Goes nicely with post-partisan. :-)

http://nextberlin.eu/2012/01/what-is-post-digital/

What is Post Digital?

So, what exactly is this concept of Post Digital? It’s not (yet) a widely known 
one. A quick poll of my Twitter followers this morning suggests that only a 
handful have grasped the idea, with only one very clear, concise answer:

That’s a pretty good way of viewing it; someone who lives in a world where the 
digital is commonplace and accepted, rather than something exciting and new. 
All today’s infants will grow up in a Post Digital era. But given the sheer 
enthusiasm and focus on digital that still exists in many parts of society, 
we’re still clearly only moving into that era, not dwelling in it.

We can also help define the term by opposition; by what it’s not. It’s very 
clearly not the idea that digital technology will pass, and be replaced. While 
there may be some who still hope for that (and most of them are found in the 
music and newspaper industries, I suspect…), they are a rapidly diminishing 
minority. Digital technology is clearly here to stay, and the phrase Post 
Digital looks forward not to its end, but to its ubiquity; in fact, to the 
point where it becomes so ubiquitous that it ceases to be interesting.

The ideas underlying this concept of Post Digital first found notable 
expression in an 1998 article by Nicholas Negroponte in WIRED.

Yes, we are now in a digital age, to whatever degree our culture, 
infrastructure, and economy (in that order) allow us. But the really surprising 
changes will be elsewhere, in our lifestyle and how we collectively manage 
ourselves on this planet.

That’s the key idea here: things get really interesting when digital itself 
gets a little, well, boring. When the sheer ubiquity of digital devices and 
content render them so uninteresting that the changes they bring to the rest of 
our culture are the subjects of our attention.

Like all really good ideas, it’s one that seems completely obvious – but only 
once you’ve heard it. After all, we already live in a post electrical age. What 
was once a talking point and competitive advantage is now a baseline 
requirement of most modern buildings. We don’t think about electricity very 
much – but it’s interwoven with much of what we do.

The name “Post Digital” was coined more recently, by Russell Davies back in 
2009:

Given that ‘Post Digital’ idea, these were some things I thought it might be 
interesting to talk about.

An inauspicious sentence for a phrase to start its life in perhaps, but one 
rooted in an essay with some great ideas that sound as fresh three years on as 
they did when first published:

1. Screens are getting boring. It’s really hard to impress anyone with stuff on 
a screen any more. However clever you’ve been. However much thought you’ve put 
in. However good the tech is. No-one’s impressed. They’ve all seen better stuff 
in ads and movies anyway – when will onscreen stuff be as good as that? Whereas 
doing stuff in the real world still seems to delight and impress people. Really 
simple stuff with objects looks like magic. Really hard stuff with screens 
still just looks like media.

Interestingly, Davies was forced to put out a quasi-apology for coining the 
term in late 2010:

Post DIgital was supposed, if anything, to be a shout against complacency, to 
make people realise that we’re not at the end of a digital revolution, we’re at 
the start of one. The end game was not making a website to go with your TV 
commercial and it’s not now about making a newspaper out of your website. Post 
Digital was supposed to be the next exciting phase, not a return to the old 
order. It’s the bit where the Digital people start to engage in the world 
beyond the screen, not where the old guard reasserts itself.

In that sense what Post Digital actually is is the end of the beginning. It 
marks the transition from the era where we’re excited by the shiny new digital 
toys that we have, and start to become excited by the changes that these shiny 
not-so-new toys are making in the way we live, in the objects we have around 
us. When all music is distributed digitally – and we’re a long way down that 
path – what does the music industry start to look like. When Karl Lagerfeld’s 
designer’s tool of choice is an iPad (or, actually, dozens of them…) how does 
that shape and influence the couture he created?

It can be argued – and I’ll certainly be giving it a go – that too much 
discussion of digital technology is confined to a tech ghetto in both the 
mainstream and niche press. We’re in the equivalent position of a hairstylist 
having to look in a specialist electrical publication for a review of a 
hairdryer… This position cannot stand, as more and more industries and 
activities are transformed by a platform of digital tools that reshape aspects 
of their business. Some are a long way into that process – few photographers 
shoot film any more, except as a craft process, and the content of the majority 
of photographic publications, both in print and online, reflects that. But that 
prevailing shift to digital, and the greater enthusiasm and experience of 
photography of a pastime amongst the general publication has seen some people 
come back to film, to shoot with, to experiment with it, to enjoy its 
restrictions and distinctive visual appearance. And, of course, to share the 
results digitally. Very Post Digital.

So, where does that leave us? With a concept that is, at once:

A compelling theory, based on the practical realities of how technology is 
integrated into society
A rallying call for those who would deny the reality of that change
Something that is becoming more and more evident in the world around us
Yes, that sounds like a revolution to me.

 


-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

Reply via email to