John Hopkins on Sun, 14 Feb 2016 05:48:36 +0100 (CET)


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Re: <nettime> Life on Autopilot?


Hallo Brian -- (sending this a third time to nettime and cc'ing it to you as it seems to be delayed by the moderators that are letting other things through...)
I had read about the Amurikan tourist in Iceland, and your notes, and thought to 
re-reflect/meditate on that from a personal/historical Icelandic context:
Naming of location is an old social process. It is an association of place with 
event (long- or short-term). Event may be natural or social. The naming process 
was once local, embodied, idiosyncratic, or personal. Local means that the 
naming is contextualized by a specific human experience of the place. Embodied 
means that the naming was propagated by verbal expression, and stored in human 
memory. Idiosyncratic in that it was the inverse of global — it was understood 
by and carried situated meaning for an individual or small grouping of people 
*who lived there*.
Located story-telling:

Physical signage is perhaps the first step in externalizing the naming process. As social structures become more and more global (de-localized), naming structures have evolved that are more and more 'universal'. (Exactly the same process as any kind of socially-driven standardization in engineering, language, and such). GPS, as a numeric cataloging of discrete points on a (socially) abstracted mathematical surface is a specific form of representation. Whydo we struggle to associate events with those places? Are we continuing the inexorable alienation process that separates our social self from non-standardize be-ing? Is there a praxis that can bring these two systems together without the seeming inevitable separation promulgated by a forced deference to standardization?
When I lived in Iceland, I quickly grew frustrated with the local cultural 
system for locating ones-self in the landscape. Coming from a long experience of 
DMA (Defense Mapping Agency)-based mapping and location activities —  USGS topo 
orienteering, geological and geophysical mapping, remote sensing (low-altitude 
to satellite-based) — the process of reading, comprehending, and makingthe leap 
from the ‘coordinated’ map to the territory was a learned but very comfortable 
intuitive process. Approximating distance, direction, and azimuth vectorsfrom 
paper to topography was practiced. Watching the stars and sun and making 
accurate estimations of location and time based on those observations wasalso 
standard. Iceland presented a radically different paradigm of location.
When I would come back to town after a weekend hiking trip, the occasion might 
arise that I would need to describe where I had been. A typical description 
would be:
"You know the Hellisheidi road?"

"Já"

"Well about four kilometers past the turnoff to Thorlákshöfn we turned due north and went along a valley on the west flank of a low ridge (the western flank of the mid-Atlantic Ridge!) for 6 kilometers and then crossed a small river and followed it west about a kilometer to the top of a valley leading southeast towards Hvergerdi."
This kind description, one which would have been enough to locate one quite 
accurately in the (contemporary socio-cultural) landscape/orienteering schema of 
the Sonoran Desert, never elicited much of a response. It was not until after 
some years of traveling in the remote landscapes of Iceland with native friends 
that I realized I could simply say that I had gone to Grensdalur. That localized 
name precisely located a particular place in what is often a disorienting 
fractal landscape. And indeed, the more I traveled in the country, the more I 
came to understand that virtually every location — creek, molehill, ridge, wash, 
cinder cone, hot spring, forested area, and (ancient or present) farm hada 
specific name. The more local the people one traveled with, the more precise the 
located naming (where each name itself represented a more-or-less comprehensive 
story that ‘mapped’ the human occupation of and interaction with thatlocation). 
The names came out of embedded human understanding of that exact place atthat 
exact time (or over a period of time).
One key to this anecdote is that this system cannot be simulated except at a 
loss. The loss comes from the separation by greater degrees of mediation between 
the embodied experience of the place and the means of social transferenceof the 
experience that ‘names’ it. It would seem that the embodied, lived experience is 
the primary source of placement, but equally important is the propagationmethod 
that locks a nam(e)ing / story to the place in the collective memory.
Using a newer system will not allow a utopian ‘return’ to another, older, 
system. They exist in parallel to some degree, and they are different paradigms 
and ultimately different living socio-cultural practices.
As to GPS:

"The global positioning system is all about self-reliance and helping people find their own way." -- from a NYT article shilling GPS units for Christmas in 2007
Wow, where to start with that small bit of promotional techno-utopianism.I mean, 
c’mon, self-reliance? When one is in fact relying exclusively on a huge military 
technology system. I equate the words autonomy and self-reliance. Though these 
are not strictly, from an etymological point-of-view, the same, they infer the 
same independence from outside influence or outside allocation of resources, for 
example. How can a battery-driven device, manufactured through an intricate 
global web of resource-consumption that reads data from military satellites, 
increase self-reliance? The web of dependencies is both wide and deep. Can the 
consumer repair one of these devices if they malfunction? Can the consumer 
easily determine if there is some systemic failure in accuracy (or in 
ground-truth for that matter)? Or modify it productively to fulfill 
idiosyncratic individual needs? Garmin can’t answer these questions because, as 
a company, they are already so deep in the web that the edges of and more 
importantly, the creator of the web, the MIC, remains all but invisible. There 
is hardly a base-line measure of human autonomy visible on the horizon. That 
baseline has long since sunk beyond the limits of the knowable world, beyond the 
purview of the entire spectrum of techno-fetish seekers and Luddites all 
together. Even from the intoxicating heights that the early adopters seekto 
attain, nothing is to be seen except the endless techno-social plains littered 
with the detritus of war, consumption, and excess.
The dependencies are also about substituting direct individual sensory input 
from the natural environment (i.e., terrain, atmospheric, infrastructural 
evidences) for inputs from this (GPS-based) selective (exclusive, limited, 
biased) infrastructure/system. A dominant system says that its information is 
superior to any other. It systemically devalues other observational information 
and its sources.
How can one be autonomous when the dependencies are so deep? It is a relative 
issue. Clearly anyone existing in a social system becomes more-or-less subject 
to the protocols of that system. It is a sliding scale, however, and individuals 
can choose to which degrees that they participate in the system and to what 
extent they reject involvement. Social pressures to adapt the idiosyncratic self 
to the (monolithic) system exist in a tremendous range of forms. From covert to 
overt, from soft to hard, from suggestive to compelling, from punishment to 
reward. It is a sliding scale, though, so that there is a responsive range of 
choices that one might make which places the self in relation to the system.
Iceland pops into mind again, when I was implementing a 'new media' and photo 
program at the National Art Academy in R'vík in the early-mid-90s, where, with a 
user-base of under 30K people, Iceland demanded a translated OS from Apple *and* 
Microsoft. Terms were collectively translated or 'determined' by public 
discussion -- I had instances like that happen in my classes, where, teaching in 
English, and mentioning a technical photographic term, the class would erupt in 
an animated conversation in Icelandic as to the correct translation of the term. 
Their cultural autonomy lay (lies) in a collective collaborative resistance to 
the imposition of 'out-land-ish' protocols.
In the case of GPS, yes, it is true that a paper map is simply another form of 
social construct (likely) created by a subset of the military-industrial 
complex. But trace back, for a moment, to the originary situation. This is where 
the self engages the other face-to-face, listening to a verbal report of 'what’s 
out there'. Trust is a determining factor in this relation, knowledge of the 
Other is critical in setting a metric of reliability and range of interpretation 
of their observations of the world. Sliding back up the technological scale 
gradually removes the immediacy of this relation and the pathway that trust must 
follow to be realized. What is it to trust ones life with the output of a 
thousand anonymous others. What does autonomy mean when any minute mistake by 
one of those thousands may create a glitch which kills?
Every time I board a plane, do I think of this? Nah, the baseline is gone. I 
place my faith and trust in Boeing/Airbus. Besides, I don’t know where I’m going 
anyway.
---

Do you use GPS on your phone? You are using a protocol established and defined by the US DOD to monitor the global movement of people and things (weapons, goods, consumables, ...). Use Windows, Apple? You are using a system of technologies of which a large percentage are originally sourced in the protocols and standards of the Cold War and propagated by imperial capitalism.
Maps? I’ve got maps. Yeah, those paper things -- maps at a variety of scales and 
vintages and of a variety of places: reductive subsets of the world. No GPS: I’m 
not interested in Department of Defense satellite connections. Yes, I know there 
will be places I may end up that I don’t have a map of. Traveling beyond the 
edge of a map is a good way of encountering the unknown. There is signage, and 
signs that can help mitigate the risk, but otherwise, first verging on and then 
leaping out over the edge of the map is a transcendent experience.
"A map is not the territory," this should be the mantra repeated constantly by 
every voice navigation system, that and "Embrace the new!"
And, in closing, I'm quite sure that the (amused) Icelandic response to the 
ignorant Amurikan tourist's 'mistake' lies with their incredulity that the 
tourist couldn't read the difference in spelling. One letter off in Icelandic 
and you change the meaning of the world! No culture that I know of treats 
language with an equivalent 'seriousness' -- even in humor.
Cheers,
John

Pertinent links:

Landmaelingar Îslands:
http://www.lmi.is/english/map-services/
http://tinyurl.com/hwmbn93
http://tinyurl.com/h5kes5s

etc

--
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Dr. John Hopkins, BSc, MFA, PhD
grounded on a granite batholith
twitter: @neoscenes
http://tech-no-mad.net/blog/
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

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