David Herzog via nettime-l on Tue, 16 Apr 2024 01:12:09 +0200 (CEST)


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Re: <nettime> Swipe, a Smart Phone Movie by Mieke Gerritzen/Next Nature


hi Oliver,

"The average person unlocks their phones 150 times a day, how natural is
that? "

On Mon, 15 Apr 2024, Oliver Gassner via nettime-l wrote:
I am not sure, this questions makes sense at all.
a) Regarding the fact a smartphone replaces, I don't know, 20 other
',machines or media' it might very well make sense

that's why i do have them in separate devices. If your smartphone breaks or is switched off for any reason, you're lost.

While i still have my only satellite-receiving gps device, a compass, an analogue watch and my notebook full of sheets of paper.

I am not prepared to fight the extinction of the internet, in fact I welcome it.

https://networkcultures.org/blog/publication/extinction-internet/

Extinction Internet, the song to the book, read by Geert Lovink,
music by Gleb Dovzhuk, @UKRAiNATV, recorded in Krakow, October 2023

https://networkcultures.org/geert/2024/03/11/extinction-internet-italian-and-portuguese-translations-with-bonus-song/

There is a video version, made by smb., you can watch it here:
https://igel-muc.de/video/20240317-geert.extinction.internet.prod.glebalisation.mp4

'30 Jahre BTX-Hack', Wauland & CCC, 2014
'Coden auf Exoten', Shana Marinitsch & Mario Spulera, 2024, video montage by David Herzog

all the best
david herzog


On Mon, 15 Apr 2024, Oliver Gassner via nettime-l wrote:

Hi Geert,

"The average person unlocks their phones 150 times a day, how natural is
that? "

I am not sure, this questions makes sense at all.
a) Regarding the fact a smartphone replaces, I don't know, 20 other
',machines or media' it might very well make sense
b) IN the sense that neither books, radios, script, papyrus or print are
"natural", of COURSE it is not "natural". (but: cultural)

I am not a media theoretician, just some guy who got a (literature and
linguistics) MA early in the 90ies ;)

Of course looking at the smartphone as a 'cultural carrier' makes sense.

I nowadays usually say:
"We will all nostalgically look back at the times when people were "still
staring at their phones" instead of interacting with invisible people on
their semitransparent glasses."

But this was just a note about the word 'natural': Nothing in our culture
is.



Am Fr., 12. Apr. 2024 um 14:36 Uhr schrieb Geert Lovink via nettime-l <
nettime-l@lists.nettime.org>:

Swipe, a Smart Phone Movie by Mieke Gerritzen/Next Nature
Download the app on your phone: https://nextnature.net/projects/swipe

Ever left your phone at home by mistake and felt like you are missing a
limb? Turns out, a lot of us feel that way. We need to talk about
smartphones. SWIPE is a movie about your phone, on your phone.

Research shows that people who are separated from their smartphones can
suffer from strong mental effects, and this all happened in less than
twenty years. We need to talk about smartphones.

The average person unlocks their phones 150 times a day, how natural is
that? On a global scale, more than 5 bilion people have access to a mobile
phone connection, and over half of these are smartphones. And let’s face
it: these numbers continue to grow. We are now living in a world where more
people have access to mobile phones than clean toilets. This fact is
equally alarming as significant. It’s a sign of our times. We are living in
the Phone Age.

SWIPE is a typographic movie about you and your smartphone. It celebrates
its impact in a playfull manner. Give yourself a break and reflect with us
on the increasingly fast-paced developments in (communication) technology.
SWIPE: THE GAME

From 1 January 2024, the Dutch government has banned all smartphones from
classrooms in the Netherlands, in an attempt to limit distractions during
classes. This asks for a training program to guide these kids to critically
examine their own smartphone use. That's why we designed an analog rehab
game for students (12+ years) that looks like a phone, but is actually a
deck of cards.

This analog rehab game, developed by Next Nature, challenges young
students to think in groups about the impact of the smartphone on their
lives, today and in the future. Through playful discussion and
interactions, they will develop a critical view on the smartphone and
perhaps even imagine life after the smartphone.

BEING ONLINE 24/7

A user manual experience for smartphone users, inspired by the "frequently
asked questions", this book presents questions about the smartphone that
users might (not) have frequently asked themselves. These questions are not
followed by single sentences, but by image collections consisting of
internet-found visuals, so that you can keep enjoying being online 24/7,
even when there's no wifi. Order the book here:
https://nextnature.net/shop/products/swipe.

GRAPHIC NOVEL: THE PHONE AGE

A graphic novel to reflect on what it means to co-evolve with smartphones.
After all, using our hands as a tools to swipe does something to our body,
having access to millions of sources of knowledge does something to our
thinking, and being able to continuously interact with your network does
something to our identity and autonomy.

More information here: https://nextnature.net/projects/swipe.
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# distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission
# <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism,
# collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets
# more info: https://www.nettime.org
# contact: nettime-l-owner@lists.nettime.org
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# distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission
# <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism,
# collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets
# more info: https://www.nettime.org
# contact: nettime-l-owner@lists.nettime.org