Session 6
We went from talking about devising a system to map motivations and feelings, to discussing smart contracts and interoperability in secondary markets, and whether secondary markets are good for artists.
Sidebar:
Bea: I shared a Jam file
Ser Ste: I think it’s a good thing to analyze these feelings though. we could separate them into like three big groups to have what we need in terms of understanding but not make it too difficult.
Naj: Some like to draw when emotional, some like to write. How do we account for all of their preferences to express?
Ser Ste: It’s good to be able to articulate in the preferred media.
Judy: Yes.
Sparrow: So very true Judy!
Ser Ste: Totally
Sparrow: A kind of personal record-keeping (in addition to the actual drawings).
Judy: Yes but it’s also a motivator.
Barbara: So interesting but I have to go, will hear the record later, definitely try to see the whole kind of data designed in a little badge is a big challenge
Sparrow: Ah, that’s cool!
Ser Ste: Same here Marko. Indeed… you’re very radical and imaginative!
Sparrow: The biggest point to remember, I think, is that without every voice and every contribution to this we would not be here where we are, we could have been somewhere different. So every input — in the meetings, in the groups, in dada — are super important. These meetings should continue as an important way for people to keep putting forward ideas!
Naj: It is “servant leadership”. (I don’t like the word servant though)
Judy: Interesting concept
Naj: Conflict comes from competition of space (geographic space, intellectual space, etc.). Here, none of us own the space and asking the group to decide how we want to fill it (without anyone owning it).
Sparrow: http://users.dimi.uniud.it/~massimo.franceschet/ns/plugandplay/challenges/dada/dada.html
Naj: In the startup world, entrepreneurs are the peasants and VCs are the landlords. The landlord always wins. The peasant rarely survives.
See you in two weeks!