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May 2007

May 31, 2007

Reboot9: Mobile social play

Conqwest Alternate Reality Games (ARGs) are games played everywhere, off and online. They're great for creating change, subverting the norms, educating on certain themes, or providing easy insight into real complex issues (think the Sims played out for real as a pervasive game). I'm currently planning out some sample ARGs for a few projects I'm involved in - where gaming meets social media. This session's helping join a few of the dots.

Here are four guidelines to help create playable mobile, playful, social games:

  1. Design for different levels of engagement: engaging players gradually helps them engage for longer.
  2. Assign roles to players: make sure that roles are clear to the players, that they know what role they should be assuming and that they switch over occasionally.
  3. Meta-gaming: activities that are not actively playing the game but related to it. Being engrossed in some downtime in the mobile social game, like painting up a costume, helps maintain the enthusiasm in the game
  4. Venues need to be established where players can come together to work out unwritten rules of playing the game (.e.g. There are soccer rules and then street soccer adds to that).

Mobile social play talk page

Reboot9: Power and Control at the Edge(s) of the 21st Century - Hierarchy and Wirearchy

Wirearchy Jon Husband used to work in a prison. Prisoners call their prison guards 'Boss'. Jon Husband also used to work in a bank. In banks, employees call their leaders 'Boss'. There has been hierarchy, but there is a new word, a new movement which is eating away at this notion: "Wirearchy" (go to his website for a cool flash-based explanation of what this is).

Take a look at the cool representation of where we've come in terms of hierarchy/wirearchy, and then maybe have a go at some questions for us / you guys, which, after a few of your comments, I might attempt to synthesise later on:

  1. Is knowledge power? Has that been the case? Is it the case now?
  2. Is competition necessary for innovation, progress and evolution?
  3. Does the absence of hierarchy create disorder?
  4. Can connecting, conversing, linking, archiving, small pieces loosely joined etc replace the 'real' power systems (the top-down capital markets, legislation, political and governance systems, elections etc)?

Reboot9: Trusted space, nature's rules

The Prior Revolution
In Galileo's day people believed the earth was the centre of the system and that the world was flat - does anyone still believe these things? ;-) There was a powerful institution that would persecute you if you challenged these things. Galileo, however, did challenge these perceptions. What did he do to create his revolution? He played off Reality versus Dogma. Galileo observed nature and discovered the laws. In natures the laws are rooted in mathematics, not dogma. But, that said, just because you can see something is happening, does not mean that it is accepted.

Natural Human Organisations
The Roman legions provide a superb outlook on how humans organise themselves. The foundation for the legion's life was its smallest unit, the conterburnium, conterburnales meaning 'mates'. The conterburnium was a small tent like home, where a group of eight men would sleep, eat and all the rest together for up to 20 years. Were they close? Absolutely. The fire service use the same system now. Ten of these groups was a century of 80 men run by a Centurion, for which there were 64 grades of promotion over 20 years. Six centuries made up a Cohort and the legion was made up of 10 cohorts, with 5400 men.

'Head Office' in Rome didn't care what was happening in these small groups of small groups of small groups. HQ was a talent clearing house, finding the Centurions who, in fact, ran the show. The whole system was run on trust and reputation.

Powerofgroups Magically, though, the Roman structures fit all kinds of magical number combinations, most of all the Dunbar number. We cannot have close personal friendships with more than seven or eight people. We can't have efficiency with more than 80 people. Beyond 80 we lose all sense of efficiency - we can't work effectively. All those guys with 3500 friends on Bebo and Facebook... they're lying, I think. This makes me think, too, of Gore Tex's structure - when a factory gets to 100 employees they split it in two and create a new one.

These are Galilean observations. They should be telling us something about our online and face-to-face relationships. But they aren't. We still live in a machine world, where we are put into groups which create friction, teams which are efficient but not much care is involved. We want to be working with friends where our attachment to each other helps the project succeed best.

Release the Power of the Human
We are primates. If we observe our monkey ancestors we can see it, and we can see what we need most: Touch and Conversation. If given the optimal initial conditions every part of nature will grow to its natural optimal design.

Plant one acorn seed and you will get a whole forest eventually, given the right conditions. Given the wrong conditions you might get a tree or a clearing, but not the forest. Think about our classrooms. Are they optimal conditions for growing relationships and making collaboration count more? Given the Dunbar number a class of 20-30 students is the most destructive sizing we could have. We need classes of eight or 80 - just like the amazing and high-performing 75 student classroom I saw in Canada three years ago.

Flower Nature knows best: optimal relationships
We have so much to learn from nature. Look at a flower, like this one, and every petal is arranged in an optimal place so that every petal gets the maximum coverage of sun and rain. Do our petals in school get all the sun and rain that they need? Do they get attention from the centurion and HQ that is required? Probably not, since our ways of working are not conditioned to be like this from the start. In our schools of hundreds, thousands of individuals, kids are forced into creating their own conterburnium, which take the form of gangs and bullying. It's natural, and nature shows us.

We need natural human leadership

Natural Human Leadership
A real leader, not an administrator, is what we need. We natural sifting of talent based on trust, trust that is earned from leading at the front, not administering from a desk behind the front line. We need to observe nature and use its lessons to inform our structures, our relationships, our expectations and our leadership.

Trusted space, nature's rules - the Reboot Talk page summary

What is Reboot about and why am I here?

Reboot Reboot's theme this year is Human?, and it's the reason I'm here - because being human is the essence of successful social media and social media might just be the enabler / an enabler for being a successful human.

For all that people try to pigeon hole me, you and anyone else who has the vaguest passing interest in blogs or social media as 'the blogger guy' (or gal), the one thing we're all about is humanity and what it means to be human.

You know what I'm talking about; the person you spoke to about blogs who just didn't get it, did they actually get the whole concept of what their role as a human is? Our opening talk, to get us in the frame of mind, explains.

1.5 tonnes of matter flows through us each year. 98% of our atoms are replaced in a year. We are in a state of permanent reincarnation, and here is the connection with digital media. With digital media we never lose information because we have something in which to put it and, in time, we push the digital media off one device onto another, as one device becomes obsolete and the next one is the renewed version.

What about our human selves? We need to make sure that we regularly reinvent ourselves, we need to reboot our minds and relationships in the same way that our bodies naturally reboot constantly.

So what is being human? We want to dare, care and share. Humans are not selfish irrational beings, we want to dare, care and share in order to gain attention for our ideas which then brings us sex, friends and employment. How Danish.

However, up until now I don't think it's been possible to do this kind of daring, caring and sharing without having a suspicious starting point: those who have wanted to contribute to a larger group of people have had to climb to positions of power to exert their contributions.

Now, though, everyone can take risks without personal cost, everyone can care for others without being seen as a martyr, everyone can share their idea without having to be at the top of the hierarchical pile.

We've gone from Civilisation 1.0 to Civilisation 2.0

New, old economy: Gifts and sharing the long tail via search

New, old food: Variety of wild plants and animals

New, old energy: Renewable solar energy in the environment

New, old social order: bottom-up, peer-ro-peer, no HQ

New, old habitation: Nomads with bonds to the homeland.

May 30, 2007

HotelFox - keeping things human

Hotelfox212 I've ended up in Room 212, the Japanese Garden. It's lovely, a Tokidoki original. Tokidoki's website is fantastic and garish (or fantastically garish?), though this room should provide the relaxation required after 20 hour days of F2F social networking. The theme of Reboot9 being 'Human' I have to say that it is really nice not staying in some swish yet inhuman-unhuman chain hotel for which the Danes are (in)famous:

Re-interpreting tradition. Simone is a great traveller and also loves the nomad life so he is happy to be working on hotel rooms that he himself would like to stay in and hopes too that his guests will wake up in them with a smile in the mornings. “This room is my own interpretation of traditional Japan seen with a modern western eye. I wanted to give a sense of freshness, a contemporary young design style, but minimal and peaceful as in the Japan of the past.”

I've just gone and uploaded some pics to Flickr.

Breaking the digital divide: oldies but goodies

Mum shared this with me. I'm peeing myself in the airport right now. No, I really am. At the same time I am wholly full of admiration for these guys. The oldest singer is 100! Who says there's a digital divide? Watch and enjoy:

Roll up, roll up! Get your Reboot here!

Reboot9

I'll have visited four countries by mid-afternoon today, starting with the early rise breakfast in Scotland, coffee and cake in England, and journey across Europe's longest tunnel-bridge for lunch in Sweden and back again for tea tonight in Copenhagen. With Reboot9's theme of 'Human' I'm looking forward to chatting to some random tourists, Swedes and Danes about their perspectives on all this technology stuff on their human-ness before meeting up with the PreReBoot crowd tonight to start having conversations around a really profound and broad theme.

If you are around in Copenhagen from 5pm and want to meet up give me a call or text: +44 793 234 3188. I'll be staying at the Hotel Fox.

I've now been bullied by Mayfield (Antony, not Ross) into holding a conversation on the Citizens of the Future although, in a hasty clicking too fast moment, I managed to delete my original entry which had about a dozen interested conversers on it - if you were one of them you might want to go an re-register your interest in my wee session. I hope to see a few folk there!

As for other things which catch my interest, and this is just on Day One:

I dare say that there will be more conversations added which might catch my eye, but this, folks, is what you've got coming to your aggregator soon. If you would like to make sure that you don't miss a post tomorrow then don't forget to learn how to subscribe for free to edu.blogs.com.

Real-life "Tell me about where you live" exercise

So many times as a languages teacher I got kids to produce podcasts or videos on their local area for tourists, imaginary or imagined, who didn't know what to do. Despite years of conditioning I now realise I have no idea what there really is to do for tourists in our own fair country.

To an email I got from Steve. He's wanting to know where in Scotland he could take his family and I'm sure that some of my readers' students might be able to let us know by leaving a comment here:

Just wondering if you knew of any decent holiday parks up your neck of the woods, we are thinking about where to go this summer and Scotland has come up as a possibility, hence I am looking for somewhere that is child friendly grass, sea, stuff for Jack to do etc etc.  Any ideas would be welcome.  Failing Scotland we might head back to northern France again.

Let's not lose four tourists to the Outre Manche. Any ideas?

May 29, 2007

Lego to launch a MMOG

Lego_mmog A MMOG is not something cute that purs, but a Massively Multiplayer Online Game and the staple entertainment of my youth, Lego, are going to be launching one in 2008.

This is great news, especially when you consider how logical and natural the link is between Lego (building stuff, pretending that your Lego world really exists, making characters talk to each other) and online environments and games such as Second Life or World Of Warcraft (building stuff, talking to other characters).

But why, oh why, do we have to wait :-( Lego was that tool of instant gratification. I guess I'll just have to go and build a police station or hospital while I wait...

Update: To keep us going Blethers has described a superb low-tech/non-tech way of getting kids talking and writing better using the traditional Lego brick.

Can you help get my masthead right?


  Mike @ Centotre 
  Originally uploaded by Edublogger

I hate it when bloggers go on the scrounge, but sometimes needs must. Having a business coffee with Mike, right, (different, I guess, from a pleasure coffee) yesterday we once again got into the dynamics (or lack of them) in my blog's masthead.

It is drifting off the page, the photo's lighting is wrong... but what's underneath it is OK. Jamie had already offered some time to get it right, but since he's on holiday if anyone is able to help out in getting this right, while keeping the colour themes I've picked (very fond of my red/light blue stuff) then please do drop me a line. Mike reckons it's only a 15 minute job for someone who knows what they're doing.

At least being 'lost on the page' is a marked improvement from being 'funereal'.

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