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Le monde en marche

Being in Paris this week I’ve discovered this great sculpture done by the French artist Fabien Chalon. In a way it summarize quite nicely what I have been talking about on the blog, the whole movement / inertia thing.

Located in the middle of Gare du Nord, the biggest train station in Europe, the sculpture called ‘Le monde en marche’ (the world in movement) gets to work every 30 minutes with a black and white film, a travelling ball and the sculpture in movement. You can watch the video below to see it working. The rest of the time, the sculpture doesn’t move but a massive video screen displays people passing by it.

I love the contrast between busy people walking in the station and the ones that take the time to stop and look at the world moving around them.

[Pic via]

The French government has submitted a new law to tax for the Internet. A few weeks ago, a meeting about the future of digital was held in Paris where Eric Besson, “secrétaire d’Etat chargé de la prospective, de l’évaluation des politiques publiques et du développement de l’économie numérique” (love his job title), claimed his willingness to see France as one of the major country digital wise.

However after this meeting, the French assembly is actually debating whether or not they should tax the Internet, including collaborative sites.

Two main reasons for this: the tax would replace lost revenue from the new ban on commercials on prime-time television and would also solve piracy problems in their eyes.

This law shows that the French government doesn’t make any distinction between TV and the Internet. They only see the Internet as a multiple channels medium. By doing so they totally miss the point about business models. The Internet is much more than a ‘medium’ for entertainment and this tax will dissuade digital entrepreneurs from creating businesses in France.

I am now curious to see what the next steps are going to be. Let’s hope that the French assembly hasn’t lost its common sense.

[Source Le Monde - Pic via]

More AOC

David Reich had a great idea to take the Age of conversation to the next level.

In his own words: “Well I thought I had an idea to get spur more talk about The Age of Conversation 2, by writing about random essays in the book and asking those authors to, in turn, pick a page at random, write about it and then tag that author to do the same.”

So I opened the book to page 112 – The fear thing by Lois Kelly. Funnily enough I am mentioning the ‘Fear of the new’ in my essay.

I really liked Lois contribution, it starts with an analogy: ‘an idea cemetery’. Who is to blame for all those great ideas that ‘never seen the light of the day’? Her answer to this simple question is very sharp: we are the one to be blame for all the great ideas that died. If you think about it, the excuse of having conservative clients, colleagues isn’t a valid one. It is down to every single person to make a difference and fight for an idea that is worth it. As Gandhi once said: “Be the change you wish to see in the world”.

[Pic via]

Black Friday madness

“A man working for discount retailer Wal-Mart was killed on Friday in a stampede by frenzied shoppers who broke down doors and surged into a Long Island, New York store, a police spokesman said.” Reuters

Kimberly Cribbs, who witnessed the stampede, said shoppers were acting like savages. “When they were saying they had to leave, that an employee got killed, people were yelling ‘I’ve been on line since yesterday morning,’” she said. “They kept shopping.”

[Pic Via]

Slow

Things don’t move that fast after all.

I’ve recently registered to Hype Machine, really good music site by the way, and apparently they really want people to update their profile pictures as they have set up a John McCain pic as the default one! Of course this isn’t actually the case, the default picture is still the Hypemachine logo but it is a very nice detail. At least it made me change my profile picture.

James Surowiecki, the author of the Wisdom of Crowds, gives an inspiring speech about the power of social media and how people organise themselves in order to have a voice.

What I really like about his talk is that he challenges his own theory. He isn’t blind about the role of social networks in today society, as he underlines the difficulty for people to stay independent and therefore to have a personal take on things. “Once you are linked in the network, the network starts to shape your views and starts to shape your reactions with everybody else.[...] The groups are only smart when the people in them are as independent as possible.” This paradox of the Wisdom of crowds should enable us to keep our integrity and make the most of social connections.

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