Skill acquisition around the world is getting easier and easier, and Pittsburgh is no exception. Two trends are coming together: the rise of the virtual, and the rise of the local.
The Virtual
In the below talk, Chris Anderson (the TED curator, not the Wired Magazine editor) makes the compelling argument that the rise of broadband is allowing video to become the go-to medium for skill transfer. He argues that humans are primed to transfer visual understanding into physical understanding, and that online video allows anyone in the world to learn from the videos of anyone else. Thousands of hobbyists post months-worth of video every day showing how one can fix a toilet, make a creme brule, or start a one-square-food garden. The internet allows a global host of experts, expert amateurs (pdf link) and amateur professionals to quickly move their knowledge into the hands of others, usually with a high level of feedback and conversation (via clarifying questions in comments and author-responses to those comments and questions).
This influx of how-tos, demos, and explanations makes it easier and easier to Do It Yourself.
Importantly, the skill acquisition revolution, combined with a growing focus on living locally and sustainably, is allowing all kinds of marginalized experts to come out of the woodwork and share their knowledge before it is lost, both online and in person.
As artist David Calman Lasky put it:
It feels alien to live in a world where I have no understanding of how
I have water, or why, or heat, or food. The more I learn, the more I
find that I can't do everything on my own, but I also learn some of
why things are the way they are, and it makes me feel more able to
change the way I am living my life. In the end, it feels empowering to
learn how to provide something for yourself. Systems in the world- like
the commerce of utilities and living expenses- are demystified.
From woodworkers to Master Gardeners to canning, skills and tools that can be used to build resilience are making a comeback. The lines of apprenticeship may have died out for a generation, but there are new applicants lining up to learn.
The Local
Video is an excellent medium, but it cannot always replicate the speed and accuracy of teaching one-on-one, in a shared physical space.
In addition to the global, internet-driven trend, there has been a local resurgence in teaching spaces in Pittsburgh.
Technical projects and electronic gadgets find a launching pad at HackPGH. Art and technology meet at Assemble. Communiteach connects those who want to learn to those who are willing to teach. The Union Project is a spawning ground for dozens of community initiatives and projects. The Mr Roboto Project is a long-running d.i.y. space that just moved into a new home. Carnegie Mellon's Studio for Creative Inquiry has begun hosting a series of local conferences. PodCamp Pittsburgh is an annual conference of new-media folks sharing what they know.
Each of these local, physical institutions has a distinct, physical presence, but also has a strong web-presence. Communiteach in particular is exclusively a web-platform for connecting teachers to learners.
This double-hit of a strong, connective internet presence combined with an open, specific physical location is an ideal way to link digital activity with physical activity. As John Robb, asymmetrical warfare expert and author of Brave New War: The Next Stage of Terrorism and the End of Globalization, puts it:
"Localize production – virtualize everything else"
Production, in this case, would be the actual in-person transmission of skill from one person to another together, in real time, in a physical location. Everything else- the coordination and invitation beforehand, the marketing or branding of the event, the recording and archiving after, can and should be done virtually.
City Squid loves supporting Pittsburgh artists and locally owned businesses. We also happen to have a special love for aromatic spices and good clean art, so we just can't get enough of Cardamom Press.
(image used with permission from Cardamom Press)
This gorgeous pgh-themed art/stationary is traditionally-printed by a pgh local. I've heard that the artist has plans to expand the line to other cities in the future, but for now, revel in the simple beauty of our great city.
Share the find with friends and buy some for yourself!
City Squid Highly recommends MOON8, a dedicated fan's NES version of Pink Floyd's Dark side of the Moon. As Connor put it "I love it because it reminds me of playing Mario as a little kid and loving Pink Floyd at age 16." While for me the scenarios were switched time-wise, I couldn't agree with those sentiments more. Enjoy!
Stand back and squint, and Apple is moving towards being everywhere.
They've been "hip" for a few years now, ever since the iPod, but under this hipness lies a push towards ubiquity. Not ubiquity in the sense of universal wifi or cell network coverage, but ubiquity across any one particular person's day.
When, once, Apple was just a computer company, now many people spend their entire day utilizing Apple devices. Your alarm clock is fueled by your iPod. Your phone calls, texts, and tweets happen through your iPhone. When you are at a computer, it's an Apple computer.
In a broad way, as more and more Apple devices utilize WiFi, bluetooth, and cellular connectivity, Apple is actually moving all of your data "into the cloud"- off of any one platform and on to, effectively, all platforms.
And increasingly, Apple is coming in to competition with Google.
Strange, to think that a hardware company and an internet search company are now vying for the smartphone and micro-computer market. A lot changes in five years.
Welcome to City Squid, a blog with much on its mind. We write about everything from disorganized people to municipal issues to terrors from beyond the stars, and it all ends up here!
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