« There's something about Toronto | Main | Engineering serendipity »

September 11, 2008

Video and final stab at social networks and cities

Nlab Readers of this blog or attendees at Nesta's recent events will have heard me, or others talk about the theme of 'social networks as the new cities'.

I don't intend restart this discussion again in detail but for anybody who is interested, find here a video of a talk I gave earlier in the summer at the NLab conference in Leicester, on this topic.

It's something of a stream of consciousness exploration of the subject but hopefully gives a flavour of my point of view. Namely that cities arn't just simply analogous to social networks, but rather some of the functions that cities provide (proximity, economies of scale, random interaction etc) are now increasingly being provided by social networks.

And most importantly, we are only just beginning to see the impact on our cities and places which will be profoundly impacted by the web, just as they have been historically by other disruptive technologies.

Anyway, enough on that, but as always I'd be interested in any thoughts and feedback as ever.

PS. Thanks again to Sue Thomas for curating the event and inviting me to attend.

add this to del.icio.us digg this
Add/View comments (0)

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/t/trackback/2199010/33340768

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Video and final stab at social networks and cities:

» NLabs social networks conference from Putting people first
NLab is a lab developed by the Faculty of the Humanities of De Montfort University in Leicester, UK to connect creative businesses with writers and generate pioneering partnerships. In June they organised a very interesting one-day conference on so... [Read More]

» NLab conference videos now online from NLab
Videos of the 2008 NLab conference are now online at Vimeo. Enjoy! PS: within hours of the site going live, Experientia sorted out the assets and presented them very tidily here. Thanks Experientia - very impressive! PPS: And Roland Harwood [Read More]

Comments

Comments - etiquette

We look forward to reading your comment on this post - take part in the debate that will make innovation flourish in the UK.

Please note. We reserve the right to remove spam, abusive, obscene or irrelevant comments. Persistent offenders will be banned.

Post a comment

If you have a TypeKey or TypePad account, please Sign In

Search This Site

Google