Welcome Canadians!
*now over 170...
* 22.05 GMT: now over 250... sadly most of you are here in error... see the comments for an explanation. Welcome anyway!
Urbanism and ICT... how current and future technologies are changing the way people use the city
Cabinet Office's e-Envoy has suggested that 'the UK Villages initiative is a great example of how the internet can be used to make connections within and between communities.' In internet discourse, many people claim that by networking across the web they are freed from the intimidation of physical face-to-face constraints. Others suggest that the anonymity of web communities permits them to be more relaxed and honest about themselves with others. Others 'construct identities'.
But does internet access - often from the isolation of one's bedroom - really generate trust in a community relationship? Does it not reinforce one's isolation in society… to the point of representing a fear of real physical engagement?
Meanwhile, in the physical world, the World Health Organisation has stated that some communities become cut off by road infrastructure, or by high levels of traffic.' Nowadays, physical transport debate seeks to encourage more people away from the isolation of private cars.
But has 'public' transport really managed to create a sense of fellow-feeling?
After all, the Home Office advises us to 'sit near other people...move if someone makes you feel uncomfortable (and)... respect women's personal space.' In the first instance, we withdraw; in the second example, we are encouraged to mingle, but are not both of these scenarios reflective of a pervasive fear of real contact? This session will seek to examine the drivers behind the idea of virtual engagement and physical estrangement.
Speakers: Sandy Starr, technology editor, spiked-onlineDan Sturges, US consultant to GM and Segway,
Neil Cummings, reader in theory and practice, Chelsea College of Art & Design
Saskia Sassen, Ralph Lewis Professor of Sociology at the University of Chicago
Chair: Mark Charmer, director, Movement Design Bureau
90 percent of Korean twenty-somethings (and one third of the population as a
whole) are cultivating their own "minihompy" (= mini home page) in Cyworld. A Cyworld minihompy differs from a regular blog by featuring an online "miniroom" which complements the owner’s real world home.