
Ideas come from places far away...
I have a new concept that I want to explore and will be concentrating my efforts there for awhile. Although I have not finalized how I will approach this new project yet, it will be similar to some of my other Social Media experiments that I have been doing over the past two or three years: transitory, time-based, nomad-ish.
I have always had a fascination with the semantic web, new-genre ideas, and Identity in a digital world. I focus a lot of my energy in this area, both my artwork as well as my design work. For me, the web represents a medium of temporary connections; never a permanent stopping place.
I try to compartmentalize certain experiments from others by maintaining indirect links to an overall identity between these various pieces. However, I never purposefully obfuscate the direct connections to my other projects or experiments, choosing instead to capitalize on the web's strength for interconnectivity. Although I will no longer be using this or the corresponding Twitter account that ties into this site, I will leave them up for as long as Posterous and Twitter exist. Should one or both go offline in the future, then, so will the content generated and stored here.
I am looking forward to the new ideas I have been thinking about and am excited to get them underway.
Thanks for reading.
LG Mobile Phones is partnering with crowdSPRING and Autodesk to host a competition to define the future of personal mobile communication.
The official entry details are here.
With US$80,000 in prize money on the line, it may be worth a few moments of brainstorming. Entry into the competition is free and, of course, LG will own your revolutionary idea outright but as I always say, where there's one idea, there are one hundred more. According to their official rules, the barriers to entry in this competition should not prevent anyone from presenting something truly innovative. I like mental challenges like this. We do it all day long in many ways. As engineers and geeks, "What's next?" is something we never shy away from asking ourselves.
Ehtisham Rabbani, V.P. of product strategy and marketing for LG Electronics MobileComm, U.S.A, Inc. in LG's official press release for the competition says, “We’re very excited about this competition because it gives consumers, professionals, students and design enthusiasts all a chance to exercise their creative imaginations and have their ideas be heard. You don’t have to work for LG to make an impact on the future of mobile phones.”
Obviously, there will be thousands of entries of which 98% will be unfeasible. However, if you think about it, LG may hit the creative jackpot as the economy has many talented engineers and industrial designers sitting around with nothing to do all day. The timing of this thing is perfect and if LG finds something they can develop further, 80K is a small price to pay for that idea.
The competition closes June 7, 2009.
How do you feel about health? Are you healthy?
DDB Worldwide Communications Group
conducted a research project where they interviewed 1831 consumers and
physicians in eleven countries to identify how people feel about their
own attitudes towards health. This
report is available on BrandChannel.
Not surprisingly, "believing we are healthy is to believe we are in
control."

Now, more than ever, we are seeing artistic, experimental media (video,
projections, embedded system control, lighting technologies, etc.) weigh
in with a heavy emphasis on the tech. Artists, like engineers, are
enamored by technology. Technology is the crowd-pleaser. Because of
that, some poetry can be lost.
In a piece of technological work, consider one word: sensuality.
Then, begin displacing the top-heaviness of the tech until you reach a
point of visceral sensation.
The infatuation becomes desire.
In a post by Andrew Keen, he addresses a question that our "always-on" Internet culture has been asking:
"What is the point of instantaneous global communication?" In this short post, Keen posits the notion that, instead of ideas moving around the globe at light speed, and in doing so, delivering these ideas and insight so much more efficiently, that this may not be the case. His theory is based upon a piece by New York Times writer David Brooks who sees our new-found communication tools as creating a culture of "uniform conformity" as opposed to diversified debate. As we take in and process information that is "instantaneous," do we also create a void where that information is processed? Are we in too much of a hurry to consume and then regurgitate instantaneous content as truth, fact, or norm just because, "we read it here first?" Recently, I have questioned the long-term effects of this "global immediacy in 140 characters or less" culture we are quickly beginning to master. I have noticed, within myself, that my eyes are teaching my brain how to process instantaneous information. I am not so sure this hasn't affected my ability to think deeply about a topic and process alternative ideas or further discussion. Maybe we are just evolving. This is all part of a new application of thinking. It is a new way. Instantaneous information leads to instantaneous decisions. And we know the usual outcome of making decisions too quickly don't we?