Taste is a Quiet Luxury
Musings captured, sorted, in collaboration with AI. One of my favorite blogs is that of Matt Webb, the great mind behind Poem/1, the watch that tells time through poems. This isn't about the poem but about one of his latest pieces. He wrote a piece on how we've seemingly moved from designing the cool stuff we saw in Star Trek to the absurd things in Douglas Adams' "Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy." Part of me welcomes this, as it might mean we also venture a bit away from...
Agents are NPCs with Main Character Energy.
This is a collection of some loosely connected thoughts sorted, altered, transcribed with AI Only a few of us "old ones" may remember Anna from IKEA, or Clippy from the Windows 98 era—those early days of chatbots. But lately, my thoughts have been occupied by chatbots again, partly because of my fascination with Intents (the Web3 ones) and partly with generative AI. I vividly recall around 2016, when I was deeply fascinated by those bots or conversational UIs and considered them the future. I...

Hit like and subscribe. We have some clicks to solve.
Ah, the Internet – a realm where the mighty click reigns supreme. This sprawling network of information, applications, and users all boils down to a simple, yet profound truth: in the digital world, less is indeed more, especially when it's about clicks. Lets take a detour about the history of clicks to understand how we should think about clicks in web3 for unleashing user adoption. Take AOL, for instance. They sensed our insatiable appetite for content and generously peppered their hom...
Notes and musings co-written with various intelligent tools in an attempt to externalize my thoughts and create feedback loops.
Taste is a Quiet Luxury
Musings captured, sorted, in collaboration with AI. One of my favorite blogs is that of Matt Webb, the great mind behind Poem/1, the watch that tells time through poems. This isn't about the poem but about one of his latest pieces. He wrote a piece on how we've seemingly moved from designing the cool stuff we saw in Star Trek to the absurd things in Douglas Adams' "Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy." Part of me welcomes this, as it might mean we also venture a bit away from...
Agents are NPCs with Main Character Energy.
This is a collection of some loosely connected thoughts sorted, altered, transcribed with AI Only a few of us "old ones" may remember Anna from IKEA, or Clippy from the Windows 98 era—those early days of chatbots. But lately, my thoughts have been occupied by chatbots again, partly because of my fascination with Intents (the Web3 ones) and partly with generative AI. I vividly recall around 2016, when I was deeply fascinated by those bots or conversational UIs and considered them the future. I...

Hit like and subscribe. We have some clicks to solve.
Ah, the Internet – a realm where the mighty click reigns supreme. This sprawling network of information, applications, and users all boils down to a simple, yet profound truth: in the digital world, less is indeed more, especially when it's about clicks. Lets take a detour about the history of clicks to understand how we should think about clicks in web3 for unleashing user adoption. Take AOL, for instance. They sensed our insatiable appetite for content and generously peppered their hom...
Notes and musings co-written with various intelligent tools in an attempt to externalize my thoughts and create feedback loops.

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Our digital journey has evolved from reading on the internet to posting and now to chatting. This evolution signifies a shift from content consumption to a craving for presence.
The pandemic prompted a reevaluation of our digital spaces. Livestreams became our new collective hangouts, where emojis in chat rooms symbolized our presence and unity. This transformation wasn't solely due to COVID-19. Our interaction with tools shapes and is shaped by us. "Chat" and "presence" have subtly permeated our digital worlds, with chat representing a communal mindset, particularly in live streaming and interactive media.
Consider the integration of tools like Google Slides and Figma, where live comments and active cursors created a sense of presence akin to a Twitch chat room.
I often think about the following conceptual diagram with axes ranging from 'alone' to 'together,' and 'observer' to 'active participant.' It led me to differentiate 'alone spaces' and 'together spaces' on the internet. The traditional internet was solitary, but now, we often find ourselves together in what are essentially 'alone spaces.'
https://opensea.io/assets/0xcF84e40643374B784F34B4dAE5B10E1B2Bab4041/5
Presence is versatile: one can be passive in solitude or actively engaged in a communal space, each with its own dynamic.
The gaming world, especially multiplayer environments like Fortnite, illustrates that presence is key, transcending the game's primary purpose. This underscores the joy of being alone yet accompanied by others, challenging the 'dark forest' narrative in favor of visible presence.
In digital interactions, identity becomes fluid. The essence is not in the avatar but in the signs of presence. Content is abundant, but presence is scarce. While content farms attention, presence cultivates intention.
In the web3 space, beyond ownership and transactions, lies the power of remixing and reimagining, akin to the dynamics of a chat. Web3 emphasizes intention over attention, offering users control over their digital experiences. Being 'on-chain' in web3 means having a digital identity. Each address in this space represents an untapped social graph potential. Web3's essence is in broadcasting transactions, yet it often feels lonely. This highlights the need to reintegrate presence into our digital experiences.
Content is plentiful, but what we crave is presence. This calls for a reimagining of application spaces, moving beyond cursors to designing more connected, less lonely spaces. Web3, as a real-time multiplayer environment, offers novel coordination opportunities. Stepping out of the 'dark forests' into clearer spaces can revolutionize our digital interactions.
We're leaving the broadcast-centric internet, driven by addiction or overload. This shift calls for a rethinking of digital spaces with a focus on presence. What are the new interaction patterns, haptics, and ergonomics that can enhance presence, while balancing anonymity and authenticity?
Considering presence, AI, bots, or digital twins might reshape our interaction in Web3, encouraging more than mere transactional exchanges. If we pivot to presence, it could transform our engagement models, moving beyond broadcasting to nurturing a more interactive human swarm.
So may I have your presence, please?
thx for Shuya and Rafa for sparking some of those thoughts.
Links:
Our digital journey has evolved from reading on the internet to posting and now to chatting. This evolution signifies a shift from content consumption to a craving for presence.
The pandemic prompted a reevaluation of our digital spaces. Livestreams became our new collective hangouts, where emojis in chat rooms symbolized our presence and unity. This transformation wasn't solely due to COVID-19. Our interaction with tools shapes and is shaped by us. "Chat" and "presence" have subtly permeated our digital worlds, with chat representing a communal mindset, particularly in live streaming and interactive media.
Consider the integration of tools like Google Slides and Figma, where live comments and active cursors created a sense of presence akin to a Twitch chat room.
I often think about the following conceptual diagram with axes ranging from 'alone' to 'together,' and 'observer' to 'active participant.' It led me to differentiate 'alone spaces' and 'together spaces' on the internet. The traditional internet was solitary, but now, we often find ourselves together in what are essentially 'alone spaces.'
https://opensea.io/assets/0xcF84e40643374B784F34B4dAE5B10E1B2Bab4041/5
Presence is versatile: one can be passive in solitude or actively engaged in a communal space, each with its own dynamic.
The gaming world, especially multiplayer environments like Fortnite, illustrates that presence is key, transcending the game's primary purpose. This underscores the joy of being alone yet accompanied by others, challenging the 'dark forest' narrative in favor of visible presence.
In digital interactions, identity becomes fluid. The essence is not in the avatar but in the signs of presence. Content is abundant, but presence is scarce. While content farms attention, presence cultivates intention.
In the web3 space, beyond ownership and transactions, lies the power of remixing and reimagining, akin to the dynamics of a chat. Web3 emphasizes intention over attention, offering users control over their digital experiences. Being 'on-chain' in web3 means having a digital identity. Each address in this space represents an untapped social graph potential. Web3's essence is in broadcasting transactions, yet it often feels lonely. This highlights the need to reintegrate presence into our digital experiences.
Content is plentiful, but what we crave is presence. This calls for a reimagining of application spaces, moving beyond cursors to designing more connected, less lonely spaces. Web3, as a real-time multiplayer environment, offers novel coordination opportunities. Stepping out of the 'dark forests' into clearer spaces can revolutionize our digital interactions.
We're leaving the broadcast-centric internet, driven by addiction or overload. This shift calls for a rethinking of digital spaces with a focus on presence. What are the new interaction patterns, haptics, and ergonomics that can enhance presence, while balancing anonymity and authenticity?
Considering presence, AI, bots, or digital twins might reshape our interaction in Web3, encouraging more than mere transactional exchanges. If we pivot to presence, it could transform our engagement models, moving beyond broadcasting to nurturing a more interactive human swarm.
So may I have your presence, please?
thx for Shuya and Rafa for sparking some of those thoughts.
Links:
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