Villages naturally have very little privacy. To guard against the results (“bad luck”) that the eyes of the Other (neighbors) might bring, inhabitants might use all kinds of methods–including some that are supernatural. For instance, in pre-1997 Bhutanese villages (e.g. before TV was allowed and other cultures flooded in) inhabitants painted symbols on their homes to ward off ill-fortune. If you visit rural areas today, you’ll notice among these house paintings are phalluses, painted by doors, hung from strings from the roof as if they were windchimes or placed like gargoyles on the eaves. This was done rather like the hex signs of the Pennsylvania “Dutch,” but not for what many guess would be the obvious reason, fertility. No, the Bhutanese were not insuring the abundance of their fields and families with these phalluses. They painted these symbols to ward off gossip and what we might call the evil eye. Gossip and the evil eye, which results from gossip because if you are trying to accomplish something, and people conceptualize and talk about it too much, that thing you are trying to do might not turn out so well. Read the rest of this entry »
The New Village: There is No Privacy in the Networked World
December 17, 2011Raw Notes and Thoughts on Talk Given by .@malbonnington .@eurorscgny
November 17, 2011Today I attended a very interesting talk by Ben Malbon of Google Creative Labs. Ben is actually better known (for me, anyway) as being the brother of Made By Many’s Tim Malbon — and for being formerly of BBH Labs.
When he worked at BBH Labs, he wrote a blog post that talked about pitching, well, Google. Evidently he had a slide in the BBH deck that said:
WE DON’T WANT TO BE YOUR AD AGENCY
MidState Medical Center: A Great Place to Be Sick is a Place That Practices Lean
October 13, 2011Here’s the hospital I want to go to when I become sick: MidState Medical Center in Meriden, Connecticut. It is hard to find documented information on this hospital, but it appears that their CEO, Lucille Janatka, practices some form of Lean, possibly the Baldrige Model, according to what I’ve heard in the local community.
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@lukew raw notes from #nycupa meeting @euroscgny with live updates
October 12, 2011This talk blew me away, actually. Finally I get Maria Mandel, whom I worked with at Ogilvy before she went to AT&T. She started a focus on mobile years ago. This talk opened my eyes, not about mobile, but another level of thinking on Network and device. I had already intuited the importance of mobile since my Tibetan monastic friends used mobile in rural India in a very sophisticated way when I was there in 2007. And they were already at an advanced then. I already understood mobile utility has a lot to do with context of user. What I had not stopped to think about I learned tonight: the Idea to design mobile first. Read the rest of this entry »


