Us.
This is a Keynote (the app) talk I gave at Webvisions' 2013 NYC Conference in March. It's my perspective on mass communication/media from the Stone Age to today.
Part of the MuseWeb Foundation’s larger "Be Here" initiative, "Be Here: Main Street" is partnership with the Smithsonian Institution and its Museum on Main Street program, which brings Smithsonian traveling exhibitions to small towns across the United States and its territories. The goals of "Be Here: Main Street" are not only to collect rich stories about America’s towns and waterways but also to connect people, businesses, communities, and cultural institutions through storytelling.
The most successful people and the strongest organisations know their own identities through and through. They know what they stand for and can get it across to those around them with full conviction and energy. But what truly makes them strong is that they mean something to those around them. They are part of a community, built out of a two-way relationship of trust with those to whom they seek to matter.
I got asked to make a list of events for a client to consider attending. I added my favorites as well as a bunch that I crowdsourced from my online friends. Here's what I ended up with! :)
Here's the slides and notes for a presentation I recently gave. It's an adapted version of the 'Open Everything' talk I used to give with case studies added for "What The HIV/Aids Movement Can Learn From The Green Movement About The Power of Networks". The case studies are Reel Youth, The Fresh Air Media Centre, and DeSmog Blog.
Photography Tips & Tricks for a New Media World - BlogWorld Expokk+ Krüg
The availability and affordability of DSLR cameras means that everyone is becoming a photographer. Instead of hiring a pro photographer, many businesses and individuals are taking matters into their own hands, sometimes with questionable results. Photographers Aaron Hockley and Kris Krüg will share some tips and tricks for better photography. Topics include basics of composition, exposure, lighting, and white balance. Basic post-processing techniques will be covered as well, wrapping up with some power tips for sharing photos using social media tools.
1. kk+
Thursday, October 15, 2009 1
Hi I’m Kris.
Thanks for having me in Calgary tonight. It’s an honor.
I’m part artist, working on photography, part geek working on software technology and the web,
part teacher talking, writing, publishing books, part hippy sharing learning loving growing, part
media maker telling the stories of my life, these times, and the people around me.
Makes for a strange and beautiful venn diagram and it’s because of all these intersections of my
passions that i think the future is a very exciting time for creative, innovative, smart, kind people
assembled in this room.
2. The Future: Open Everything
Thursday, October 15, 2009 2
I’m gonna try to tell you a lil bit about the world I live in and the future I see. This is a talk that I
wish had one hour to give but since I don’t I’m just gonna talk really really really fast.
This spirit of “openness” that Iʼm gonna talk about represents an ideology that fundamentally changes the we
do “business” and shifts the ways in which we communicate and interact with one another as complex
organisms.
So i am not gonna get hung up on the technology part of this because technology can be
intimidating and the acronyms/jargon/buzzwords can overwhelm and confuse rather i’ll relate the
technology to ways about communicating more richly and making relationships deeper and more
diverse - and accepting the risks required to get there by looking at examples of this sense of
“openness” in the world as it stands.
3. The world is already sharing
Thursday, October 15, 2009 3
People all over the world are right this second sharing knowledge, ideas, stories, intimate details, connections, and emotions -
to audiences known and unknown.
This is not just miscellania but real intimate discourse. By participating in some little corner of the Net, you are contributing
to the organic growth of something much larger - a collective consciousness of info, art and emotion -- and by doing this we
are contributing to the overall health of the public domain and our culture.
4. Open Media: citizen media making
Thursday, October 15, 2009 4
The way media is made is changing.
##
The media is seeing these changes more rapidly and are definitely struggling to figure out the
changing landscape.... they mistakenly put their assets into preserving the status quo.
There is a growing tension between who is a journalist and who is not? is blogging journalism?
should journalist blog? These questions are unresolved and becoming less and less relevant as
people seek out the best content, the freshest opinion, no matter the label.
##
citizen journalism oftern results in inside source on breaking stories,
crowd sourcing reporting more is merrier, deep and compelling coverage of emergencies and disasters.
empowerment through technology tools, digital camera, audio recorders, phones, SMS, video ... put broadcast and media
making into everyone's hand!
5. Document Everything
Thursday, October 15, 2009 5
"if you don't put it on the internet, it didn't happen" KK+
Document everything, distribute, get it out to the people on all the channels available to you -- photography, videos, audio and
music, writing and blogs. As much as what is happening here tonight is valuable to the people in this room, how much more
valuable it becomes when shared online and freely with people across vancouver, british columbia, canada and the world. As
an creative, you are already creating content, you now have easy and automagic ways to get it out to the world and to build a
movement and an audience.
6. Participatory Group Culture
Thursday, October 15, 2009 6
By sharing the wisdom of crowds the collective benefit is far greater!
There has been a realization that in many situations such as this one tonight.... the collective knowlegde of the audience far
outweighs that of the presenter and new events are being organized without heirarchies and showing all of us are capable
teaching, sharing, organizing, and mentoring. This raises the level of participation and empowers anyone to make a real
difference and contribute their skills and ideas. Encourage your customers, fans and friends to share, comment, tags, add
photos to group. Participate along side you in the creation of culture.
7. Open Source
Thursday, October 15, 2009 7
Free software, built by all of us, owned by none of us. Used to power all sorts of things from
political campaigns, publishing platforms, activist actions.
##
The open source software movement is intrinsically tied to social change in itʼs DNA. This movement is defined by:
- communities to the core, more like tribes or extended families and trusted collegues
- building things for common good while eschewiing traditional power models
- doing work for free or very cheap in order to bring goodness
the result= levels the playing so small and independant players can compete with the traditional giants and get message out
easily and cost effectively.
8. Cast off the shackles of your oppressors
Thursday, October 15, 2009 8
Because of these changes in culture, media and technology weʼre at a unique time in history where we are seeing upheavel of
traditional power hierarchies.
##
Information dissemention has gone from a top-down model that relies heavily on a few gatekeepers to an open and distrubed
models where we all have the power to put our messages into the world. It used to be hard but now you essentially have
access to the resources that previously would have required owning a television station, a radio tower, a printing press. Every
day that passes this stuff becomes easier and less expensive to access.
##
The shackles of microsoft and apple are cast off! Brazil and other countries rejecting microsoftʼs “drug dealer” business model
and companies, governments, universities are all embracing open everything because its cheaper, more sustainable and
works best!
9. Open source culture is thriving
Thursday, October 15, 2009 9
Itʼs easy to look around our city and communities and see that open source culture is in fact thriving.
Small companies and groups are able to do things that only in the past only people with huge budgets like corporations and
governments. Movements like FreeTheNet.ca here in Vancouver & Ills sans fils based in Montreal are growing in numbers and
strength. These are free community wi-fi with local portals that allow grassroots organizations to do things that before now
were only possible by huge corporations. Some of you may be familiar with the Free Geek movement here in Vancouver. This
is a group of passionate volunteers that gather old computer gear and the teach volunteers how to fixand build computers and
then give them to the students after certain amount of work.
10. Open Unconferences & Camps: Meet-up in real life
Thursday, October 15, 2009 10
The geeks donʼt live in the basement, geeks are everyone and all around you. Weʼre seeing a groundswell of grassroots cons/
camps springing up all around us.
These are places wher you can share technical and tactical knowledge and information for mutual benefit without sharing
philosophies or other interests. Instead of corporate expensive registration fees, and pay to speak or paid to speak presenters,
you get peer-taught, volunteer run, everyone participates events with better learning, more fun and way cheaper. Things like
art camp, photocamp, vinovamp, transit camp, barcamp, drunkcamp, campcamp, opencities, meetups, Macha pechu, pechu
kucha, puchachki.
##
topics can be anything and size etc. doesn't matter.
11. Open Culture: Give it away!
(photo by Franz Patzig)
Thursday, October 15, 2009 11
Biggest danger is as young creatives isnʼt piracy but obscurity .. irrelevance. Get your work in to the wild. Mix
your shit with other peopleʼs shit. Collaborate. Cross-pollinte. Make something bigger than yourself.
In fact, iʼve found in my experience that the more you give away the more you get back and build your reputation and social
capital... like putting coins in your karmic piggy bank. Creative commons is at the heart of this movement and is all about
enabling sharing while retaining creative control over our artist works. Iʼve got a lot to say about this topic and would love to
talk with you guys more about remix culture at any point.
##
12. effective dissemination
Thursday, October 15, 2009 12
Don't reinvent and create a fiefdom, get out of the silo and spread the love around!
##
The temptation from the early web days was to put everything into its own silo with top down control and re-
creating a new “thing” for all your content and campaigns
Instead, consider layering your causes and campaigns with like-minded others who are working already
(Netsquared and other community blogs) and social networks where your audience is already hanging out (ugh
Facebook)
13. encourage participation
Thursday, October 15, 2009 13
Many of your patrons, customers, and friends are capable and eager to do more than write just buy your art or
time.
##
You can empower them to remix your stuff into meaningful collabroative content - and they will and do a great
job. Find ways to incentive super active agents in your ecosystem with inclusive giveaways, contests, and
parties. Learn to access highly passionate tastemakers, to get out the word our, reach new audiences, and find
new venues for your work. The best part is these activities are fun, free, and fulfilling.
14. yes we can!
Thursday, October 15, 2009 14
Now we can participate and interact through tools like blogs, comments, online video, photosharing and other
collaboration technologies.
##
We can publish inexpensively through and tree-free using the internet and other tools of the digital world. We
can coordinate throngs and hordes through technologies like SMS and RSS. We can powerfully organize and
access the world of information through things like content management and search. It worked for Obamaʼs
campaign and countless others - perhaps this spirit of participation can work for you.
15. The Revolution will not be broadcast...
Thursday, October 15, 2009 15
This movement is new and has only just begun!
What do I see on the horizon?
China and India - many questions and misconceptions in this massively emerging and dynamic
environment, it’s opening up and changing the whole world!
Pervasive mobile technology - ubiquitous and universal access to the collective knowledge of all
mankind. Especially in the developing world like africa where the mobile web is a gateway to the
modern world.
Open borders - exchange of ideas, love, skills. Creative ideas and endevours are the spices of the
modern explorer
##
what’s next? the small apps made quickly to do specialized tasks and play well with others
16. Know Google-fu
Thursday, October 15, 2009 16
When it comes to online reputation... I am whatever you say I am. The way people figure out who you are is
through typing your name into Google.
##
The top 10 results that come up define you in the eyes of the people researching you... like it or not. Every
should know what picture is painted by the top Google search results for their name and should learn how to
modify and control the information that appears. Our online digital identity is the summation of all the things
that we share about ourselves and that others say about us. Effective outreach requires knowing how google
works (or how to make it work for you). Learn how to track the conversations about you and your brand. This
isnʼt optional.
17. distributed life/work
Thursday, October 15, 2009 17
Move towards distributed life where you can have all your assets and applications available to you from any
computer in the world via the internet using tools like gmail, wikis, google docs, Amazon s2 and EC3,
basecamp, etc.
##
Moving towards a place where we are all keeping info online instead of on one home computer... we become
untethered and free to roam between devices, identities, geographies, and audiences. distributed lives means
we gain reach and efficiency in working and collaborating from far-flung locations wherever your partners,
patrons, or projects may take you.
18. Tactical Toolbox
Thursday, October 15, 2009 18
How does technology play into all of this? Sometimes technology gets painted with a sticky, tarry
brush as a polluter, capitalism driven ... and confusing
The good news is, ... these technology tools are easier/better then 10 years ago even better than
one year ago.
Load up a Basket of Publishing Tools: Drupal Wordpress, Wikis, Flickr, YouTube, Twitter
Fill your Cart with free/cheap Business Tools: Basecamp, Freshbooks, Harvest, Google Docs
Adjust your brain for openness and sharing by default
and ...
19. Go Forth!
Thursday, October 15, 2009 19
Go forth my friends in creativity and kindness.
I encourage you to pack your toolbox, roll up your sleeves, and learn about this shit. Don't get hung up on the
acronyms, jargon and preconceived notions about technology or copyright or sharing. Consider what it is what
you have to share and the value you bring to the table and discover how to spread your message and
contribute to positive change by helping to create a new and open culture. Be open minded and return to the
state of the uncarved block! When there is nothing left to give you have to set yourself on fire.
20. WWHDTD?
• “I learned this, at least, by my experiment;
that if one advances confidently in the
direction of his dreams, and endeavors to
live the life which he has imagined, he will
meet with a success unexpected in common
hours.”
Thursday, October 15, 2009 20
It’s not just me... these are universal truths.
21. Addendum: Tools
• EventBrite - manage registration
(smaller: Evite & Mobaganda)
• PB Wiki - free hosted wiki that let’s
attendees connect
• BaseCamp - project management for
event team
• WordPress - free open-source content-
management system
• Ning - Create a social network for your
event
Thursday, October 15, 2009 21
22. Addendum: Tools
• Flickr - collect photos of event via tags &
groups
• Twitter - connect with attendees, listen
• Google - docs, alerts, groups
• Upcoming.org - great place to list events
(also ZVents & Eventful)
• NetVibes - create a dashboard out of all
of the above
Thursday, October 15, 2009 22
23. Addendum: 3 Things You
Can Do Today
• Start listening - Google Alerts + Twitter
Search + Google Reader
• Develop your brand - register your domain
name and reserve your namespace across
major social networks
• Join Twitter & Facebook
Thursday, October 15, 2009 23