Steve Cisler (by way of Pit Schultz <pit@contrib.de>) on Mon, 9 Dec 96 02:27 MET |
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nettime: The NII Awards and Digital Footprint |
The NII Awards and Digital Footprint, Dec. 3-4, 1996, New York City By Steve Cisler, sac@apple.com. This document may not be reproduced, stored, sold, cached, mirrored, or deconstructed by any commercial firm without the permission of the author. Somewhere in space there is a planet where the inhabitants are happily moving from a digital view of the world into analog technologies. Back on earth, we are moving to the digital environment. Organizations and individuals in that movement seek to earn and to bestow recognition that this change is taking place and that it is beneficial. Home pages are plastered with icons and medals showing the recognition they have gained in various competitions. Background In 1994 I heard about a project entitled the NII Awards. From the pitch being made to my company through the brochures and email, it was the ultimate Stone Soup strategy: start with an idea (a delicious meal) and no resources (vegetables, meat, seasonings) and persuade those who do have the resources to put some into the pot. I declined to participate in 1995. However, the applicants/contestants entered by the hundreds (including some projects we had supported) I realized that it was gathering some steam and did have some serious backing. Much of this is due to the work of Jim Hake of Access Media in Santa Monica, California. During the startup phase Hake was compelled to make some alliances to generate revenue to continue the competition. One of these included the reselling of entrants' data (and some supplementary information) that had been massaged and packaged by a market research firm. As I recall the executive summary was about $3000, and a full suite of services ran more than $25,000. This is not an unusual practice, but the participants and some advisors to the project from the non-profit sector said they were unaware of this resale plan. Naturally, they were disturbed because of the money involved and the fact they received no direct remuneration. I contacted Hake and he came to see me to discuss the whole NII awards in the aftermath of this tempest. I was impressed with his vision and his good will. I realized he was struggling to make this work, and sometimes a juggler can't keep all the chain saws in the air, but it's still a good show. I agreed to help out in the 1996 competition which just concluded this week. Judging As a co-chair of the new public access category with Jock Gill, the U.S. Postal Service had agreed to sponsor this. USPS has a very ambitious information and transaction kiosk plan that has gotten off to a very slow start in Charlotte, North Carolina. During the summer of 1996 there was a long dry period when we heard very little from the NII Award organizers. Rumors of server problems and family emergencies surfaced, but finally all the entries were made available on a web site, but the timeline to sift through the first entries, winnow them down and complete final judging was compressed. This was difficult because many of the participants in the judging process were extremely busy and could not devote huge chunks of time to endless rounds of online deliberation. I needed to print the entries to read on the plane during a business trip, but all were segmented html documents. I was forced to print more than 200 pieces, because I just did not have time at work to read them on screen, and I did not have the bandwidth to do it at home. Paper proved to be the best way of making a first pass. Most all of the sites had a web page or site, and while this was not a web competition, some judges only commented on the web design and not the programs in question. In my category, public access, the web component is perhaps the least important. We looked for projects that served a whole public, not just people online or just students, and when it came to the finalists most of them had physical spaces for people to visit, to get help from real people (not knowbots or avatars), and they were very service oriented. They were successful combinations of virtual services and real human touch and presence to make the public feel more at ease. No kiosks projects were entered, though a few entrants do have kiosks as part of their offering. The Awards Ceremony By the time the six finalists were being judged, I had to leave for a Day of the Dead ceremony in Mexico (but that's a separate trip report) so I did not know who the actual winner was until the evening of the ceremony on December 3, 1996, in New York City. The idea of an Oscars-like atmosphere seemed a little strange to me when I heard the description of the 1995 ceremony, but this one, sponsored by IBM, was nicely done, and the Hilton Hotel cooks did a good job of serving excellent food to a giant group of people. Yes, it was chicken, but it was very good chicken! Bob Costas was the MC; he kept the mood at the right level of levity. Each of the ten categories had a different presenter who showed the finalists and then a video clip. The winner then came to the stage to make a short speech and accept the award. The video clips were well done, though there were some of the IBM ads where the subtitles were written to poke fun at the original ads, and one went over well but the others were less than successful. Vice President Gore made a video message and invoked the term "Information Superhighway." Perhaps that will catch on, just as it has in Canada. I prefer the European moniker, "Information Society" because it is more indicative of the purpose of the awards. Muki Izori of East Palo Alto Gets Plugged In <www.pluggedin.org/epa.net> accepted the award for public access. He and one of the young programmers who writes html to support the initiative came up, and I spoke with him later. I judged it as a top candidate, not because it was aiding an underserved population, but because it was trying in so many ways to serve all groups in the area in many different ways: training, web information, a place to meet and talk, sales of services, and access to good equipment. I was also impressed with CTCNet <www.ctcnet.org>, the alliance of more than 100 sites around the country, of which Plugged In is a member, because they are offering support to many of these fledgling public access venues, some of which are not as well organized as East Palo Alto's. LinkNet <linknet.kitsap.lib.wa.us> from the Bremerton, Washington library did not win, but two of their technical people came to New York and I think they will be back again, especially since they have instituted a new and successful 2 mbps wireless link between one branch and the main library. Ohio Public Library Information Network <www.oplin.lib.oh.us> was also a strong contender. Other winners by category: Arts & Entertainment--The CitySpace Project: <cityspace.org> Business--Interactive Wall Street Journal <wsj.com> Children--Faces of Adoption <www.adpt.org/adopt> Community--Charlotte's Web <www.charweb.org> Education--The Jason VII Project <aquarius.eds.com> Government--NSF FastLane Project <www.fastlane.nsf.gov> Health--Applied Informatics <www.cpmc.columbia.edu/appldinf> Next Generation--Starbright World <www.starbright.org> AT&T NII Telecollaboration--Electronic Cafe International <www.ecafe.com> There were more than 800 entries, and the winners are posted prominently. In the community category, Steve Snow of Charlotte's Web (one of four winners that had received NTIA TIIAP grants) made a great pitch for the benefits of community networking. I hope he posts his acceptance speech. The library in Charlotte, NC, is fortunate to have him in charge of this solid project. Some of the real benefit is the mix of people who usually move in a much narrower track: business, health, non-profit, education, government. Getting them together and having them hear about dozens of interesting achievements outside of their own world view will probably help the online world stay diverse and surprising. It's been several years since I imagined I could keep up with all the Internet changes, and I learned about programs like the NSF's FastLane and the Starbright Foundation (which is not using the Internet) and most impressive of all, the National Adoption Center online which has placed many children using the Internet to publicize older kids, disabled, kids, brothers and sisters. It was an outstanding example of how the net really did extend the reach of this volunteer group whose founder started at her kitchen table with 3 x 5 cards. Her first upgrade was to 5 x 8 cards! I'd urge you to take a look at her site no matter how many kids you have or even if you'd never have any. One mother with nine adopted children came on stage with the director who made a short but eloquent acceptance speech. I like serendipity so I frequently will go into a dining room at a conference and sit at an empty table to see who winds up nearby. However, this time Mario Morino, an enthusiastic supporter of the NII Awards, had asked a group of his friends to sit at his table. He even sent out short biographies of each guest, but I was offline and did not know anything about anyone there. It turned out that Mario did not even get a seat at his own table, but by chance I sat next to a woman who is a fine writer and consultant who not only was my age, from my alma mater, but it turned out I used to serve her when I worked in her sorority dining room. We traded stories of old professors, talked about the quality of writing on the Net, and where it was all going. Digital Footprint The next day a couple of hundred people spent the day talking about the future of the Net and where we really were. Hake put together an event called Digital Footprint and set up ten panels and several speakers for the 8-3:30 pm event for some of the attendees and winners of the NII Awards. In a sense, it was a time for appraisal and not self-congratulation. One of the goals was to come up with metrics that could be used to measure success or at least progress in the different areas. For some, it was enough to say that X schools had been wired at capacity Y, or that computer ownership in a community was increasing, or that a site had received 100,000 hits the previous day (or month or in the last hour). Some like, Red Burns of Tisch School for the Arts and a longtime pioneer said she would like to see less quantification and more risk taking in projects. The whole movement is young and needs more time for experimentation. The organizers made one brilliant addition and also a common mistake. They had Klesmer Madness to provide musical interludes and to signal the moderators that their panel discussion needed to conclude. The mistake was trying to fit all the speakers into 7 hours of sitting, with only a little amount of time for Q&A and no time for a full discussion with all the participants. For a group so devoted to interactivity and to symmetric network connections, the experts talk-audience listens was at best a compromise since most of those present could not devote another day for leisurely discussion. Some people said their words and left, but most stayed until the end. Of course there were good discussions in the halls. Roel Pieper, CEO of Tandem, kicked off the event with an infomercial about his company and its role in the NII: transactions, invisibility, reliability, scalability. The message seemed to be: the humans who are not online are probably passive consumers who won't want NT, NC, or a PC. The solution is SmarTV, a two-button (buy/don't buy) control that can be used with existing sets. Barcodes in the images and a sensing device in the control. He asked, "How can the TV be used to embrace the consumer?" and I despaired for the future of this new medium. Online sales may be the use that will drive many other activities of greater social value, but to hear that was his primary message being delivered at Digital Footprint was very revealing. Pieper, a European, did warn the audience not to think of the Net as an English-only environment. I'm already working on my new Eurovocabulary: Kaufen: ja/nein; Acheter: oui/non; Comprar: si/no; Buy: yes/not yet. Farai Chedaya of CNN moderated the government and democracy panel and did a good job as moderator. Larry Irving of NTIA-represented the Statist (one of Louis Rosetto's favorite terms) forces and subbed for John Heileman of Wired. Adam Clayton Powell III of the Freedom Forum discussed the importance of the Net in the last election. I tend to agree with ex-White House staffer David Lytel who said it would be about like television in the 1952 election. Powell gave harder statistics: Of all voters 8% visited candidates' web sites; 12% visited journalistic web sites. 50% found it somewhat or very useful. Larry Irving talked about how many grants they have done at the Department of Commerce, including the 4 NII winners this year.He's interested in best practices. To him the importance of the net during the election is getting what he calls unfiltered access to info: headline plus in depth info about the same topic. I would just call it multiple sources of info, none of it unfiltered. Powell talked about the increased amount of connectivity he found on a trip to Africa, with high tech being used in unexpected places. You need a high level of security for distributing pension payments. In South Africa a van travels to villages and has a with handprint recognition for the payees. The image is transmitted to a central server, verified, and the payment is made. Would something this robust be needed before people could vote online? John Gage of Sun reminds me of someone with an unsorted bag of goodies. He sizes up the audience and pulls out little stories, quips, and statistics that may seem unrelated. And in fact, they are. I do that too when I speak, so I don't object to it. But taken as pieces of a mosaic to reflect change, technological advance, or progress toward some infrastructure goal, they do finally tie together. He spoke about the changes going on in fabrication plant cost, the opening up of Malaysia as a secure data haven (tip of the hat to Bruce Sterling for alerting us to that trend many years ago), NSA'S Fort Meade--the biggest newsroom in the world; and of course, the story of NetDay in California. But this was interrupted with a blast of Klezmer music. He finished up reinforcing his notion that slow-moving school staff and principals should move aside for the volunteer techno-kings who knew that wiring the school should be a top priority. The Clinton administration thinks that wiring the schools is a trojan horse for school reform, but parents of many children to not equate access to the Internet with better schooling. There needs to be a learning process for the adults as well as the kids, and that was part of Mario Morino's message. Mario Morino of the Morino Institute <www.morino.org> commented on the diminished faith in institutions schools, corporation, and government. The awards show how differently we are communicating with each other, yet they form a collective IQ leading to a societal transformation. He spoke about the Potomac KnowledgeWay Project and one involving netrepreneurs (probably a similar concept to the 'consolidators' described by Mitch Ratliffe in "digital media" for October 1996). In his high speed delivery he urged the audience to: -Convey the potential of the revolution (and the threats) -Move away from infrastructure metrics and move toward outcome-based measurements. -Ensure ubiquitous access. We need low cost devices and cheap access. -He is working on promoting neighborhood learning centers for all social and economic classes -Provide and promote a 21st century literacy, where people can understand the origin, flow, uses and misuses of information and its derivatives. He said the future will be divided into those who know how to learn and those who don't (or have stopped). Morino asked, "Why do we approach the 21st century with problems of society, of dead cities, of little healing in our country?" Other out-of-context pearls and URLs: Bill Smith of Bell South: I'm amazed at what happened with ADSL (asymmetric digital subscriber lines) systems (lower costs) IP switching advances, and personal broadcast networks like Pointcast. Encryption will be the most important issue says Kris Younger of Netscape. This was echoed by several others, partly because of the distance between what industry and cypherpunks would like and what the law enforcement contingent wants the federal government to do. In the e-commerce panel, John Patrick, V.P. of IBM proved that he is still the most optimistic of all Internet boosters. Well, maybe George Gilder might have even a rosier picture, but Patrick thinks there will be a billion home pages shortly, and that a lot of business will be conducted online. Leo Campbell of the USPS talked about the digital postmark to be offered by the post office. I was glad he reminded people just how much paper we are still moving. There was a short music and coffee break, and later KarNet the Great, showed up in a cape, turban, and sprinkled metal stars in his path (after the conference I watched the janitor struggle to clean them, but they were hooked to the fibers of the carpet). A comedian provided him with answers and envelopes. Some of you may remember Steve Allen's Question Man routine that predated Johnny Carson. Sample answer from Steve Allen: Stork Club. Question: What do you kill a stork with? This forecaster merely wanted to show the enormous changes in technology through interesting statistics. In the business value and opportunity section, several people were bullish on the so-called "push" model of net services. Examples are numerous, but Pointcast is the most well-known, and After Dark is the first one on the Mac. Ratliffe pointed out that people like the push model because it resembles the broadcast television model. He believes agent technologies will be more interesting, perhaps even being used to resolve conflicts in so-called online communities. A general theme running through the discussions was not wonderment at the technologies and increases in bandwidth, resolution, or even the amount of information, but the need for human skills in relating to people (as customers, citizens) and the abilities to write, think, and communicate were the most important competitive weapons. I found the common thread of people appreciating people's skills to be refreshing for a technical conference. Children were discussed in a couple of panels, and I liked the observation that kids congregate at the house with the highest modem speed (Gigi Wang of IDC) Mitch Ratliffe filled in as moderator for the final session on the future. It was the end of the day, and the audience was tired, and so were the panelists. Some needed questions repeated, and people lost their train of thought. The standout for an optimistic outlook was Douglas Rushkoff who admitted to having recently learned to talk to real people and not just engage in online discourse. He said something to the effect, "I'm an optimist. Humans will not rape and pillage; they will be nice and evolve to a higher stage. Will we be able to 'steer the ship of global culture' or we allow the naysayers force us to retreat to a more conservative stance." He claimed the Net is forcing participants to drop social prejudices and that somehow indigenous groups online will battle the forces of imperialism and prevail. I had this image of the final scene of Star Wars (which was inspired by Leni Riefenstahl's Triumph of the Will) where Hmong and Mayan and Lakota and Romani cyber-guerillas were getting some sort of Indigenous II award from Rushkoff. But perhaps he meant the early users of the Internet were 'indigenous' and that they will prevail over the arrivistes. It was unclear. Kit Galloway of the Electronic Cafe said that cultural imperialism was no longer an issue, but he was comparing it to the 1970's when it was much more in the headlines and was being discussed in the UN. Many groups are worried about the spread of the Net culture and Net effects. Conclusion Although it was very hard to tie all of these threads together to get a cohesive picture, Hake's statement of purpose did make sense to me. Hake made the important point that seemed to justify events such as Digital Footprint and the awards ceremony: There is an unnecessary division between the for profit and non-profit sectors. He thinks we all have to make money for all these good things to be supported. The NII Awards and the forthcoming academy will help the different sides be aware of their interdependence and the existence of other types of projects. Softbank International, a Japanese firm, has purchased the NII awards, or at least the concept. What that will mean in the future remains for the volunteers as well as the new owners to decide. If they try and take it international, it probably should be on a country by country basis, or perhaps a region. The differences in infrastructure and access are so pronounced, that it will be hard for a digital version of Kip Keino to emerge in some sort of cyber Olympics if a Slovenian online zine tries to compete with Wired or if the Jason project is pitted against a project to connect rural farm kids in Michocan, Mexico. Another point is that some countries will reject an "international" concept if it was hatched in the United States. There will have to be a strong local involvement for this to spread even to other countries in North America. While Hake has tried to get publicity in regular media, it seems that a book might be worthwhile to supplement the shorter profiles that show up after the awards in papers and magazines and online. Maybe he will have time to write that book after the new owners take over. For information on the recent competition, see <www.gii-awards.com>. Steve Cisler -- * distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission * <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, * collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets * more info: majordomo@is.in-berlin.de and "info nettime" in the msg body * URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@is.in-berlin.de