Entries tagged "life"

What motivates us, or Dan Pink on the slow economic proof of our human-ness and social nature

Dan Pink‘s talk animated by RSA (who doesn’t seem to give the illustrator’s name, sorry). This is an evidence research-based translation of some of the basic premises we focus on in TummelVision: that we are motivated *by each other.* That we are not algorithms. The autonomy and mastery that Dan Pink is talking about, in my opinion, is what let’s someone know they are there and not merely a substitutie for a machine. Independence lets you feel choice and mastery gives you feedback and a sense of competence. But the best use of all these skills, the underlying motivator of why they are so rewarding is because they allow you to find ways to meaningfully connect with others and share usefulness and work for others.

In spiritual language that’s called service. Except our economy is now called that too. It’s the intent that’s not always the same. But as this slow thinking and analysis (as in Dan Pink’s talk) eventually moves forward it is slowly proved to people (aka the mostly white algorithm-lovin dudes running western business) that *feels* good (!! crap that women do, aaaahh!) is also effective.

((tags: economics, motivation, human, autonomy, algorithm, purpose, money, incentive, feeling, emotion, women, social, tummel))

Posted via email from subvert with heather gold

What motivates us, or Dan Pink on the slow economic proof of our human-ness and social nature

Dan Pink‘s talk animated by RSA (who doesn’t seem to give the illustrator’s name, sorry). This is an evidence research-based translation of some of the basic premises we focus on in TummelVision: that we are motivated *by each other.* That we are not algorithms. The autonomy and mastery that Dan Pink is talking about, in my opinion, is what let’s someone know they are there and not merely a substitutie for a machine. Independence lets you feel choice and mastery gives you feedback and a sense of competence. But the best use of all these skills, the underlying motivator of why they are so rewarding is because they allow you to find ways to meaningfully connect with others and share usefulness and work for others.

In spiritual language that’s called service. Except our economy is now called that too. It’s the intent that’s not always the same. But as this slow thinking and analysis (as in Dan Pink’s talk) eventually moves forward it is slowly proved to people (aka the mostly white algorithm-lovin dudes running western business) that *feels* good (!! crap that women do, aaaahh!) is also effective.

((tags: economics, motivation, human, autonomy, algorithm, purpose, money, incentive, feeling, emotion, women, social, tummel))

Posted via email from subvert with heather gold

My appearance on tWIT's FourCast predicting the future w Tom Merritt, Scott Johnson and hak5er Shannon Morse

My predictions: 

Near Term – Sarah Palin will run for the Republican nomination, win it and, if unemployment stays over 11% have a good shot at the Presidency. We discuss modern media mastery and manipulation and the merging of media, politics and celebrity all enabled by the Internets.

Longer Term – Arizona and Nevada will wage war on Canada for water who will defend itself by offering passports and donuts.

Longest Term – instant telepathy (first understood via Justin Hall at my SXSWContinuous Partial Attention show) and persistent openness forces us all to learn to be less judgemental and more meaningfully connected.

((tags: Dune, water wars, TWIT, futurism, predictions, Sarah Palin, Canada, french crullers))

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some sunshine on homophobic haters on TWIT and online

This gentleman decided to get in touch, personal-like after my latest appearance on TWIT.
The haters are a tiny few on this network, but they’re persistent.

Kudos to Tom Merritt @acedtect, Scott Johnson @extralife, LeoLaporte and all the folks who book me there and support equality. Look out I’m so scary. Boo!

still married,
xoheather

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My tummeling talk at Xerox Parc for BayCHI / social interaction designers

A conversational “talk” about the importance of emotion and tummeling, and why we need to understand human interaction not simply in terms of interfaces but as something we humans do with each other. If we are to have social spaces that encourage and support human-human interaction, then this needs to be a central goal for those who create virtual and real-life social spaces. The role of interaction designers, coders, and other UX folks are critical if we are to have a web that serves human needs rather than the other way around

Yes this talk included the term Human-Human Interaction in the title. That’s how interaction designers talk. For the rest of us, I’m talking about people talking with each other.

For more conversations about how people connect, check out my podcast with Deb Schultz and Kevin Marks: Tummelvision.tv

Thanks to Josef Berger for recording and posting the talk.

http://www.youtube.com/user/TilTuli#p/c/FAC6CB2E788EEDC2

((tags: SxD, tummel, interaction design, UX, Xerox Parc, Heather Gold))

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At the Audience Conference yesterday

My appearance on TWIT's Tech News Today

I had a great time heading up to Sonoma, breaking through the foggy cloud on the Golden Gate Bridge, heading up up through the sun and brown hills and blue sky to the TWIT cottage in Petaluma where the independent broadcasting revolution really took off. Can’t wait to have my own someday. 

It was a blast guesting on Tech News Today with longtime fan and supporter Tom Merritt and kick ass Becky Worley who played fly half on the national women’s rugby team. But yes, they’re real tech journalists who know and research things.

Heather trivia: I played back on my college rugby club where my coach was fellow comic Sabrina Matthews.

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future of broadcast tonight TummelVision

With Ted Rheingold, Andrew Hazlett, Deb Schultz and Heather Gold

done with a candlestick (H2 zoom mic) in the drawing room (tiny hotel
room)

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"The big breakthrough will come…when we are able to handle the truth about people." Van Jones

“The big breakthrough will come…when we are able to handle the truth about people.”

-Van Jones, Shirley Sherrod and me, NYTimes op-ed
Van’s entire piece is worth reading about what it feels like to be caught in Washington DC doing politics in real-time right now via the web.
I’ve been exploring the process what it means to be “Private” (aka yourself) in Public for some time now. It’s what solo performer, comedians, performance artists and many performers do. When it’s chosen an you provide the context it can be very powerful. Of course the latest political episode is particular poignant because Shirley Sherrod spoke in public on behaviour of her government employer but apparently of her own choosing and gave plenty of context which made her story about race and class understanding really powerful. And it’s that context which was taken away by Breitbart’s selective editing and the ensuing political playout of anxious reactions.
And I still believe that it is this act that makes the world safe for you as I said during my 20009 SXSW panel Everything I Need to Know About the Web I Learned From Feminism. But the always brilliant and challenging danah boyd noted that it’s a privilege to be yourself in public. And of course people behave differently in different publics.
The “public” of the media and the blogosphere and political DC are all different. Of course our political “public” is theoretically supposed to be the place in which we solve common problems but this kind of judgemental-ness and harsh manipulation which serves political and media business ends isn’t always in the interests of our common good.
This rend is an old media and political one. It’s not new. The fact that the real-time web is speeding it up is a little bit new. What will be new and is necessary is what Van Jones mentions: not the truth about how people are or what they’ve said but when we can handle it.
An individual matures when they can handle difference. It’s called differentiation ( “the ability to separate one’s own intellectual and emotional functioning from that of the family”). An individual heals from depression or trauma when they get to a point when they feel they can handle their feelings. Our body politic and publics seem to me to operate just like a person.  And I think Van is right, the key word is handle.

As an individual you can’t control the world, you can only get better at feeling you can handle it and the change and challenges it presents you with. It’s the same thing for the media and our politics. And sometimes you have to bottom out before you are motivated to change. And it looks like our politics are heading there.

The Net provides a place to attack each other better and I wager it’s connectedness (and our real-life connectedness with each other and our selves) could also help us get better at handling once we decide that’s what we need to work on.

Fun video link: danah boyd’s comments on how gendered behaviour plays out in social networks (thx @allaboutgeorge)

Posted via email from subvert with heather gold

My Law Project show is next Wed in HOT Fest at NYC's Dixon Place

 
More info and advance tickets at only $10, here.
 
Facebook goodness (RSVP to make make my day).
 
And yes, my Torts professor really did have Tourettes.
 
 

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