I always thought Second Life wouldn't last. Okay, so now it's a virtual 
porn haven, and sure, they'll make money from that for years to come 
(sorry...) but that's not really a new way of interacting - it's a 
glorified phone sex line.

Interesting that mainstream SL seems to have tailed off the moment that 
voice messaging was introduced - I don't think this is chance - when 
people have a very limited communication medium (like the ever-popular 
SMS) it leaves space for the imagination. Once the bandwidth of the 
medium becomes too high, once the resolution increases, people lose 
interest. Why? Maybe less really is more.

I suggest that Second Life and WOW and the others are all fighting 
against a key truth - we all only have a limited amount of life - every 
hour spent in the digital realm is an hour stolen from real (first?) 
life. Getting paler, fatter, lonelier, shorter sighted.

I say this with knowledge - getting carpal tunnel syndrome from a 
6-month Runescape grinding binge I overdosed on virtual worlds. Going 
cold-turkey was soooo liberating.

Recently I deleted my LinkedIn Profile. It sucked my time to maintain 
it, while I could have been doing real work. Now I'm struggling to 
justify microblogging. Yes, everyone says it's "The next greatest..." 
but I'm looking hard to see the value.

So now I'm wondering whether many of the technologies we've been 
pre-occupied with are poisonous:

Every minute you listen to your iPod is a minute of deafness to the real 
world.
Every step you take while you're SMS'ing is a step you're taking blind 
to the street scene around you.
Every time you interrupt a real-world conversation to take a call is a 
minute spent prioritising the remote over the present.
Think of a mobile phone as a comic-book thought bubble. When people hold 
it to their ear, reads "I really should be somewhere else". Never before 
have so many people been so convinced for so much of the time that their 
bodies, their friends and their contacts are in the wrong place.

Is the real world, right here, right now, so unbearable? If it is, are 
we so helpless, apathetic and supine that we're simply looking for an 
escape plan?

Are we so hypnotised by consumerism and fashion that we can no longer 
value the free, high res, high, bandwidth, streaming, three-d, 
motor-feedback enabled, olfactory, totally immersive potential of... 
being here now?

Stick that in your Second Pipe and smoke it!

Best,

James
=====

P.S. Meanwhile, the oldies but goldies just keep on rocking. Email is 
STILL the killer app.

_______________________________________________
NetBehaviour mailing list
[email protected]
http://www.netbehaviour.org/mailman/listinfo/netbehaviour

Reply via email to