Reboot 9/Day 2: Disclipline & Exhaustion

My mode yesterday was the very conscious opposite of my usual mode at work, namely “make no plans, forget the clock, see what happens.” As a result I got in the wrong train, arrived at reboot late, missed some lectures, and none of it bothered me in the slightest. At first. In the afternoon a strange sense of guilt developed, and I pledged to myself to put the discipline cap on for day 2 and get as much out of it all as I could.

So far it’s worked. Up 15 minutes before the alarm went off, out on the street half an hour later and more than enough time for trains (the right ones) and a few minutes to sit on the lawn before the first talk got going.

Stowe Boyd started the day with “Flow: a New Consciousness For a Web of Traffic”. Stowe’s a consultant who helps companies build social apps, but more importantly, he thinks a hell of a lot of good thoughts about social tools and their impact on individuals and society. The soul of his talk is a quote from Kenneth Bouldin: “We make our tools and then they shape us,” and the tools he was on about are of course social apps such as Twitter, Flickr, Jaiku and blogs. On the way from the quote to the idea that blew me away he convincingly dissed the Attention Economy, touched on the inevitable “are we becoming a hive mind?”, warned against a coming lashback from the powers that be, and threw out such simple and short quotes (which are regardless sound-bites it’ll take days to digest) such as:

Time is a shared space.
The buddylist is the centre of the universe.
Productivity is second to connectivity.

The simple idea that blew me away, not because it was so innovative but rather because it accurately describes a feeling no one I know has ever articulated but I and many have felt was that social apps are giving us back an age-old tribal awareness. We’re becoming like cavemen who are simultaneously scanning the horizon for signs of prey, cleaning a skin, and chatting the whole time. What and how everyone is doing is becoming priority number one.

Later in the day Stowe held a Micropresentation on “Entrepreneuritis” which stuck with me, due to the not necessarily thought-provoking but absolutely hilarious quote: “We don’t need to do the right thing because we can do the wrong thing reeeeally well.” Sound familiar?

I’m afraid to say I was so flashed by Stowe and exhausted by my thoughts that I listened to but didn’t retain almost any of “Attention: On the Near Future of Marketing” by Marko Ahtisaari , ex Director of Design at Nokia, who’s started Blyk, a free mobile network aimed at 16-24 year olds. Everything’s got to be paid for somehow, so of course it’s free + advertising, but with interesting ideas about allowing the kiddies to choose which ads they want to receive when. I’m sure the talk was exciting (and his all white suit is the fashion hit of the whole conference) but I just didn’t have the brain-space to absorb any more.

Originally published at mattbalara.com

Reboot 9/Day 1: A Few Visual Impressions

Like any good geek with an overdeveloped need to present myself and my experiences as if anyone was interested, I carried a camera around all day and saw a few things worth looking at.

Want one.Must. Have. This. Shirt.

This is how gorgeous the weather was today. If you weren’t here, you can go off and be jealous now. Go on.

Reboot Casualty #1This guy and his neighbour did what I desperately wanted to after a vastly insufficient amount of sleep last night, a skull stretching amount of ideas and info and plenty of skin bakin’ rays.

There are of course many many more (556 at last count), from myself and many others.

Originally published at mattbalara.com

Reboot 9/Day 1: Happiness & 20 Seconds

Waiting on trains doesn’t make for happiness. Getting in the wrong train when it comes doesn’t either. Does hearing half a lecture which might have otherwise been interesting make happiness? Nope. Sitting on the grass in the sun at lunch comes far closer, but hell, a wet ass and a not particularly tasty sandwich cancels out a good portion of sunlight.

Good thing that the first lecture I managed to see completely was “Happiness” by the Chief Happiness Officer himself, Alexander Kjerulf. A lecture about happiness shouldn’t have an “unfortunately”, but unfortunately this one did. I had thought—since it’s usually Alexander’s subject—that his lecture would be about encouraging and achieving happiness at work. Being someone who’s in the process of rethinking the way 150 people work with one another and for their clients, I figured there’d be a lot I could take home from such a lecture. Here it is: ‘unfortunately’ it would be better described as What is Happiness?, or, as Buddhist since 1998, I’d describe it as Buddhism for Beginners. What I did take away was this quote from Aristotle:

Happiness is something final and complete in itself, as being the aim and end of all practical activities whatever …. Happiness then we define as the active exercise of the mind in conformity with perfect goodness or virtue.

Much more entertaining and potentially useful were the “Micropresentations” which followed. Seven presenters, each has 15 slides and 20 seconds per slide. It was exhilirating and often hilarious, but amazing how wildly the presentations differed, not only in subjects but, more interestingly, in effectiveness. For example, Leisa Reichelt’s “Ambient Intimacy” flowed with humour and intelligence as if she’d done this every day, while others stumbled to complete each slide in time (no names, I’m not out to embarrass anyone who failed as dramatically as I probably would) and brought very little across. Note to myself and colleagues who present: we need to do this once a week. If you can not only survive but also communicate in such a form, you’re a Powerpoint God.

Conference scheduling is always chaos, so I missed a good deal of Matt Jones’ presentation about Dopplr, so I’m off to see if I can find him for a chat and a beta invite. And someone said there’s cake…

Originally published at mattbalara.com