The Anthropology of Mobile Phones

cellphone-book

Having learnt all about zombies awhile back, I’m now reading another anthropology book, this time it’s on the way that mobile phones are used in Jamaica, particularly by those in low income groups. Up till now I’ve known very little about Jamaican society so ‘’ The Cell Phone" by Heather Horst and Danny Miller has been an unusual introduction to the culture there as well as an intriguing look as how people interact with technology.

Among the low-income groups in Jamaica, having an extensive network of contacts can mean the difference between dire straits and getting by all right. For example, having someone help watch the kids or help with an errand means that a single mum can get a job and still manage to maintain a plot for home grown food. Or, men can get oddjobs or do little deals through people they know. For people in such circumstances, it is also critical for survival to have people to turn to for money or other kind of help in time of need. Where the landline infrastructure is patchy, especially in rural areas, the cellphone is a lifeline in sustaining there crucial networks.

Many calls tend to be short and about nothing much - the sort of chit chat you might have if you passed a neighbor in the street. The point is to touch base (link- up) as a way of keeping the connection with that person ongoing rather than there necessarily being any particular reason or objective for the call. Texting is also used a lot although the group of people in the study were not strong in literacy - the simplified and truncated nature of text messaging removes the stigma of bad spelling. The phone is also the primary channel for accessing the internet as many in this group would not be able to afford a computer.

For those without a cell phone or landline, making simple arrangements would involve a long trek to halt face to face with someone or queuing to use the phone at the local shop. Keeping in touch with family members who have gone abroad to find work is of course also much more difficult.

There are many causes of poverty but what this book highlights is how relationships and networks help individuals survive the worst of its effects and how technology like cell phones can play an important role in sustaining those connections. In my mind, for those of us who are fortunate enough to have more resources than the group in the book, also rely on communication technology to increase our chances of success. Websites, email, blogs, Facebook and of course cellphones keep us connected with friends, family, works, customers, clients and help create business opportunities - and to some extent, in today’s world, if you are offline you are less likely to have access to as many opportunities as those who engage regularly online.

I’m also struck by how the cellphone is becoming more and more a communications hub for many people, whether low-income Jamaicans or high-flying Silicon Valley types. It’s a phone, an address book, a diary and you can do pretty much everything you can do on a computer as well as text and take photos and video. And you can have it with you at all times. In fact, I’m writing this blog post on my phone now.

How do you use technology to maintain your personal and business networks? How important is your cellphone as a communications hub? I hope you’ll add a comment and share your experience.

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Posted by Yang-May Ooi on Wednesday, August 20th, 2008 at 6:51pm

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One Minute Olympics

You can’t go anywhere on the web these days without seeing something about the Olympics but I’ve managed to miss most of it for some reason. But, to my delight, I’ve found one minute summary of the opening ceremony which filled me in on the greatest show on earth that I somehow missed the other day…


236.com: The Olympic Opening Ceremony in a Minute @ Yahoo! Video

I rather like that few seconds of Bush looking bored…

Posted by Yang-May Ooi on Monday, August 18th, 2008 at 1:00am

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Digital Olympics

You don’t have to be glued to the telly this summer to follow the Olympics. You can watch it online from your desk at work or on your mobile phone anywhere you can access the mobile internet. According to Fierce Mobile Content, an up to the minute study by NBC Universal reports that, “74.6 million viewers tuned in for Friday’s Opening Ceremonies–while television accounted for 94 percent of the audience, online viewing represented 5.7 percent, mobile TV accounted for 0.03 percent and only about 36,000 viewers (0 percent) watched via video-on-demand.”

This is likely to be the first time that many people are using their mobiles to watch TV, according to the report, and no doubt a lot more people are watching online who cannot get to a TV. So the increased viewer numbers overall is good news for the US TV channel NBC as they are one of the key US broadcasters offering live coverage of the Olympics online and via mobile - once people get the hang of using new technology and get used to having that universal access, they are likely to want more. Increased access to content via a variety of media means, of course, increased viewer numbers overall and that’s good for advertising revenue - and may even translate into people willing to pay in the future for the convenience of, say, mobile content delivery.

The NBC online site offers viewers the option to be alerted when an event starts as well as “video to go” if you missed it. There are also downloads of highlights, results and medals listings, information about competing countries and online games to play. And, evidence of the growing Hispanic demographic in the US, a Spanish version of the site.

In the UK, the BBC also offers live video coverage of the Olympics online with a live text commentary. You can receive video masterclasses on your mobile phone - eg explaining the art of tae kwan do - and also take part in a live streaming discussion via text (Text 81111 with “OLYMPICS” as first word - UK users only). You can also receive text alerts for the events you want to watch live. For the mobile site, type http://news.bbc.co.uk/mobile/ into your phone’s browser. Like the NBC site, there are medal and results listings. There is also a section featuring BBC Sport’s Olympics Monkey - a cartoon mascot of sorts derived from the Chinese mythic hero Monkey - with games and quizes.

In fact, checking out the BBC mobile page opened up to me a whole world of mobile BBC content beyond the Olympics - including previews of the thriller series Spooks, text recipes from a cookery programme and the chance to share your snapshot of a newsworthy event direct from your mobile phone.

In China, too, mobile coverage of the Olympics is ubiquitous, according to Reuters. The report quotes Yun Weijie, president and chief executive of Telegent Systems, a Silicon Valley semiconductor maker: “TV will become a standard feature for cellphones in China by the end of this year, just like cameras.”

Posted by Yang-May Ooi on Thursday, August 14th, 2008 at 10:15pm

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The secret of making zombies

wade-davis I’ve been reading a fascinating real life account of a journey to discover the scientific and cultural roots of zombies and voodoo and I now know what it takes to make a zombie. Wade Davis’s account of his visits to Haiti in the 1980s, meeting with witch doctors, secret societies and zombies, combines scientific biological analysis of poisons, ethnography, history and personal narrative into a great read in “The Serpent and the Rainbow”.

Davis writes beautifully and the book reads like a novel, with lyrical passages describing the natural wonder of Haiti and mystery built into enigmatic encounters with various strangers. The book opens “noir” style with Davis being summoned to the apartment of a rich scientific investor for drinks, complete with the investor’s beautiful daughter. Thus, he is given the quest to find the elements that go into making zombies - a quest that leads him to participate in shamanic rituals, bargain with shady characters for poisonous powders, win a horse race through the streets of a Haitian town and penetrate voodoo secret societies. But this isn’t a novel - it’s fact, which is what makes the whole read even more engaging.

There has been some scepticism about the veracity of the tale because it all seems so fantastical - see Bob Corbett’s critique of the book. Corbett seems to be an Emeritus professor at Webster University so it’s a criticism to be taken seriously. However, on the page I’ve referenced, Corbett does give Davis the opportunity to respond and also acknowledges that “without sufficient evidence. I don’t claim to have any further evidence than I cited above”.

At any rate, it’s a cracking good read and I’m raring to put on my fedora and leather jacket, grab my whip and artefact-gathering sling bag and head off into the wilds…

Posted by Yang-May Ooi on Wednesday, August 13th, 2008 at 12:12pm

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Small Busy Island

This is a trailer for a BBC programme that uses satellite technology to visualise human communications activities in the UK from shipping traffic in the Channel, taxi movements in London, telephone activity around the country and more. It’s fascinating and hypnotic - and makes me think that the UK is such a small island and yet so crowded and frenetic!

Click on the image below to be taken to the BBC website dedicated to “Britain from Above”

bbc-skies.PNG

Posted by Yang-May Ooi on Monday, August 11th, 2008 at 12:13pm

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Too darn hot

sun

After more than half my life in the UK, I can’t take the heat anymore. This summer whenever the temperature goes over 22 degrees, I feel as if I’m about to expire from heat exhaustion. And to think how I used to miss the 30+ degree tropical sauna of Malaysia!

Part of the problem is that it never is very warm for very long in England so we rarely get the chance to acclimatize to higher temperatures before our bodies have to curl up again against the cold. I think it’s not so much the actual heat but the relative temperatures that’s the cause of the discomfort. If I feel comfortable at 12 degrees then a 1.5 times rise in temperature is going to feel like a furnace. I’m beginning to see now how those Scandinavians and Eskimos and others who live at 40 below for much of the year can experience Zero degrees as a heatwave while the rest of us may yet be shivering in our Shoes.

Another problem is that the UK is just not built for warm weather. The building and internal furnishings are all engineered to keep heat in for most of the year. The towns and cities are closely packed and crowded with people and traffic - especially London. Here in the Capital, buses still spew out hot air through their heating vents throughout the summer! And the tube is of course a journey into the inferno.

In contrast, during my last visit to Malaysia I was often too cold and had to wear a jacket over my shirts most of the time while the daily temperature was 30 degrees or more. Why? Air conditioning. From the house to the car to restaurants and shops and offices - I was insulated from the muggy, tropical heat by air conditioning. Air Con is a life saver on the equator but I suspect also contributes to global warming in a bad way since it produces a lot of hot air in direct proportion to the cool air created.

To be fair, the UK has also been going down the air con route with many major shops and offices - and even commuter trains - increasingly offering a cool sanctuary from the sweltering summer. That’s a thumbs up for many of us Londoners but a thumbs down, sadly, for the environment.

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Photo: thanks to steve phillips from flickr.com (CCL)

Posted by Yang-May Ooi on Wednesday, August 6th, 2008 at 10:39pm

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Bargaining - Chinese style

This is a great clip of comedian Russell Peters, who is Indian/ Asian-American, doing a stand up sketch about trying to bargain with a Chinese shop-keeper - his Chinese accent is superb!

Thanks to Silvia Cambie who first showed this video on her blog.

Posted by Yang-May Ooi on Monday, August 4th, 2008 at 10:37pm

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Book Publication Date

We have a publication date for the book!

I met with my co-author Silvia Cambie and our editor, Annie Knight, from Kogan Page earlier this week to discuss the next phase for the book now that we were nearing the end of the writing process. I’ve got one more substantive chapter and then I need to go through my manuscript and prepare a smooth second draft. Silvia has a couple more case studies and a chunk of final writing to do and we then both need to get together to write a concluding final chapter. We are due to submit the finished manuscript at the end of November. Based on that timescale, the publication date for the book is set for 3rd July 2009.

It was exciting to sit down together for the first time in several months with Annie and Silvia and really talk through the detail of the book. The last time we did so was back in the autumn of last year when the project first came together and our book proposal was accepted. At that stage, we had an outline of our ideas and argument for the book. Now, 9 months later, we’ve done a lot of research and interviewed many business people and communicators internationally as well as putting it all together into a coherent narrative and I think we have something that’s going to be really fresh and thought-provoking.

So what’s the book about? Well, the working title has so far been New Trends in International Public Relations. Silvia puts the case for the rise of the till now non-dominant cultures in global business and the need for cross-cultural engagement to be at the forefront of any enterprise that wants to make waves internationally. Her experience as a business communicator means that she has drawn together a range of case studies on leadership communication, corporate social responsibility and cross-cultural communications from all over the world. My sections on the rise of social media as a recognised communications tool complement her part of the book, taking the reader on an in-depth guided tour of the virtual cultural landscape of the interactive web. The web is another country - to misquote H. E. Bates - with a culture and etiquette of its own and to engage succesfully in that landscape, communicators need to do so understanding those “rules” of engagement.

We may be tweaking the title of the book to New Trends in International Communications, which reflects more accurately the breadth of the content. If we do, it’ll play havoc with all my links and the URL for my research wiki - rats! But it’s important to get the title right so it’s a small price to pay to have to go back and reset my links etc… Stay tuned and I’ll let you know.

In the couple of months leading up to publication, we’ll be getting review and advance copies to send out to reviewers and also to take with us on speaking engagements at conferences etc. We’ll also be talking to the Marketing Executive in more detail about opportunities for promoting the book in the traditional real world way. We also hope to be able to offer additional online resources to our readers, perhaps via this blog and/ or the Kogan Page website eg links to the source material for my social media chapters, verbatim text from interviews, background research materials etc.

So, starting next week, my “honeymoon” is over and it’s back to hard work on the book to write the last chapter….

Do you have any ideas or suggestions for us about promoting the book? If you’re a writer or publisher, has there been a particular strategy that has worked well - or not so well? If you’re a reader, what kinds of activities would invite you take notice of our book - and even buy a copy…

Posted by Yang-May Ooi on Wednesday, July 30th, 2008 at 5:44pm

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Mobile Multimedia Blogging

If you don’t want to be chained to your computer while keeping up your blog(s), Utterz.com is a great platform that integrates with your mobile phone so you can blog using text, photos, video and audio. Checkout my video blog post uploaded via Utterz from Nimes where I’m on holiday ….

Mobile post sent by yangmayooi using Utterzreply-count Replies.

Posted by Yang-May Ooi on Saturday, July 26th, 2008 at 8:10pm

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Wireless Postcards

utterz-image
The reason that my blogs are a little depopulated this week is that I’m on holiday in Nimes in the South of France. We’re staying in the tiny pedestrianised old city centre that dates back to Roman times. The marble like flagstones of the little narrow medieval streets are shiny clean and the pale stone of the buildings glare white against a blue cloudless sky. Used to weak English light, my eyes are tired from the brightness and my skin is tingling from the blaze of the sun.

I love the contrast of the ancient medieval streets and the trendy boutiques along them, sparking with the latest lifestyle "objets" for the 21st century shopper - including a PC shop and a Mac shop. I also love the grandiose Roman buildings that that ancient imperial power left behind here, as they did throughout much of Europe. The arena that used to host gladiatorial combats and Christians being fed to the lions is one of the best preserved in the world - and now hosts concerts (we just missed French pop singer Vanessa Paradis) and bull fights. The remaining central section of a Roman temple built around 2000 years ago is now an air-conditioned cinema. I can never get my head round how old some of these still-functional Roman edifices are, with their intricate hand carved decorative motifs that are so alive and fresh.

A few years ago I would be browsing through postcards and sitting down at cafes to write notes about all these sights to post to friends back home. But technology has changed all that. I’m texting my family little snippets every day: what we refer to as "blow by blow" accounts. I’m snapping photos on my phone to email to a few friends and to my Flickr account. And I’m writing this blog post on my phone, too - as an email to my Utterz account which should automatically upload to my two blogs.

Now all I need to do is find a free wireless hotspot so I can despatch these "wireless postcards" - which shouldn’t be too difficult as the whole city seems to be flooded with wireless networks, according to my phone.

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Posted by Yang-May Ooi on Thursday, July 24th, 2008 at 10:30am

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Portrait of Yang-May Ooi

Fusion View offers a cross-cultural view on people, society and technology by writer and cultural commentator, Yang-May Ooi. Yang-May is the founding partner of social media consultancy, ZenGuide.co.uk, which specialises in web-content creation and blog management.

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