Being Interesting

22 June, 2008

I spent a wonderful day yesterday at Interesting 2008, exploring interesting things with interesting people. It wasn’t like any conference I’ve ever been to before: much more informal, more fun, more varied. It made traditional conferences look like what they are: sterile, mannered, orchestrated sales events. Thank God for people who are happy to sit in a big room and talk to each other about things they’re passionate about. Why doesn’t that happen more often?

In some ways this was to conferences what blogs are to mainstream media. It’s personal instead of abstracted, defined by the personality of the marvellous Russell Davies and his friends rather than ‘brand values’, and inviting lasting relationships. Lovely.

A few quick thoughts on why Interesting was so much better than most events (and I’m still trying to work this out so please do add your own thoughts if you want):

  1. Short talks about simple things. No essays, no complexity – just 5 or 10 minutes for each speaker to get you interested in their thing.
  2. Passion. Everyone was talking about something they loved and did in their spare time, rather than something they were selling. You can pay people to do things, but you can’t pay them to be interested in them. And as Russell himself said, in order to be interesting you have to be interested.
  3. Nice surprises. No-one knew what each speaker was talking about before they started, so no-one wanted to miss a word.
  4. Bring your own. No lunches provided, and though sponsors brought cake and biscuits we came for the content, not the freebies.
  5. Singing. And recorders. And electric guitars. And a ukelele. And other things that conferences aren’t supposed to have.
  6. Jokes. Conferences are so bloody serious – and being serious is not the same as being interesting.

There are more of course, and in some ways it’s like a magic trick: I don’t want to know how it works, because if there’s a repeatable pattern then Glaxo and Nike could do it too. But there’s definitely a lot I’ve learnt about how to run more “interesting” events. Big thanks to the ever-lovely Tessy for giving me her spare tickets, and to Russell for letting School of Everything do Interesting Things in the foyer.

So here’s to fewer conferences, more Interesting, and huge respect to this guy, and this guy.


More videos of me with bad hair

13 May, 2008

It’s dangerous who you get talking to these days: in this age of consumer media and mobile technology, everyone’s a TV journalist.

I went for a drink in the sunshine with Stowe Boyd yesterday after the School of Everything Tech Advisory Board, and the next thing I know I’m being interviewed on his N82 and streamed live to his blog:

www.flixwagon.com/watch/26183

The technology was so quick, I didn’t even have time to do my hair…


Look mum, I’m in the Guardian!

29 April, 2008

Lovely piece about School of Everything in today’s Guardian. I particularly like the “Explain your project to my mum” question, which should really be mandatory on all project specifications. (Not quite so sure about my hair in the photo though…)

And while we’re at it, a nice piece about us from Libby Davy on Authentic Blogging too, and some kind words from my friend Tessy.

I’m feeling the love…


Money for Everything

2 April, 2008

School of Everything is now officially solvent. We announced the deal yesterday, and it’s been picked up quite a bit already:

I’ll add more links here as they come in, but see www.schoolofeverything.com/about/media for the best of the coverage.

Now we’ve just got to build it and make it work…


Freeschool Tools

13 March, 2008

I’ve been rambling on about Freeschools again. Here’s me yesterday explaining how to turn any community into a school by the simple application of a few post-its and a bit of enthusiasm…

Thanks to the ever-sociable David Wilcox for the video, and for his excellent accompanying blog post. And why not join the Sociability Freeschool on our new experimental freeschools site? Let me know what you think of it, and what you could teach me.


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!


Friday cartoon

1 February, 2008

I’ve always been a fan of visual ways to explain complex things, so I’m very happy that the School of Everything now has it’s own comic strip to explain what we do. Happy Friday!

Paul learns to knit


Freeschools

27 January, 2008

Here’s a video of a talk I did for my friend and Sociability Associate Saul Albert back in October, explaining my Freeschools project. It’s a bit long and more than a little rambling, but some of you might find it interesting, if only for the fluffiness of my hair.

It picks up from about 7 minutes in. (There’s also a transcript and some interesting marginal discussions on our Freeschool Commentpress site.)

The Freeschools concept is my favourite “social technology” project right now because it’s so simple. Through the simple application of two colours of post-it notes and some simple “social software”, it is possible to turn any group of people into a learning network. We’re starting to spread this concept via the School of Everything now, and already people are beginning to run these evenings all around the country. If you’d like to have a go at starting your own freeschool, the instructions are here.

The Freeschool concept is based on the experiments of the Palo Alto Free U, on which the School of Everything is based and which I explain a little in the talk. You can see a Freeschool experiment in action in the second half of the video. I think as a social research project, it demonstrates two very important things: firstly, all people need to begin sharing their skills is a clear process for sharing what they know, and what they need; and secondly, you never know what people know.

Freeschools are more than just experiments for me though, they are a good example of an emerging methodology for designing social interactions, once called “social engineering” but which might now be termed social design. In modelling processes for constructing interactive software applications, we are discovering new ways to model all the other interactions in our lives too.

In each strand of my work at the moment, my underlying purpose seems to be to reduce what we’re doing to the simplest format possible. For the RSA Networks we reduced the process of incubating projects to “propose -> discuss -> support“. For Croydon Council last week I was modelling citizen-led campaigning as “Be heard. Get involved. Make change.” My colleague Mary recently reduced the process of a peer-to-peer project support group to “what are you doing, and what do you need help with?

It may feel like oversimplification, human interactions are surely too rich to really be defined in such crude terms. But that’s the joy of complex systems: a few simple rules can have huge and unpredictable consequences. After all, Go is a very simple game. So is football for that matter. Freeschools are a very simple idea, but their potential for impact is complex and far-reaching. And most importantly, they demonstrate that you don’t need the internet to have social technology.


Growing up in public

15 January, 2008

So, 2008 is upon us and we’re all a year older and a little wiser. As things start to wind up again (slowly) after the Christmas and New Year break, one thing has struck me: it’s nice to be back in these conversations again. In 2008 I intend to have more interesting conversations, online and offline. I hope you’ll all join me.

I’m particularly happy to be spending more time this year on School of Everything, which has really kicked up a gear since Christmas. We’ve just launched a new, tidier version of our alpha site, so all feedback very welcome. It’s not the finished article yet though – far from it – and this has left me pondering the implications of releasing our early versions into the public eye in such a bold way.

The “release early, release often” motto is a good one, and I’m discovering something important at the moment: it’s okay not to get things right first time. The work we’ve been doing with the RSA recently is a great example of that: we produced a prototype which does one thing well, and from that we’ve grown a community and justified spending more time refining it and adding requested features. It’s a very healthy way to grow a system: grow the technology alongside the community, and it certainly brings down those pesky barriers between community facilitators and the members themselves.

But openness comes at a price. By showing our users something which isn’t finished, we risk leaving them frustrated, possibly so much so that they never coming back, or bad-mouth us to their friends. We’re not exactly following the standard cautious processes for online brand-building (closed alpha, restricted beta, invitation only etc.). But if we don’t trust our users, how can they trust us? And surely if we trust them, they’ll see what we’re aiming at and help us get there with them. Sometimes it takes that naked honesty to really convince people you’re worth helping.

Fingers crossed anyway. Here’s to a hopeful, collaborative, honest 2008, to more interesting conversations, and to the School of Everything – growing up in public.


More of everything

14 November, 2007

Fiendishly busy at the moment, particularly doing some very interesting work for the RSA on their “networks” project to harness the power of their fellowship to achieve civic and social innovations. It’s particularly nice to be working with Saul Albert of The People Speak again so soon after our recent talk on peer education. Thanks also to David Wilcox for helping me make sense of the back story – and for the fine apple danish too.

Saul and I are experimenting with some new ways of collecting user feedback, and working with Pete Brownell and Liz Turner on a Drupal-based prototype to model the generation of project ideas organically within a community (think Innovation Exchange with teeth). Saul’s blogging the development process at openrsa.blogspot.com if you’re curious. There may be mileage in this one.

Meanwhile, the School of Everything just hit the big-time, blog-wise. Cracking summary of the concept by Sean Flannagan of Deeplinking – and a very unexpected but welcome endorsement from web legend Esther Dyson. (Nice photo of my colleague Paul too – very smart jeans there Paul.)

Blimey. More soon.


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