Many of you will remember the early days of the web when The Next Big Thing was “always on” — fast, cheap bandwidth that would liberate us from the curse of dialup and would naturally enable new business models to emerge. We normally thought about this in terms of Internet connectivity, separate from mobile telephony. Since those days we have seen the blurring of the lines between voice and data due to the emergence of VoIP, 3G mobile, smartphones and (still too expensive) flat rate data pricing.
I just came across this article in the NYT, A Pocket-Size Leveler in an Outsize Land, by Anand Giridharadas. And it really hammered home the reality of where we are heading as a planet as far as digital connectivity is concerned.
But the technology has seeped down the social strata, into slums and small towns and villages, becoming that rare Indian possession to traverse the walls of caste and region and class; a majority of subscribers are now outside the major cities and wealthiest states. And while the average bill, of less than $5 per month, represents 7 percent of the average Indian’s income, enough Indians apparently consider the sacrifice worth it: if present trends continue, in five years every Indian will have a cellphone… There are 65 times more cellphone connections than broadband Internet links, and the gap is widening.
A huge percentage of the world’s population is coming online not through PC-based Internet, but through their cell phones. There are 3 billion active mobile device users in the world, 92% of them outside of the US market. (Stats are from Tomi Ahonen.)
What does the social web look like, how does it feel, when your first and only window into that world is a handheld mobile device? Like the Indian parable of the blind men and the elephant, your perception is determined by where you touch the animal.
A mobile device is by its very nature always on. Since there is little doubt that even the cheapest cell phones will be able to send and receive pictures and videos, listen to and share music and navigate the so-called mobile web in the not too distant future (as many already do), it is fascinating to think about what kind of new social networking businesses will be built to scale to, um, billions of members.
Some of you may be puzzled by the title of this blog, so here’s a brief explanation for the curious.
‘Pataphysics (‘Pataphysique in the original), is a term coined by Alfred Jarry in 1893. It is to metaphysics, as metaphysics is to physics, AKA the science of exceptions.
I became enamored of Alfred Jarry in college after having been recruited to play a bit role in Ubu Roi. I had never heard of him before and was awestruck by its rawness, its power, its vehemence and the modernity of the piece. It premiered in 1896. I could go on at length about Jarry’s take no prisoners artistic position, but suffice it to say he remains a seminal figure for me.
I recently discovered that the word ‘Pataphyics was written into Maxwell’s Silver Hammer by Paul McCartney – “Joan was quizzical, studied ‘pataphysical science in the home…” and immediately loved the image and decided to adopt it here. First, because my train of thought runs on a ‘pataphysical track (Eadem mutata resurgo: “Although changed, I shall arise the same”) and second I am always attracted to the esoteric and ambiguous. The song itself is no great shakes, but I couldn’t resist the Jarry reference.
It will certainly take me a few weeks (months??) to get back into blogging and to dress the blog up with appropriate widgets, decent blog roll and all the other doodads. This is my experience with a self-hosted Wordpress blog. So far, so good and this K2 template is the cat’s meow.
Over and out.
It seems appropriate somehow that my first post on this new blog should marry two of my current interests, plasticine sculptures and mobile devices.
Over and out.


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