Open Mobile
Following on the heels of the wildly successful MobileCampVancouver 2008, Mobile Muse is proud to present - in conjunction with New Forms Festival - Open Mobile on Sunday September 21st. I will be kicking off the day with a talk about the future of mobiles, accompanied by visuals from Roland Tanglao and Jesse Scott. The rest of the day will be filled with a range of provocative and highly informative presentations from artists, mobile marketers, event programmers, social activists, and just plain old mobile geeks. See the eventbrite page for exact location, times, and speaker topics.
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What: Open Mobile 2008 When: Sunday, September 21, 2008 from 09:30 AM - 04:20 PM (PT) Where: Intersections Digital Studios (IDS) - Emily Carr - 1399 Johnston Street - Granville Island - Vancouver, British Columbia - Canada Hosted by: New Forms Festival |
The abstract for our keynote, in draft form, follows:
Opening Mobiles, Community Activation and the One Wireless Web
It was once said that the Sony Walkman, not love, would tear us apart.
Contrary to these claims about mobile privatization, whereby
individuating technologies are said to produce alienated populations
running around in mobile media cocoons, and for some quite
unexpectedly, the diffusion of advanced mobile devices and applications
offers new opportunities to build and activate communities, invoking a
radical reconstruction of media, art production, intellectual property,
and public space. Ubiquitous, open, mobile, and accessible
internetworking technologies, heralded by portable wi-fi devices such
as the Nokia N95 or Apple’s iPhone, will enable us to continue the
legacy of our tethered social media cloud - media sharing, wikis,
tagging, twemes - in a radically different space than we’re used to (or
one that we’ve simply forgotten about somewhat): public space. This is
contested terrain, with a complex political economy, but the potential
for a ubiquitous mobile web is now too alluring to ignore. This talk
will navigate the mobile web space with one eye on media history and
political economy, and another eye on the accompanying VJ screen, to
assess how the speaker’s messages are being scrambled while this all
unfolds.
- Jean Hébert's blog
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