I went to Essex University with Jemima Gibbons. In fact, we were both elected to serve on the same small editorial committee of Vulture, the student union rag. I’d tell you what year that was. But I'm too much of a gentleman…
We found each other again less than a year ago. Via Twitter, naturally. She came along to a hastily arranged tweet-up in Camden Town – which was where she told me about the book she was completing. Had we stumbled upon each other earlier Jemmia says I'd likely have played a cameo in Monkeys With Typewriters myself (insert your own gags here).
Jemima’s book is “a novelistic approach to social computing” according to Luis Suarez.
It certainly has a story-telling quality – scenes described, images evoked.
I’ll admit it wasn’t an approach I was comfortable with at first, but it grew on me – and I found myself drawn in attracted by the page-turning storyness of it.
It’s a story in which I happen to know a great many of the characters. ‘Social’ is a relatively small world – particularly in London where the majority of the plot unfolds. Perhaps that added to the fascination… I kept reading on looking out for the next friend to get a mention…
Sometimes there is more story-telling description than actual insight – but that’s not altogether a bad thing.
Many, when faced with creating a mass media portrayal of the interwebs (book, magazine article, latest BBC4 TV series…) default to a way of describing aA Big Thing that it is out to do and who is out to do this big thing and to whom – very centre-out notions and essentially a broadcast approach.
The reality is the web is what it is. It is all of us. It is what each of us makes it. It is what emerges from our interactions. There is no grand plan, there is no editorial committee…
Jemima’s approach (and the clue is in the title, Monkeys With Typewriters… brave when your surname is Gibbons) is much closer to the latter ‘reality’.
It’s a guide book for those in organisations coming to terms with the shifting sands beneath their feet (as hierarchy and central control are swept away and improved upon by adhoc self-forming communities of purpose).
And it’s a guide book that is more practical than most, coming complete with buzzword demystification and a 30-step guide to ‘getting social’ thrown in.
If you’ve spent a lot of time thinking about the impact of group forming network theory then this is probably not the book for you. But if you’re just starting to understand that everything the network touches it will disrupt, then Monkey’s With Typewriters will set you on the right path without making your brain bleed. And we all know someone who could do with that.
Showing posts with label tweet-up. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tweet-up. Show all posts
Friday, February 05, 2010
Monday, December 15, 2008
Tweetup! Social Media, Online PR, P2PR
If any of you are in Victoria, London tomorrow am (December 16, 2008), I'm free from just after 10am until noon and would love the opportunity to talk to you about some of the themes we've been discussing on this blog and on the p2pr community.
I'll have a video camera along for the ride to record your thoughts, too - if you're game.
Keep track of where and when via twitter!
Last time I did one of these we came up with the Eighth Mass Media. :-)
I'll have a video camera along for the ride to record your thoughts, too - if you're game.
Keep track of where and when via twitter!
Last time I did one of these we came up with the Eighth Mass Media. :-)
Monday, June 30, 2008
Eat'n'Tweet: Introducing it and us
A handful of interested/interesting people who have found each other through the power of the network (blogs, twitter etc) are getting together for an informal meet at lunchtime on Thursday July 3. If you've found this you're interested and almost certainly interesting - so you can come too!
You'll find us, on this occasion, at The Couch in Dean St, Soho, London from 1pm (well, that's when I'm aiming to get there).
If you can't make this one, I'm planning one in Cambridgeshire in the near future, too, with colleague badgergravling.
Tweet ups by their nature our generally adhoc and self-forming. I'm just giving this one a little helping hand with this blog post, too.
Anyway, zeroinfluencer asked if I'd do a few intro's ahead of time. The following are links to the individuals' twitter account - where you'll usually find a little bio and a link to a blog or similar. So, here we are (so far...)
davidcushman (that's me)
Also attending: Tim Russell from yospace
Other possibles include:
Spanx
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The rate of change is so rapid it's difficult for one person to keep up to speed. Let's pool our thoughts, share our reactions and, who knows, even reach some shared conclusions worth arriving at?

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