Annie, I am with you: the email list is a tried and true system of discourse. 
However, after lengthy conversations with Ruth and Marc about the importance of 
reaching out to younger generations, many of whom have basically stopped using 
email and have shifted to other forms of communications, do we need to adapt 
our channels for changing times? I would shudder to think that we might become 
complacent and conservative through convenience. 

That said, I think the NetArtizens experiment we ran last March, using multiple 
channels that were intertwined has the potential to go further. Most of us 
communicate via multiple channels: way we conduct ourselves variously across 
those channels according to length, speed, synchronicity, and media 
possibilities. I have always envisioned some kind of synthesis of 
communications channels that would allow for our various styles, needs, and 
technical capabilities to feed into a virtual community as interconnected nodes 
on a distributed network. 

From:  <netbehaviour-boun...@netbehaviour.org> on behalf of Annie Abrahams
Reply-To:  NetBehaviour for networked distributed creativity
Date:  Friday, October 2, 2015 at 1:28 PM
To:  NetBehaviour for networked distributed creativity
Subject:  Re: [NetBehaviour] An interview with Geert Lovink

:)

I would be willing to go elsewhere, no problem
but,
what exactly is wrong with using a mailinglists, I just don't understand - 
thinking I am too old, a bit out of what is happening "today", just explain me 
what is the problem ?

yes, it needs attention, but that is just what I think a "community" like 
furtherfield would need, if you are not interested in what's happening, if you 
don't have time to read, than you don't belong here, than you follow Marc on 
twitter and facebook and you'll get all you need

a mailing list might be a way to reach out at really concerned people

Randall, I do follow you, I would love to see live streaming at furtherfield 
events, possibilities to connect directly to visitors and the 
exhibiting/eventing artists - it would be great! (but again who will organise 
that?) i would love to be able to ask them concrete questions about the 
relation art and environment where it is showed, their presentation and the 
public's reaction.

xxx
Annie

 


On Fri, Oct 2, 2015 at 4:21 PM, Randall Packer <rpac...@zakros.com> wrote:
Rob, this is an interesting point and one I have been thinking a lot about: why 
are new media discussions using list software that is perhaps 20 years old, 
which don’t allow for the possibilities of embedded media, avatars, search, 
database, etc. (I know there is a Web version of this, but who looks at?) For 
me, there is a  paradox here. Many complain about the glut of email in their 
lives, and yet lists are perhaps the number one producer of email for those who 
subscribe to lists. Is it because email is still our main channel of 
communication, the go to for correspondence, discussion, social media 
notifications, etc? Matt Mullenweg, the founder of Wordpress, never uses email 
for business communication, rather P2, a bulletin board web-based interface 
where he can follow everyone’s conversations in a threaded, searchable 
environment. He claims this to be the future of social networks, and I tend to 
agree, but it takes commitment among the community to learn to use the new 
tools. I am not condemning listserves here, they serve a great purpose and they 
are super-easy to use. However, we all have to admit it is an antiquated system 
and there is no reason really not to overhaul the whole thing and move into the 
21st century.

OK, I expect to be heavily criticized here, but that’s my position. :)



On 10/1/15, 10:41 PM, "Rob Myers" <netbehaviour-boun...@netbehaviour.org on 
behalf of r...@robmyers.org> wrote:

>On 01/10/15 02:21 AM, ruth catlow wrote:
>>
>> But I too have had a feeling of un-ease about a disconnect with the
>> conversations that happen here on the list. This list is one of my
>> favourite places, and yet I find it hard to advocate for it, to people
>> who are not already here. Perhaps because email has now acquired toxic
>> associations for many people because of the demands it places on
>> 'immaterial labourers'.
>
>They're all exploited via apps now aren't they? :-)
>
>At the risk of solutionism, modern discussion systems provide web forum
>-style interfaces to mailing lists (and vice versa).
>
>https://www.discourse.org/
>
>http://groupserver.org/
>
>- Rob.
>
>_______________________________________________
>NetBehaviour mailing list
>NetBehaviour@netbehaviour.org
>http://www.netbehaviour.org/mailman/listinfo/netbehaviour

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-- 
26 09 14h  vivre entre – from estranger to e-stranger, une conférence 
performée
festival Magdalena,  La Bulle Bleue, 285 rue du Mas de Prunet, Montpellier
aabrahams.wordpress.com/2015/09/17/vivre-entre-from-estranger-to-e-stranger/

besides, 
online performances On Object Agency 
with Martina Ruhsam
archives (text, script, video, images)
bram.org/besides/
Marc Garrett interviewed me for the Choose Your Muse series on Furtherfield
furtherfield.org/features/interviews/choose-your-muse-interview-annie-abrahams 


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