F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

61
Mobile technology appropriation in a distant mirror: baroque infiltration, creolization and cannibalism François Bar Francis Pisani Matthew Weber slides: http://www.slideshare.net/arnic/f-bar-technology-appropriation-a

description

Slides from talk at Nokia Design Center, April 4, 2008Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0

Transcript of F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

Page 1: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

Mobile technology appropriation in a distant mirror: baroque infiltration, creolization and cannibalism

François BarFrancis Pisani

Matthew Weber

slides: http://www.slideshare.net/arnic/f-bar-technology-appropriation-april-2008

Page 2: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

Mobile technology appropriation in a distant mirror: baroque infiltration, creolization and cannibalism

0. inspiration

1. appropriation

2. innovation model

3. research questions

4. current projects

Page 3: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

Mobile technology appropriation in a distant mirror: baroque infiltration, creolization and cannibalism

Page 4: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

Mobile technology appropriation in a distant mirror: baroque infiltration, creolization and cannibalism

1556

Page 5: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

Mobile technology appropriation in a distant mirror: baroque infiltration, creolization and cannibalism

1556 1928

Page 6: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

Mobile technology appropriation in a distant mirror: baroque infiltration, creolization and cannibalism

“Só me interessa o que não é meu. Lei do homem. Lei do antropófago”

1556 1928

Page 7: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

Mobile technology appropriation in a distant mirror: baroque infiltration, creolization and cannibalism

1556 1928 1960s

Page 8: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

Mobile technology appropriation in a distant mirror: baroque infiltration, creolization and cannibalism

1556 1928 1960s 2003

Page 9: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008
Page 10: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

Mobile technology appropriation in a distant mirror: baroque infiltration, creolization and cannibalism

Page 11: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

Mobile technology appropriation in a distant mirror: baroque infiltration, creolization and cannibalism

Page 12: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

Mobile technology appropriation in a distant mirror: baroque infiltration, creolization and cannibalism

Page 13: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008
Page 14: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

-1-three appropriation modes:

baroquization / creolization / cannibalism

Page 15: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

Appropriation modes: baroquization

Page 16: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

Appropriation modes: baroquization

Page 17: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

Appropriation modes: baroquization

Page 18: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

Appropriation modes: baroquization

Page 19: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

Appropriation modes: creolization

Page 20: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

Appropriation modes: creolization

Page 21: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

Appropriation modes: creolization

Horse-phone:“Like earlier horse-phones, it had a cord. Wire stored on a 5-mile reel played out as a scout rode. The improved model let a rider make calls without having to first dismount and then drive a spike into the ground to complete the electrical connection. Instead, the grounding wire was attached to the horse’s skin. The mild electrical current would pass through its body to its hoofs, one of which was almost always touching the ground.” (Popular Mechanics, Sep. 1907)

Page 22: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

Appropriation modes: creolization

Page 23: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

Appropriation modes: creolization

Photo: Jan Chipchase

Page 24: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

Appropriation modes: creolization

Photo: Araba Sey

Page 25: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

Appropriation modes: creolization

Page 26: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

Appropriation modes: cannibalism

Photo: Kathleen Diga

Page 27: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

Appropriation modes: cannibalism

Photo: Kathleen Diga

Page 28: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

Appropriation modes: cannibalism

Photo: Araba Sey

Page 29: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

Appropriation modes: cannibalism

source: http://www.vavolo.com/productdetails.asp,ProductID,2400,,.htm

Page 30: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

Appropriation modes: cannibalism

Page 31: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

Appropriation modes: cannibalism

Page 32: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

-2-appropriation

within thetechnology cycle

Page 33: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

1. roll-out

Page 34: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

1. roll-out

2. appropriate

Page 35: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

1. roll-out

2. appropriate

3. re-claim

Page 36: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

1. roll-out

2. appropriate

3. re-claim

Page 37: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

m-banking

Page 38: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

m-banking

1. roll-out

Photos: Jan Chipchase

Page 39: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

1. roll-out

2. appropriate

sentePhotos: Jan Chipchase

m-banking

Page 40: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

m-banking

1. roll-out

2. appropriate

3. re-claim

Photos: Jan Chipchase

sente

Page 41: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

m-banking

1. roll-out

3. re-claim

?

Page 42: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

1. roll-out2. appropriate

3. re-claim

Page 43: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

three reclamation modes:

co-opt / adapt / block

Page 44: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

three reclamation modes:

co-opt / adapt / block

echo:baroquize / creolize / cannibalize

Page 45: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

suppliersroll-out technology

usersappropriate

suppliersre-claim

users adoptreject

users baroquizecreolizecannibalize

suppliers co-opt adapt

block

Page 46: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

1. roll-out

2. appropriate

3. re-claim

Iterative

Cumulative

End-user driven

Structured learning

Embedded knowledge

Path-dependent

Page 47: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

-3-research questions?

Page 48: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

1. adopt

2. appropriate

3. re-claim

what is open?

?

Page 49: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

1. adopt

2. appropriate

3. re-claim

what remains open?

?

Page 50: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

suppliersroll-out technology

usersappropriate

suppliersre-claim

users adoptreject

users baroquizecreolizecannibalize

suppliers co-opt adapt

block

Page 51: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

suppliersroll-out technology

usersappropriate

suppliersre-claim

users adoptreject

users baroquizecreolizecannibalize

suppliers co-opt adapt

block

Page 52: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

suppliersroll-out technology

usersappropriate

suppliersre-claim

users adoptreject

users baroquizecreolizecannibalize

suppliers co-opt adapt

block

who are the “users”?what motivates them?what resources can they draw upon?how do they go about it?can they get help from others? (“appropriation-for-hire”)

Page 53: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

-4-research projects

Page 54: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

Comunicaciones Móviles y Desarrollo en América Latina (CMDAL)

Econometric Model of mobile impact (18 countries)

Case studies: Argentina, Brasil, Chile, and Perú

Funding: Fundación Telefónica

Partners: Universitat Oberta de Catalunya, SpainUniversidad de San Andrés, ArgentinaInstituto de Estudios Peruanos, PerúUniversidade de São Paulo, BrasilInstituto de Pesquisas e Projetos Sociais

e Tecnológicos (IPSO), Brasil

Page 55: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

Brazil: economic experiment

motoboys160,000

young

marginal

mobile

information dependent

(CANAL*motoboy)

Page 58: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

Los Angeles: Mobile Voices

Open-source storytelling platform for recent immigrants in Los Angeles to create and publish stories about their community, directly from cellphones

Partner:

Instituto de Educacion Popular del Sur de California (IDEPSCA)

– Runs 6 day-labor centers in L.A.– Popular Education for empowerment– Technology literacy initiatives

Page 59: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

Project goals• community building through storytelling• ICT access for disenfranchised people• create economic/social opportunities

Usage scenarios• mobile storytelling• annotated city• mobile labor market

Design approach• low cost• participatory design• open source, generic tool

(https://docs.indymedia.org/view/Global/VozMob)

Project timeline• Spring 08: prototyping• June08-May09: IDEPSCA deployment• after June09: broader diffusion

Page 60: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

Technical Research Challenges

Privacy• reveal as little information as possible, but still collect

enough to tell stories• user-controlled disclosure• server-side policies for purging data

Low-cost• portable to low-cost java phones (e.g. motorola i855)• minimize data transfer (or cope with low bandwidth)• minimize power consumption

Generic platform• favor open, flexible design for adaptation

to various use patterns

Page 61: F Bar - Technology appropriation April 2008

http://abaporu.net