Wonderosity

Where curiosity turns to wonder

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Entries Tagged as 'Geeking Out Loud'

A geeky week for me: Iphone 2.0, meeting Scoble, Thingamajiggr, & BarcampSeattle

June 11th, 2008 ·

It’s looking like a geeky week. First I watch the iphone 2.0 drama unfold (not much drama, more let down really…gotta wait 3 weeks for the really good stuff.)

Then last night (Tuesday) for ‘Tertullia’ (a Seattle guy’s group I’ve been a part of for a couple years now) Buzz brought in Scoble for ‘the Scoble show’. Here’s a Qik video that Robert took during that evening, I’m in a blue shirt and ask a question about Qik.

Though most of the content of the evening was a rehash of things I was already aware of, it was good to see how the rest of the group reacted to Scoble’s view on the meaning of the media shift. It was also great to meet him face to face and see that he really does seem to be a nice guy who is having genuine fun following his geeky passion.Though I’d love to hear more details about where he thinks technology should have its limits, I got him to twitter back to me the day before an answer to my tweet “@scobleizer I’m curious. Seems like you are constantly wired. Do you have any personal/family boundaries for unplugging? What are they?” To which he answered:

Then for this weekend, I’m hoping to make it to thingamajiggr (part of Ignite Seattle) for some good innovative geeky fun. Finally, I’ll be attending the first Barcamp Seattle for more geeking out loud. Below is my pathable profile for the event (Pathable is a cool Seattle company that connects people using metadata, then provides physical name tags with valuable info for the live event.)

Then its a father’s day at the in-laws for a ‘tech-sabbath’ rest ;)

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Tags: Geeking Out Loud

Can I resurrect the fun of blogging and podcasting?

May 26th, 2008 ·

It’s funny, well, sad actually: I really used to love blogging and podcasting. I enjoyed the creative act, the experiments I conducted, the excitement of being heard by others, and the pleasure of getting feedback on my thoughts and creations. Then something happened. Certain factors crept in and killed the joy. And now I’m wondering out loud what they are for me:

  • By far the main culprit: When I started doing ’social media stuff’ professionally, my fear of ‘looking unprofessional’ increased dramatically -the inner censor (”Grammar!”, “Stupid, unoriginal idea”, etc) got loud.
  • The #2 reason is that somewhere I lost my soul, my passion, my freedom to express myself honestly. Partly this is just practical –life got busy and took on priorities. But the other reasons, having to do with deeper issues of spirituality and idenitity, are things I need to deal wi th.
  • After leaving my last job, and starting two different businesses, life got really busy. But I don’t really believe that’s true as I spend plenty of time ‘consuming’ others’ media.
  • Comparing myself to other bloggers and podcasters, which I now consume more of, contributes to that #1 issue big time
  • For podcasting, production time can be a bitch.
  • Endless experimenting with and indecision between various tools and platforms.

I could list more (what about you?), but I think those are the main reasons and its time to change. So, to all those inner and outer critics: screw you, perfection and people pleasing is not what social media is about.

I just gotta be me, like it or not, buy it or not, ‘digg me’ or not.


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Tags: Geeking Out Loud · Spark Extraordinary Living

Why Twitter Matters –my response to business week article by Steve Baker

May 15th, 2008 ·

Twitter in Business Week today. Article and my response here: http://tinyurl.com/69u3l3

Follow LeifHansen on twitter.

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Tags: Geeking Out Loud

Spark Interviewed by Conscious Living

April 9th, 2008 ·

I hope you enjoy this fun, power-packed interview by the wonderful ladies (Wendy Garrett and Sandy Jorgensen) over at a new Talkshoe.com show called “Conscious Living“. While we (mostly me, caffeinated ) talked about many things, we focused on:

  • How Soul Tech received so much press and what the workshop is about
  • The various projects and businesses I’m involved in
  • My soon-to-launch www.SparkSocialMedia.com site
  • The pros and cons of technology/Social Media and where I think things may be heading

To those of you visiting wonderosity from this show, you can follow this link to receive the free eworkbook we talked about.  And you can follow this link if you are interested in seeing how you can use social media (blogs, podcasts, social networking sites, etc) to enhance your business, organization or other passion project.

Thanks Wendy & Sandy!

-Leif

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Tags: Geeking Out Loud · Spark Extraordinary Living · Spark Podcasts & Video

3, 2, 1.5 -Almost Launch: Spark Social Media Site Almost Live

April 8th, 2008 ·

Well, I’m almost ready to let this site go public. There are a number of important additions I need to take care of (as mentioned in the forum), but I think that the Spark Social Media site will be ready to launch within a few days.

Our site will be featuring:
SparkMarkA collection of social media tutorial videos
SparkMarkRelevant and hot news from our collection of aggregated social media blogs
SparkMarkMeet other members and participate in the forums
SparkMarkJoin specific social media groups
SparkMarkLearn from a growing Social Media Wiki/Glossary
SparkMarkSocial Media Snapshots and Spark Event Photos

And just for the record, my goals for this site are:

  1. To generate more business for Spark Social Media and its partners
  2. To become a destination where both Social media virgins and intermediates can learn and grow their business, organization or other project.
  3. To be a place where I can gather information and learn from others as well

Look forward to seeing you there!

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Tags: Geeking Out Loud

iPhone Hype Holds Up…

March 18th, 2008 ·

Check out the new iphone usage stats at m:metrics (from 10,000 adults.)
And with the new iPhone SDK just released, the iphone will be eating an even bigger piece of the pie when all the cool new native apps are released.

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Tags: Geeking Out Loud

52 Nights Unplugged, an inspiring project by Ariel Meadows

February 8th, 2008 ·

One of my favorite outcomes from the Soul Tech workshop is that one of the participants, Ariel Meadows (a Tech Savvy Microsoft Employee,  Author, and insightful blogger) decided to commit to one night a week of no ’screen technology’ (except snapping a few digital pictures to record her process.) She’s documenting her experiences on her blog under the tag (and registered domain name) “52NightsUnplugged“.    

I’d mentioned in the workshop, during a point of practical steps one may choose to take, that my family has been trying to keep a ‘low tech sabbath’ on Sundays (off and on for about three years now) and I’d like to think that perhaps that was part of her inspiration.  Regardless of the source of her inspiration, I think its very cool and courageous that she’s going for it!  Even more inspirational is the fact that she’s been getting responses from her readers deciding that they too want to give it a go.  In addition, the Today Show (who chose to profile Ariel during the workshop) is flying her out for the upcoming February 19th show to talk live about how ‘52 Nights’ has been going.  Go Ariel, spread the gospel of ’soul tech’, of sustainable technological practices… or whatever one wants to call it. 

It’s not about abandoning technology.  It’s not about smashing the machines.  It’s about dethroning technocentrism.  It’s about not getting to the end of your life and thinking “Crap. I wish I hadn’t spent 25 of my years staring at screens.” (Take the natl avg of 4.5 hrs of TV a day, add movies, video games, cell phones, PDAs, etc and thats a low guestimate for a 75 year life…and who knows what new technology will be tempting us in the future.  Beware the ring Frodo.) 

Soul Tech, or Sustainable Tech, is about recognizing and acting on the fact that there are more wonder-full, mysterious, creative, real, adventurous, fulfilling ways to experience and express our humanity than just staring at screens and tapping mice.  I want to live life deeply and I’m sure you do too. 

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Tags: Geeking Out Loud · Spark Extraordinary Living

Experience your life in 5 minutes, play “Passage”

January 30th, 2008 ·

If you haven’t played the game (or had the experience) of “Passage” yet, download it now (Mac, PC or Linux) and see what you think.  The game/experience takes 5 minutes and I thought it was a fascinating and artistic way to express much of what life’s ‘about’. I won’t say much more, but will let it be a surprise.  Kudos to Buzz for telling me about this.  After you’ve played it once, I’d suggest reading the creator’s statement and then playing it again.

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Tags: Geeking Out Loud · Spark Extraordinary Living

Odiogo, Cool new service turns your text blogs into high quality audio podcast!

January 9th, 2008 ·

I discovered  (and, as you can see…um, I mean hear, have implemented) on a friend’s great blog (Full Circle Associates) a powerful new service that turns the text of anybody’s blog into an audio podcast and then even adds that feed to iTunes.  Why is that so cool?  Well, I don’t know about you, but I have much more free time while on the move (driving, exercising, etc) and listening to my iPhone than time where I can read blogs in front of a screen.  Besides, listening and driving is a lot more enjoyable and safer than trying to read it off my iphone ;)  Anyway, you can check it out by pressing one of the play buttons on each blog entry, and you can subscribe to my blog’s audio feed by clicking on the ‘Odiogo’ button in the upper left column of this page.  Have fun and let me know what you think!  Set yourself up with one by heading over here

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Tags: Geeking Out Loud

Part III, Modernity’s Myth (The Ring, The Stone, & The Pool: Exploring the Nature of Technology through the Magic within Tolkien’s Myth)

January 9th, 2008 ·

Part II

Part I

 

Modernity’s Myth

In order to understand the relevance of Tolkien’s story to us today, and in order to better understand how technology has taken such a prominent place in our society, we will now need to examine another myth, a myth which wants us to take it a little more ‘literally’.  I call it a myth because every worldview is part system and part story:  They are systems because they try to show how the various dimensions of reality are related;  they are stories because they try to make sense of human history using language that is inescapably associated with a socio-historical context, and because they make choices that can never be severed from subjective value judgments.  


We have a choice of what myths, what visions we will use to help us understand the physical world.  We do not have a choice of understanding it without using any myths or visions at all.  Again, we have a real choice between becoming aware of these myths and ignoring them.  If we ignore them, we travel blindly inside myths and visions which are largely provided by other people.  This makes it much harder to know where we are going.

The myth we will now be examining is the worldview produced by unrestrained scientific inquiry and assertions –a way of defining the universe that, when taken in its extreme form, reduces the universe to merely quantifiable material substances.  This worldview has taken on various nuances and labels, yet I will be using the term ‘scientific reductionism’ to describe it.  Scientific reductionism is the belief that all that exists is ultimately reducible to rationally explicable, mathematically quantifiable materials and laws that can best be discovered and exploited through the scientific method of apprehending reality.  While I will not recount here the history of how this worldview came to be so prevalent and so radically misappropriated, its primary point of origin was the Enlightenment’s placing of reason above all other sources of truth. 

Wendell Berry, critiquing one of the most recent and comprehensive attempts to promote this radically materialist worldview, O.N. Wilson’s Consilience, notes in his poignantly titled book Life is a Miracle: An essay against modern superstition that


Our daily lives are a daily mockery of our scientific pretensions.  We are learning to know precisely the location of our genes, but significant numbers of us don’t know the whereabouts of our children.  Science does not seem to be lighting the way; we seem rather to be leapfrogging into the dark along a series of scientific solutions, which become problems, which call for further solutions, which science is always eager to supply, and which it sometimes cannot supply.

A glance at any newspaper (or out most windows) confirms this image of leapfrogging in the dark –drugs that turn out to have devastating side effects; factories that destroy the environment;  machines that end up diminishing or creating barriers between relationships; social ‘programs’ that end up dehumanizing people; technologies that promise to bring happiness but only bring temporary entertainment –these and many other examples confirm Berry’s image.  We are dramatically confronted by the many problems caused by our previous ‘solutions’, and yet oddly enough more and more scientific ‘miracles’ are advertised, believed in, sold, and all too thoughtlessly consumed.  It’s as though we are addicted to technological ‘fixes’ and yet in denial of this addiction and its destructive consequences.

Yet without recognizing these consequences and without admitting the limits of this scientific myth, we have brought about serious problems; problems which may mean a temporary freedom for science, but which actually result in great loss of freedom for the world.  Berry puts it so:


Our present idea of freedom in science is too often reducible to thoughtlessness of consequence…In both science and art there is a principled resistance to any suggestion that the specialist, within his or her work, might be subject or subordinate to anything.  And so the freedom of the originators and exploiters has become, in effect, the abduction and imprisonment of all the rest of us.  Adam was the first, but not the last, to choose for the whole human race. 

Freedom was never meant be mean the ‘freedom’ to do whatever one desires; it comes when the boundaries and limits drawn by love are respected.  Our choices have consequences, and as we have seen, many of the choices of the scientific-political-technological powers-that-be have resulted in a great loss of freedom for many.

A further problem with this myth is that by reducing the known universe to mere lawfully determined, quantifiable material, we abandon any meaningful belief in the wonderful realities that make life worth living –wonders like free-will, the human spirit, and love.  Berry reminds us that, left to itself, this limited way of knowing “would impose the scientific methodology of reductionism upon cultural properties, such as religion and the arts, that are inherently alien to it, and that are often expressly resistant to reduction of any kind.”

  Since reductionism believes that everything can ultimately be explained, these mysterious realities can only be perceived as puzzles yet to be solved, illusions and superstitions yet to be discredited, or territory waiting to be conquered, quantified, and used.  Yet in believing this we deny the mysterious nature of the very realities that enable us to discover and proclaim that any ‘truth’ might exist in the first place.   In his book “The Abolition of Man”, CS Lewis illustrates this point well, 


But you cannot go on ‘explaining away’ forever: you will find that you have explained explanation itself away.  You cannot go on ‘seeing through’ things for ever.  The whole point of seeing through something is to see something through it.  It is good that the window should be transparent, because the street or garden beyond it is opaque.  How if you saw through the garden too?  It is no use trying to ‘see through’ first principles.  If you see through everything, then everything is transparent.  But a wholly transparent world is an invisible world.  To ‘see through’ all things is the same as not to see.

It is worth noting that one interesting magical property of The Ring is that it makes its wearer invisible.  At first, it seems as though these pictures clash –a  ring that makes its wearer invisible and a worldview that makes everything else invisible –but in the end, they are the same.  For when we attempt to have power over others, denying their ultimately mysterious nature, we begin the process of dehumanizing them, and we too begin to fade from all that makes us truly human.

Obviously we do not literally disappear (though with foolish creations like the nuclear bomb, the metaphor becomes frighteningly befitting) but that which makes us truly human does. Wendell Berry tells us that by accepting the reductionist worldview, we adopt the idea “that there is no difference between creature and artifice, birth and manufacture, thought and computation”  In essence, this way of perceiving the world leads us to see the human as just one more machine –and not a very ‘efficient’ one at that (depending on one’s values).  Berry notices that


This machine business may once have had meaning.  It may have been a way of asserting a belief in the integrity of Creation and the physical coherence of creatures; it may have been a way of insisting on the indispensability of part to whole.  The machine, in other words, had a certain usefulness as a metaphor.  But the legitimacy of a metaphor depends upon our understanding of its limits.

Surely one of the ways of describing life is as an integrated system –there is nothing wrong with that –yet this metaphor has limits that urgently need to be recognized.  Taken by itself, the scientific way of knowing is ironically more of a limited and limiting myth (for it reduces reality) than the more traditionally ‘mythic’ ways of knowing –like the artistic work of Tolkien or a more traditional religious worldview –the very spheres that many scientists so often try to discredit in our present age.  We now turn to look at the link between scientific reductionism and the technologies that it produces.


  

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Tags: Geeking Out Loud · Spark Extraordinary Living

Breaking: Cat Figures Out iphone, “My Mother’s Cat Molly Figured out the iPhone UI in Minutes!”

January 2nd, 2008 ·

Wow.  The heart of wonderosity, caught in living color.

At first Molly’s fur hindered the the touch-screen interface, but soon she was pawing her way around the coolest cat and iphone-friendly sites Safari could summon.

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Part II, The Ring, The Stone, & The Pool: Exploring the Nature of Technology through the Magic within Tolkien’s Myth

December 17th, 2007 ·

We continue from the last entry exploring the nature of technology through Tolkien’s myth…

My Story
As early as about 1978, when personal computers were just beginning to make their way into many North American middle class homes, I was already spending a lot of time with them. Using a computer was one of the few things my step-father and I did together. In fact, I learned to type by playing computer adventure games: hunting and pecking for the right letters, I would give my computerized character commands like “g-o n-o-r-t-h” and “p-i-c-k u-p s-w-o-r-d” and “a-t-t-a-c-k t-r-o-l-l”. I was entertained and fascinated, enchanted, and soon became quite proficient with these magical boxes. But with time, as they and I each developed in complexity and power, previously unseen problems and concerns about their nature and my use of them began to arise. I was unsure how to begin trying to understand how technology was affecting me and the rest of the world. Thus the research for this paper has primarily been to help me wrestle through my very ambiguous feelings about technology. And, in my own unusual way, the writing of it is an attempt to increase awareness of what seems to be the crucial questions involved with technology and to offer any answers I have found along the way.

A week before writing this paper I decided to go for a long walk in the woods to think over what I’ve learned thus far and to put together some kind of outline in my head. However, before I left my house, I started gathering things for my backpack –a few snacks, a book or two, a journal and pen, and my new ‘Revo’ –a 1999 gadget that was basically like a laptop computer, except that it was only the size of a wallet. Pretty geeky stuff for the times. “I had better take this to capture my ideas” I thought to myself. However, in light of the topic at hand, I eventually reconsidered and left it in my office. Actually, I decided to leave the pen and paper there too –for, I wondered to myself, aren’t these types of technologies as well? In the end I left everything at home except a tuna-fish sandwich that I had made for lunch, which I put in my coat pocket before heading out the door. If you’re one of those who would consider my tuna sandwich a type of technology, well, I’ll have a word or two for you later. Anyway, I left the house feeling a little less burdened than my initial attempt.

The woods were quiet and refreshing. Eventually the trails of the UBC endowment lands take one away from the sounds of rushing cars and other city noises. Slowly, as my mind settled and I became immersed in the beauty of the woods, I began to mull over much of what I’d read related to the nature of technology. Soon afterwards, ‘brilliant earth-shattering revelations!’ (or so I felt) began to rain down upon me. “Oh, I hope <read: fear> I don’t forget these ideas” I thought to myself, “I wish I would have brought my Revo –or at least the pen and paper. Maybe I was being too legalistic. Should I go back and get it? I’d hate to forget all this.” This type of chatter and more of its kind looped through my mind for a few minutes before finally submitting to the silent whispers of the trees.

I wondered to myself later that day: was my Revo, like Tolkien’s One ring, calling out for me, it’s servant?

Tolkien’s Story
J.R.R. Tolkien created a massive work of the imagination, a fantastic meta-narrative some might say, that is working its literary ‘magic’ on millions of readers to this day. I was one of these enchanted readers early in my childhood, and made my way through his trilogy probably only a few years after my exposure to the magic of computers –which, for a 10 year old infrequent reader, was quite a feat (around a couple thousand pages if you include the Hobbit!) Tolkien’s primary works (The Hobbit, The Lord of the Rings trilogy, and The Sirmarillion) have sold well over 100,000,000 copies (as of 1999), have been translated into at least thirty languages, and are frequently at the top of various national ‘top ten book’ surveys. They have clearly been influential in the lives of many many people –and there is no sign that this trend will be ceasing any time soon. In his myth, the basic plot runs so:

An ancient and magic ring has been unexpectedly found by a member of a simple and somewhat humble race, a hobbit by the name of Bilbo Baggins. He knows not the ring’s true nature or powers, but there is a powerful enemy that does. In time, a wise old wizard named Gandalf and other wise men from various races –elves, dwarves and such –come to conclude that this ring is none other than the One Ring, from the sayings of Lore;

Three Rings for the Elven-kings under the sky,
Seven for the dwarf-lords in their halls of stone,
Nine for Mortal Men doomed to die,
One for the Dark Lord in his dark throne
In the Land of Mordor where the Shadows lie.
One Ring to rule them all, One Ring to find them,
One Ring to Bring them all and in the darkness bind them
In the Land of Mordor where the Shadows lie.

A High Council is called in which, after many disagreements and struggles, it is painfully admitted that there is only one thing that must be done with this powerful ring –it must be destroyed. The council realizes that even if one were to try and use the ring to war against the Dark Lord Sauron (for a great war is stirring at the time of this story, and many tragic victories have already been won by Sauron), it would eventually turn to ill, for its use would ultimately corrupt and enslave the wearer (The reason for this will be explored in more detail later, but for now recall Acton’s famous phrase “Absolute power corrupts absolutely”). Yet the matter of destroying this ring is not so simple: it must be taken by one willing to travel far into the lifeless land of Mordor, and cast into the same mount of fire in which it was forged.

By the time that this council takes place the ring has passed on to another hobbit, Frodo Baggins (Bilbo’s adopted cousin), who reluctantly accepts the heavy burden of bearing the ring to Mordor. The rest of the story, which is the majority of Tolkien’s trilogy, describes the journey Frodo takes with a fellowship of companions, and the adventures that they embark upon to try and destroy the One Ring.

 

Stay tuned for Part III:  Modernity’s Myth 

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Tags: Geeking Out Loud · Spark Extraordinary Living

The Ring, The Stone, & The Pool: Exploring the Nature of Technology through the Magic within Tolkien’s Myth , Part I

December 3rd, 2007 ·

“As the servants of the machines are becoming a privileged
class, the Machines are going to be enormously more powerful.
What’s their next move?”

–J.R.R. Tolkien (in a letter to his son, at the close of WWII)

Have you ever had the odd experience of re-reading a paper you’ve written, even just a few years back, and feeling like it must have been written by someone else far more knowledgeable or far more idiotic than yourself? I tend to feel one of those two extremes when I re-read my papers (which is probably why I do it so rarely). While a good portion of those papers now feel like they were a waste of time, a few of the ones I wrote in grad school still have tremendous importance and relevance to me and, I’ve been told, for society in general.

One of the two papers most requested from me I’ve decided to take material from and re-post in blog format, for a) I’ve recently received some national press about a workshop we’re doing related to this topic, b)I’ve always wanted to edit and update this paper, c) Excerpts from the paper are much easier to digest than a 50 page paper and, d) My paper was written from a particular ‘theological’ context that could distract some folks from the heart of the issue. If you want to read the full paper with all its foot notes (there are some good juicy ones), feel free to go ahead but, without further adieu: “The Ring, The Stone, & The Pool: Exploring the Nature of Technology through the Magic within Tolkien’s Myth, Part I, An Introduction”

“…Technology is playing more and more of a role in our daily lives and we are doing more and more of our playing through technology. However, the question that gets closer to the point of this paper is this: is technology actually playing more and more with us? Some of us are concerned that this might be the case; that as we increasingly use technologies, we are actually increasingly being used by them as well.

If the connections between an increase in technological dependency and many of the problems facing our modern society are not already obvious to the reader, I hope that by the end of this paper they will be. Yet not only do I hope to heighten your awareness of the seriousness of the situation at hand, I also aim to help you better understand the very nature of technology, and in time, to be more thoughtful about intentional about which technologies to embrace and in what manner their powers can best be used. Lastly, I will point towards another type of power, an alternative ‘magic’, that I believe can better meet many of the needs and desires which we have tried mostly in vain to meet through technological means.

In order to accomplish these goals we will need to traverse what may seem strange or unrelated territory; for what do technology, magic, myth, and art have to do with each other? By drawing upon the mythic literature of J.R.R. Tolkien, the relationship of these subjects will become clearer as we examine the nature of three magical artifacts found in Tolkien’s trilogy: the One Ring, the Palantiri stones, and Galadriel’s Pool.

After briefly telling a story about my relationship with technology, and after briefly summarizing the core plot of Tolkien’s trilogy, I will use each of these magical artifacts to provide the basic structure of this paper. In looking at ‘the One ring’, I will be critiquing various myths of modernity and exploring the nature of technology in general. Next, the Palantiri stones will provide for us a helpful analogy to our modern technologies, and so here I will also propose a more holistic approach to technological assessment. Finally, by looking into the pool of Galadriel, I will conclude by examining the nature of another kind of more creative magic that exists in both our own world and Tolkien’s Middle-Earth. But first I would like to share with the reader why this topic is so important to me…”

More coming soon…

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Tags: Geeking Out Loud · Spark Extraordinary Living

LA Times catches Spark’s fire about Soul-Tech

November 23rd, 2007 ·

Check out the recent article from the LA Times on Spark Northwest & 8020Vision’s Soul-Tech workshops!

Too wired, techies regroup, reach out - Los Angeles Times

Too wired, techies regroup, reach out

Leif Hansen, shown at Gas Works Park in Seattle, coordinates workshops in which
self-described technophiles look for ways to relinquish high-tech and find a balance
between the virtual and real worlds. “I see people very overwhelmed,” he said.
“Calling their dependence on technology an addiction, some attend retreats near Seattle to take the first step and admit it.

Like many professionals, Mark Stiffler spent countless hours surfing the Internet, typing e-mails and talking on a cellphone. The “wired” life took a toll.

It made him edgy and disconnected. His dependence on high-technology began feeling much like addiction and, like many addictions, this one affected his personal relationships…” {More}

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Tags: Geeking Out Loud · Spark Extraordinary Living

Dilbert Gets it: Soul Tech Needed

October 25th, 2007 ·



Again, Soul Tech: Restoring balance to our Tech-intense lives

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Tags: Geeking Out Loud · Spark Extraordinary Living

Soul Tech -Restoring balance to our tech-intense lives

October 19th, 2007 ·

Exciting News! Spark Northwest is teaming up with 8020Vision to offer another Humanity 2.0-ish workshop in Seattle, entitled:
Soul Tech -Restoring balance to our tech-intense lives

Humaity 2.0 on Orcas

You know how when going on a vacation it takes a few days to relax and get in the vacation mind? It is like that with our tech-intensive world. Technology can be fun and effective, and yet it can be addictive, stressful and soul-deadening as well.

During a recent Spark Northwest Humanity 2.0 workshop on balancing technology and need for human fulfillment, participants identified several major challenges, including:

  • How do we deepen awareness of when we are too consumed by technology?
  • When we become aware, how do we consciously choose new behavior that deepens our happiness and connection with others?
  • As we work to establish a balance between technical and soulful aspects of living, how do we stick with it?

The Soul Tech workshop will address these challenges.…{More Details}

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Tags: Geeking Out Loud · Spark Extraordinary Living

My iphone video mentioned in London Times…

October 17th, 2007 ·

Some lady emailed me this morning to tell me that my experimental video of begging for an iphone on the street was mentioned in the London Times. It was listed (as #3) in an article entitled “50 reasons not to buy an iPhone“:

“3. If you’re still determined to get an iPhone, you could of course try innovative ways to raise the money like begging on the street like this guy.

It was also mentioned a while back in Computer World magazine in an article entitled “Top 10 — plus one — funniest iPhone Youtube videos“.


Phone owners can always take to the streets to beg for the funds to pay a bill, as this man did in an attempt to procure the pricey device.

I haven’t seen a view hit jump yet (its been over 20,000 for a couple of weeks I think), but who knows, maybe it will make another comeback…it’s still timely and relevant and pretty funny, I think at least.

I REALLY do need to update the iphoneplease.com site though to say that I am now a proud iphone owner, thanks to the money the site raised and to the generous surprise birthday gift from a group of friends and family members.

Leif w/ hacked iphone

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Are we outsourcing our memory to technology, and thus losing ‘employment’?

September 28th, 2007 ·

Read an article in wired today about our memories being ‘outsourced’ to technology, something I have surely found true in my life. I’m concerned at the *lack* of concern in the article. What do you think?

———–the first snip, rest at link above——–

We’re running out of memory.

I don’t mean computer memory. That stuff’s half-price at Costco these days. No, I’m talking about human memory,
stored by the gray matter inside our heads. According to recent
research, we’re remembering fewer and fewer basic facts these days.

This summer, neuroscientist Ian Robertson polled 3,000 people
and found that the younger ones were less able than their elders to
recall standard personal info. When Robertson asked his subjects to
tell them a relative’s birth date, 87 percent of respondents over age
50 could recite it, while less than 40 percent of those under 30 could
do so. And when he asked them their own phone number, fully one-third
of the youngsters drew a blank. They had to whip out their handsets to
look it up.

That reflexive gesture — reaching into your pocket for the
answer — tells the story in a nutshell. Mobile phones can store 500
numbers in their memory, so why would you bother trying to cram the
same info into your own memory? Younger Americans today are the first
generation to grow up with go-everywhere gadgets and services that
exist specifically to remember things so that we don’t have to:
BlackBerrys, phones, thumb drives, Gmail.

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Tags: Geeking Out Loud

Humanity 2.0 -Orcas Island, a great success!

September 11th, 2007 ·

Well, I was planning on writing up a more detailed summary of our Orcas workshop, but to be honest I am POOPED with the process of creating the new H2.0 social site, so hopefully you’ll get a general sense of things by checking out the pictures, etc. Pictures are only from me so far (thus I’m not in them, nor the games and interactivies I facilitated), but they show the group’s process as well as pictures of all our poster-board notes filled with great ideas, burning questions, and helpful insights.

In short, it was a great time of meeting and experiencing wonderfully diverse people and perspectives, brainstorming, problem solving, and playing together. All what we hoped it would be.

Thanks to all who came and who helped promote it! We have decided to definitely do a Seattle version, most likely sometime the first half of October. So the bunches of you who wanted to come but found the time and distance (to Orcas) a little too much, you’ll get to come. Woohoo!


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Tags: Geeking Out Loud · Spark Extraordinary Living

Humanity 2.0 -a go!

August 30th, 2007 ·

Well, we’ve finally decided (largely due to some welcome external energy and enthusiasm) to give the green light to the Humanity 2.0 workshop on Orcas. Though I started with excitement, the surprising lack of initial response and registrations took me somewhat by surprise. Though “I love the idea.” “Yeah, it sounds great!” were frequently heard, it unfortunately seems that the people I was talking to weren’t as into the retreat part of it –the time and financial commitment of heading out to Orcas that is. “Do it in Seattle, and I’m there!” Cheapskates! (: If this goes as well as planned, Seattle will happen as well, but first we’re sticking with this Orcas Retreat and I think its going to be great.

I am particularly thankful to three people.
1)My wife Anna for dealing with my ups and downs and encouraging me that whether we have 3 or 30 people, the experience and learnings involved are still worth it.

2)My partner in crime for this workshop, Jay Kimball of 8020vision.com –for he also had to listen to me process a lot, provided some great feedback, and did some really great work in promoting the workshop in various ways.

3)Nancy White, who I haven’t yet met (though I look forward to it), but who found out about H20 through another friend’s blog (Stuart Maxwell’s meetatthepig.com) She encouraged me with her enthusiasm about the topic (”Oh, there are more people like me out there –thanks I knew it!”) and looks like will be responsible for getting another half a dozen people to the workshop.

Thanks to each of you, and to others who helped get the word out. Now, to the details!

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Tags: Geeking Out Loud · Spark Extraordinary Living