the future will be confusing · 3.05.12

Here’s the talk I gave last week at the (very wonderful) Do Lectures

A few things I probably didn’t stress enough (and I got known as the DNA guy due to my talk, but there’s more to it than that):

Honestly, if your business isn’t considering how computation changes things, you’re toast – especially those industries that haven’t traditionally been computerised or modernised.

Genetic testing will not be optional very soon in the future – doctors and specialists will need your genetic data to make medical decisions (especially about treatment and drugs). Whether or not you analyse the rest of your results is between you and your doctor.

23andme is a very bare-bones service – it could really do with a layer of genetic counselling or intepretation of your data. Unless you’re pretty conversant with genetics and statistics, the numbers and results are pretty meaningless.

As an individual – if you don’t have literacy with science or technology, you’re at a disadvantage. I may not go quite as far as Program Or Be Programmed, but it’s definitely no longer funny to laugh away lack of technical prowess. Technology directly affects lives every moment and every decision, and unless you understand what and how the technology works, and who and why they are using it, you’re being blindly led.

Anyway. Other news.

Last week I also left Dentsu London (now mcgarrybowen) and this week I started at the Government Digital Service. Big hard problems to solve, working very close to the code. Enjoying it a lot.

Next week, Next 12 in Berlin…

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a visit to the archives of HSBC · 12.04.12

A few weeks ago I was lucky enough to be invited to the HSBC archives in a secret East London location.

I love archives, especially company ones. They’re getting rarer and rarer, often I guess perceived as a luxury, whereas being able to tell the story of your history should provide providence and security.

HSBC Archive

My interests are, however, often orthogonal to those of professional archivists. Most of the records in the archive are books – ledgers, official correspondence, meeting notes. I’m interested in the ephemera; building mock-ups, rubber stamps…

HSBC Archive

… and particularly the marketing material, the internal newspapers.

HSBC Archive

I mean, look at that. It was from the future.

HSBC Archive

And cats! Paying with cheques!

HSBC Archive

It’s all a fascinating look at how modernisation was perceived.

HSBC Archive

And, y’know, a Christo lying around.

HSBC Archive

See all the photos here.

talking · 12.04.12

Just to say I’m speaking at the Do Lectures in West Wales in a few weeks time, and also NEXT Berlin in early May. Very much looking forward to both of them.

a new fashion aesthetic · 2.04.12

In Bruce Sterling’s closing speech of SXSW, he claimed that the interactive attendees were better dressed than the music people: “There’s something semiotic, Gibsonian about people dressing better than musicians. When you showed up at SXSW X years ago, you were meeting guys in [t-shirts, jeans]… they’re still here, but mostly that’s the way your uncle looks now. Now they look put together — not like rich person, not like, ‘ook at my sable fur,’ but like new shoelaces, done hair — they look pretty nice. They’re trying to live up to their products and services, which [didn’t look nice] 20 years ago…”

Now, I’m not really sure that’s true – but he was completely right that the dress sense of many, and especially the music people was completely retro. I didn’t see a single example of non-retro dress sense during Music.

And Bruce had a challenge: “Although SXSW people do look chic, it’s a rather retro look. They don’t actually look very futuristic. I would suggest, when you come back next year… come back in robotvision glitchcore. Man, you would rule the physical universe. It would be like a silent coup, people wouldn’t know what to make of it.”

I’ve been mulling it since. And when I say mulling, I mean pinteresting. Thinking through looking. It definitely refers back to Russell’s original quote that “every hep shop seems to be full of tweeds and leather and carefully authentic bits of restrained artisanal fashion. I think most of Shoreditch would be wondering around in a leather apron if it could. With pipe and beard and rickets.” Whilst I like a bit of tweed now and again I wanted to see what else was out there.

new fashion aesthetic

new fashion aesthetic

new fashion aesthetic

It’s explicitly non-retro, even more so not retro-future, or retro 8 bit. The look overlaps with this season’s aztec fixation, but even appropriating such imagery ruled a piece out of consideration. Sometimes it’s just the right colours, or the cut. It’s more gradient fill than pixels. It’s things that couldn’t be made 5 years ago. Supersymmetry and asymmetry. It’s not about the ‘machine vision’ that the New Aesthetic references, but it’s hard to see how that will not be appropriated and re-emerge into fashion as something not necessarily technically correct but aesthetically interesting.

I may not be right. I’m starting to disagree with some of my earlier choices. This is just the start of looking and thinking about this. If you have any examples I might want to add, please tell me.

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yesterday's new words · 29.03.12

trigeminality
interoception
orthonasal
retronasal
chemoperception
neurogastronomy
macrokelp
cryptogamists

Comment [1]

panopticon · 20.03.12

Spring Break Gets Tamer as World Watches Online

“You don’t want to have to defend yourself later, so you don’t do it.”
“I do worry about Facebook. I just know I need a job eventually.”

Resume, references, password: Job seekers get asked in interviews to provide Facebook logins

“It’s akin to requiring someone’s house keys.”
“I needed my job to feed my family. I had to.”
“Volunteering is coercion if you need a job.”
“If you need to put food on the table for your three kids, you can’t afford to stand up for your belief.”

Sad times.

sand in the vaseline · 19.01.12

Just before Christmas all of my credit cards magically turned into RFID enabled smart cards (I was finally able to actually pay wirelessly with them for the first time last week, but that’s another grumble for another day).

For a week, all was fine, but then suddenly, I couldn’t get into the tube with my Oyster card. I had to fish the Oyster out of my wallet to make it work. Too many computers in my wallet. I’m not sure what caused the change: did I suddenly have too many cards, in the wrong lamination? Or has the gate software been upgraded, given that soon London Underground will mainly just use credit cards for entry/exit rather than Oysters? The only UI I have is to make a physical choice.

So rather than the effortless wallet breeze through the gates, I have to use the more technical L-shaped half open. Well within my city flaneury expertise level, but an added irk, several times a day.

Experience designers love a bit of Saarinen: “Always design a thing by considering it in its next larger context – a chair in a room, a room in a house, a house in an environment, an environment in a city plan.” That’s what’s wrong here, an RFID card is not considered within the context of a wallet, containing multiple competing RF field creating information and ID objects, and this new, electric wallet isn’t considered within the larger system of shops and the invisible RF world.

This is starting to happen elsewhere, too. Pretty much every TV at CES had the same functionality: Wi-Fi. Gesture control. Voice control. Given your console, your TV, your cable box, your light switches, your hi-fi, your phone, your tablet will have these performative technologies, we’ve got to find ways to add direction to our waving hands and faltering voices. I’m already at the point where I have to turn the Xbox off completely before flicking to watch TV, lest the Xbox misinterpret my movements. Every utterance or movement could be met with a chorus of slavish obeyance by your white, brown and shiny goods. Badly designed hardware interfaces will be bullies – demanding their own room, with no interfering IR laser speckles and a stalkerish obsession, hanging on your every word.

Whilst the technology companies demo their living rooms of the future, they live in a dreamlike world where everything you buy is a Samsung, or a Sony, whereas the reality is a Funai next to a Huawei next to a Panasonic next to a Vizio. And it’ll probably take 10 years for them to work together to fix this mess, let alone pipedreams of creating common standards. I can’t wait for how Which? will review the interfaces of these products. Consumer electronics reviewers will have to become performance artists, and consumers alchemists, creating concoctions of brands and boxes that actually let them take control of their living, working and playing environments.

Comment [2]

2012 · 1.01.12

Less heat, more light.

the closest I'll get to a post about X Factor · 11.12.11

I’m not going to embed a Coldplay video here but the centrally-controlled LED glowing wristbands at their concerts/X Factor appearance are both technically brilliant and slightly disenfranchising (and completely useless and dormant after the concert). Weirder still, Coldplay bought a stake in the electronics company behind it. Which queers the use in X Factor somewhat. Stop this New Aesthetic, I want to get off.

companies companying · 30.11.11

5000000

I love this. I often bang on about how there’s no better marketing that showing a company companying – showing what they do, how they do it, what that does. It might seem very old fashioned (“we make a lot of these”) but it somehow makes the company and product more tangible. I’d‘ve never have predicted that over 260 million Tunnocks Caramels were made a year. That’s brilliant.

I think it’s why Kickstarter is successful too – big numbers, constant updates about making the thing. Weeknotes. Companies companying.

Anyway.

Comment [2]

Londoners · 24.11.11

Londoners is a lovely little book. Stories told at whatever length they need to be by an interested ear.

I think it’s easy to tell if you’re a Londoner. Read the introduction and the prologue (an interview with Simon Kushner, a former Londoner, now living in Cape Town) and see if you’re smiling like a loon.

From the introduction:
Londoners

From the prologue:
Londoners

Londoners

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