New Public Thinkers: My Nominations

10 December, 2010

My good friend and intellectual scratching post Dougald Hine has started a conversation here to identify the next generation of public thinkers, and has invited me to be part of it. Here’s what Dougald says:

“Radio 3 is currently looking for “a new generation of public intellectuals”. You can apply here – except that to be eligible, you must be studying or working inside a university. Now, call me self-interested, but by this criterion, the likes of John Berger or a young Karl Polanyi would fall through their net. I’m not comparing myself to those remarkable men. But as someone whose work gets cited by academics in a range of disciplines and is, I hope, beginning to make some impression in the public sphere, I’m disappointed to be excluded from consideration.

This isn’t just about me, though – there’s a whole network of people I’m aware of in the UK and beyond who are doing substantial new thinking from outside of academia – often in close and constructive dialogue with those operating from inside university departments. The way Radio 3 and the AHRC are approaching this project is going to miss out on a huge amount of the emerging intellectual culture of our generation – many of whose brightest minds saw what was happening to academia and chose to do our thinking elsewhere.

I’ve written to Roger Wright, the controller of Radio 3, telling him this and inviting him to redress the balance. To help him, I’d like you to nominate your own choice of “new public thinkers” from outside of the university walls.”

It’s a compelling argument, and one which I wholeheartedly support. I have nothing against the academic world, having worked with many academics over the years including on Social by Social, but ever since my School of Everything days I have been convinced of the importance of breaking learning out of institutions and embedding it into society, and of the huge intellectual value created outside the academic world. And as one commenter pointed out, it seems odd that Radio 3′s criteria would actually exclude Antonio Gramsci, inventor of the term “public intellectual”.

Dougald has very flatteringly nominated me as one of his choices, prompting a flurry of blogging and tweeting from me as I try to live up to the moniker! So now here are my three initial nominations, although I’m sure I’ll think of more later. Interestingly, they’re all people who do things rather than write or talk about them, which perhaps reflects my growing belief that ideas are worth far more if they’ve been tried out in practice. So here goes…

  1. Dougald himself – obviously I should return the favour, but over many years of collaborating with Dougald he’s been consistently years ahead of public discourse, introducing me to Ivan Illich when we were dreaming up School of Everything, writing about economic collapse long before the mainstream had the courage to do so, and creating new models for living and working which I believe will help shape the future of society for years to come.
  2. Charles Armstrong – an entrepreneur by profession, Charles brings his understanding of ethnography and technology together to create new tools and infrastructure to help us live better, and has som incredibly smart ideas about networks, crowdfunding and the future of business and society. I’m nominating him particularly for his work on emergent democracy and the brilliant One Click Orgs which is introducing democratic structures into the corporate world.
  3. Tessy Britton – another long-term collaborator of mine, I could nominate Tessy for the work she has done on learning and personal development which has shaped our work together on Mindapples. However, I’m particularly nominating her for her incredible work on Social Spaces, including the wonderful book Hand Made, and her bold action-research project of the Travelling Pantry, touring the country to test her ideas out in practice. Many PhDs have been awarded for far less.

So, who are your nominations? Please name your choices on your own blogs or webspaces, link back to Dougald’s post, and invite your friends to do the same. Let’s see what interesting people emerge…


#SXSW takeaways

6 April, 2009

I’ve been off exploring lately. Those of you who follow me on Twitter etc. will have spotted that I was at ‘#sxsw‘ – also known as “South by Southwest“. The South by Southwest Festival is held every year in Austin, Texas, and it’s a huge international (mainly US of course) festival of Film, Music and Interactive content.

The #kebab unpanel - photo by Benjamin Ellis

The #kebab unpanel at SXSW09 - photo by Benjamin Ellis

School of Everything were out in force promoting ourselves internationally, meeting other start-ups and soaking up new ideas. The flavour was very much Silicon Valley though and I was surprised at the lack of cutting edge thinking in the panel discussions. I’ve come back feeling that the quality of discussion in London is extremely high: hearing apparently cutting-edge panellists repeating ideas which I’d heard two years ago in London made me feel we’re really at the heart of something interesting over here.

I enjoyed Steven Johnson‘s talk about the eco-system of news, not least because I enjoy analogies to ecology to describe business developments. I also enjoyed hearing Bruce Sterling rant about the recession, the human impact of web 2.0 and the importance of bringing your own beer to speaking gigs. And I managed to get myself into an argument with Chris Anderson of Wired about the economics of ‘free’ culture and the future of publishing, which actually included him shouting “screw the printers!” at me. All rather good fun, and he was nice enough to Twitter me afterwards and continue the discussion over here.

The highlight though was undoubtedly the British invasion of the conference with the now-infamous #kebab session. In the pub with Richard Pope on the Saturday night, we decided that the conference needed stirring up and hence that we should run a Brit-focussed panel about using the web to achieve social aims rather than just “how to monetise Twitter”. The next morning, Richard found us an empty room to steal, nagged me into facilitating it, and we somehow persuaded Mike Butcher and others to announce it – until by 2 o’clock we had a room full of people waiting for us to do something interesting.

We ended up running “Not another social media panel” – an improvised ‘panel-slam’ event where anyone on the panel could instantly replaced by a member of the audience. Be interesting, be knowledgeable, or be replaced by someone who has something better to say. The result was a pleasing array of organised chaos, including user-generated name labels and a live Twitter-stream for the event following (for some reason) the hashtag #kebab. By the end of the session (via some references to monetising waterboarding and assorted US vs. UK banter) the entire panel had been replaced including me, the room was packed and ‘kebab’ had trended as the fifth most mentioned word on Twitter. There’s some video footage kicking around in the Twitter stream, and we also ended up on Techcrunch, the Guardian and even in Wikipedia. Not bad for a little idea we had in the pub.

We’re now wondering how we can start a SXSW-style event (with added kebab) here in London and rally some of the cutting edge discussions around the UK start-up scene. Anyone interested in helping out with that, let me know.


Going Postal

11 November, 2008

This is quite simply magnificent in every way:

Go Postal!

Read more at Social Innovation Camp, who are celebrating over 100 ideas for their second event next month – woo-hoo!


Save the Jet Ski

24 October, 2008

My random idea for a new environmental campaign just made Idea of the Week on Social Innovation Camp. Take a look!

Thoughts and comments gratefully received – and please do submit your ideas to the next camp, I want lots of new things to work on and help with please. (Um, sort of…)

And check out the utterly bonkers video my friend Claire made to promote the camp. It’s like getting a lovely long hug while on drugs…


SI Camp: The Movie

25 April, 2008

Social Innovation Camp: the Movie is now online, courtesy of our friends at The People Speak:

Feeling incredibly inspired now. We must do it again!

(I don’t really think the truth is overrated by the way…)


Trampoline FlightDeck

9 April, 2008

Nice piece about my friends at Trampoline Systems in CRM Magazine this month, also featuring a nice cheesy quote from yours truly about the future of CRM software.

You can read the full piece here, and I also highly recommend Trampoline’s Enron Explorer – great for fans of network visualisation software and/or massive industrial fraud.


From the frontline… Social Innovation Camp

5 April, 2008

Long day at SI Camp (particularly long after the opening party last night), but there’s some really fascinating stuff being developed here. Lots of great people have turned out to help, and the buzz is fantastic here.

I’ve been dividing my time between Stuffshare, Barcode Wikipedia and Personal Development Reports, working with John Grant and others to help the teams define their propositions, focus their efforts and create compelling ways of explaining what they do. The potential for all three are huge, particularly the barcode guys who have such a simple idea but the potential to completely transform the consumer marketplace. I’m also having a lot of fun thinking up new names for them all.

On the way we’ve been creating lots of entertaining new buzzwords for what social technology does. I’m enjoying David Wilcox’s new “social reporter” meme, and the cheekiness of attempting “market transformation”, but my favourite so far is “behavioural publishing” – for when it’s not about enabling new behaviours, it’s about using technology to show what’s already happening and encourage more of it. What behaviours of yours would you like to “publish”? Lots of fun to be had with this one.

Off home to relax now in preparation for another intense day of camping tomorrow. I plan to spend tomorrow morning interrogating each of the teams on their business models and 5-minute pitches, ready for the final show and tell in the afternoon. I wonder who’ll win…?


Too much technology, too much innovation

30 March, 2008

This cracking piece about innovation on BNET got Dugg recently and deserves a share. Whether it’s replacing car keys with complex wireless authentication technologies, or grafting endless functionality onto otherwise perfectly usable software – innovation is becoming synonymous with new things you can do, rather than doing what you want more easily.

It reminds me of something I used to ask a few years back: how come in science fiction, everything works perfectly? Hover cars don’t break down, phasers don’t need rebooting, spaceships don’t get stuck. Technology is often presented to us as this unstoppable force that will make our lives so much easier. But for every finger-print ID door lock, there is a team of fingerprint ID door lock service engineers; for every automated grocery reordering system, there is a pile of misordered vegetables rotting in the distribution centre; for every matter transporter there will be a matter transportation workers union. The more technology we have, the more humans we need to make it work.

This week I’ve got Social Innovation Camp, followed by Disruptive Social Innovators, and then an RSA “civic innovation” event, not to mention chats with about a hundred people with “social” and “innovation” in the job/business names. Meanwhile everyone from DIUS to Channel 4 is talking about supporting innovation and the Innovation Nation. We’re in danger of overdosing, elevating the new above the useful and throwing away past successes. And more importantly, we risk elevating the technology, the “innovations”, above the users themselves.

A line in Clay Shirky’s recent Q&A at the RSA comes to mind (slightly paraphrased): “It’s not about novelty, but ubiquity. If you are looking for social scale change, it’s adoption.”

Social progress is often about making more widespread use of what works already, not just putting new things in their place. Car keys work perfectly well, thanks: they’re cheap and robust, they never need upgrading, and most importantly, everyone can use them.

So let’s focus our energies on making simple, easily-supportable things that everyone can use, and spreading the behaviours and technologies that already work. And fewer hoverboots please. (Although having said that, this is waaaaay cool…)


Simple simple simple

20 March, 2008

I love this…

stuffthathappens.com/blog/2008/03/05/simplicity


School of Everywhere

5 March, 2008

The School of Everything went international yesterday. We launched in New York at the NY Tech Meetup, which is terribly glamorous of course, but the exciting bit for me was the process back at Everything HQ of getting our new international locations system working.

We’ve implemented the open gazetteer source Geonames as our locations database, so rather than using the very UK-specific “postcode” lookup we’re now handling everything based on names of localities. You enter your location, such as “Clapham” or “Felixstowe”, we look it up in Geonames and assign you a location on the map. If Geonames picks the wrong Clapham, we’ve added a neat disambiguation tool so you can choose which Clapham is right for you.

The data is easy to change in the Geonames database (via their site), which means if your location isn’t listed currently, you can add it. We’re hoping that over time we can encourage lots of web projects to standardise on Geonames, so that in time we can refine it to be a really comprehensive, open geolocations system for everyone to share.

Take a look at www.schoolofeverything.com now, create a teacher profile, have a play with it and let me know what you think. And if you’ve got friends around the world who have something to teach, tell them about us!


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