
Schwinn
Originally uploaded by schickr.
17:30 02 July, 2007 Image 278

Clever thing
Originally uploaded by schickr.
Maybe they can make one to spoof the iPhone.
Been spending the day, reconnecting to my internet-plumbed networks – Facebook (new to me, sorry), Twitter, flickr, Google Reader, dopplr, and this very site.
It was interesting to be disconnected. But, I needed a break, sort of like digital rehab.
I just might be back. And it’s not because… well, I’ll save that for a bit longer, just to tease.
Well, I’ve had a few brainwaves about noise and radio and what all these services are really trying to provide. I need to make a few notes before I can properly divulge them here (at least in writing). Nonetheless, I need to immerse myself back into the emanations of quanta coursing the internet to be able to better express and create something from this brainwave.
Yeah, I’m a geek. More to come.
Antoine, upon whom I stumbled via MobHappy’s Carnival of the Mobilists, has a nice thought stream on social network apps that meld well with the mobile. Ok, so they’re a ton of folks talking about this, but I particularly liked his comment that:
“Mobile devices are already here as the handshake, and so the question is, what are social networks doing to get you off the computer, and get you in front of one another?”
Lately, I’ve kept repeating that the mobile is the ultimate social networking machine. Instead of trying to plop these services onto a mobile device, we need to use the mobile devices to FUEL our social interactions online, especially to do what Antoine says: to lead to a handshake.
In the end, it’s our first life that counts.
Link [via Carlo and gang]: AntoineRJWright.com – Personal Musings:
Already living within our social interactions, mobile devices facilitate our innate ability to interact with one another, and extend that beyond the temporal to an attachment that we can reconnect at [nearly] anytime.
…
When a social network can get past the place of just engaging the connected tool to facilitating a live interaction, then we have a software service that would take the handshake metaphor appropriately into the 21st century.