[OSList] What is the sweet spot for Online OS using video chat?
Lucas Cioffi via OSList
oslist at lists.openspacetech.org
Sun Aug 28 19:08:01 PDT 2016
Hi All, thanks for the comments. Here are some replies for Harrison and
Birgitt:
Hello, Harrison, you asked what unique capabilities online tools have.
Here are some ideas about what current technology can do to help OS...
- It's possible for an online OS participant to see all participants in
each breakout space (and the notes being taken in each space) so that they
can make a more informed decision about whether to exercise the Law of Two
Feet (a.k.a. Law of One Click).
- It's possible for someone to bring in additional resources, facts, etc
into a session while it is happening (the downside is that they are also
more distracted than they would be in-person).
- Connecting by video chat has some advantages (cost, environmental
impact, accessibility, etc). There are also disadvantages like
distraction–wait a minute I need to send out a tweet on Twitter; ok I'm
back–and the possibility of less personal connection to other participants.
Here are some ideas about what future technology can do to help OS...
- Multilingual conversations will become possible. For example, one
participant is speaking in Chinese and it's instantly translated so that
other participants can listen in their native language.
- You'll be able to hold an online OS with "robots". I know this sounds
crazy, but it's coming. For example, in addition to creating an
invitation, you can also "create" one or more virtual participants,
selecting their personality type, expertise, etc. They'd be listening and
processing all that is said and they would "speak" when it's their turn as
if you had a person with that personality and expertise level. Think of a
robot playing the Devil's Advocate for a corporation; it could very well
save the organization in some circumstances. As long as all human
participants know that there's a robot participating, I see no harm in
this. It's like having a pet that speaks, and that has it's pros and cons
:) Then again, some day, we might be the robots' pets!
- Virtual reality will enable us to participate in a much more liberated
way. "Virtual reality" can already create an immersive experience; you can
strap on a pair of goggles and it looks like you're in a room with someone
else or a group of people or riding a roller coaster (or a wave!). When
you turn your head to the left, the video feed on your screen adjusts so
that you get the sensation that you are actually looking to the left. The
scenery is interactive in 360 degrees. How is this useful? Well, there's
a discussion on OSList right now about people who lack the ability to pick
up the pens and paper in the center of the circle. When people can assume
a new virtual "body" there will be no limit to what they can do in the
space. Someone who has one skin color can wear a different skin color if
they like. Someone can speak as an endangered species. Sounds crazy, I
know! There are many possibilities, and many potential problems as you can
imagine.
- I'm sure others can add to this list...
Hello, Birgitt, you asked what I'd like to create. I'd like to create
something that people will find useful. I searched the OSList archives and
found a fascinating thread from 2012 started by Suzanne Daigle. To get
there, visit the August 2012 Archive
<http://lists.openspacetech.org/pipermail/oslist-openspacetech.org/2012-August/thread.html>
and
scroll down to "Conversation today with Brian Burt of MaestroConference".
There are so many great ideas from so many talented facilitators on that
thread. I found one of Lisa Heft's responses
<http://lists.openspacetech.org/pipermail/oslist-openspacetech.org/2012-August/527642.html>
and one of Michael Herman's responses
<http://lists.openspacetech.org/pipermail/oslist-openspacetech.org/2012-August/527641.html>
to
be especially helpful.
That conversation lists all the elements that are necessary to be present
to classify an online event as OS. The part that's missing from that
conversation is what the user experience would feel like. Four years have
passed since that 2012 thread and many on this list have had plenty of
experiences with online tools that lend themselves to being used for Online
OS (Tuesday OS hotline, Open Space Online, Zoom, Sococo, MaestroConference,
QiqoChat, etc). Each of these tools has strengths and weaknesses.
*Rather than taking a tool-centered approach (how close could we get to OS
using what's already available), I'd like to take a moment to invite anyone
to share what a great user experience would feel like, gather these ideas
on OSList, and then any of these tool makers could build that into their
platforms.*
Knowing what we now know of online user attention spans, it's got to be
simple.
Example:
1. Participant arrives on a page and sees _____________.
2. Next the participant _______________.
Lucas Cioffi
Founder, QiqoChat.com
Charlottesville, VA
Mobile: 917-528-1831
On Sun, Aug 28, 2016 at 11:57 AM, Harrison Owen via OSList <
oslist at lists.openspacetech.org> wrote:
> Lucas – your comments as always are provocative. But maybe a bit too
> literal?
>
>
>
> My thought is – replicating OS (as experienced by human beings in a
> physical room) is a worthwhile undertaking. The deeper task, I would think,
> is to open some new space that is available only online. Just as the
> “normal” (space/time) OST tends to blow people away – what is the
> cyber-equivalent?
>
>
>
> I don’t have a clue of an answer. But I do remember “way back when” –
> sitting at my kitchen table with a TI Silent 700 plugged into a phone
> through acoustical couplings. Suddenly “it” came alive and electronic
> beings from all over the planet for the most part (actually I am not really
> sure where they came from) populated my table, life, reality…. Space hadn’t
> opened. Space/time was transformed.
>
>
>
> What can you do for me baby? I guess that is the question.
>
>
>
> Harrison
>
>
>
> Winter Address
>
> 7808 River Falls Dr.
>
> Potomac, MD 20854
>
> 301-365-2093
>
>
>
> Summer Address
>
> 189 Beaucauire Ave
>
> Camden, ME 04843
>
> 207 763-3261
>
>
>
> Websites
>
> www.openspaceworld.com
>
> www.ho-image.com
>
>
>
> *From:* OSList [mailto:oslist-bounces at lists.openspacetech.org] *On Behalf
> Of *Lucas Cioffi via OSList
> *Sent:* Sunday, August 28, 2016 10:36 AM
> *To:* World wide Open Space Technology email list
> *Subject:* [OSList] What is the sweet spot for Online OS using video chat?
>
>
>
> Hi All,
>
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> I would be super-excited to hear how folks would design the simplest
> online Open Space experience using video chat.
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> I posted my thoughts below, but I put them further down so that you might
> have a moment to think about what online OS experience would work best for
> you, rather than letting my thoughts influence yours.
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> Here are my rough thoughts:
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> 1. When the event begins you open up a webpage. You can see the following:
>
> - where the opening circle is
> - how many virtual breakout spaces there are
> - who is in each virtual space right now
> - what is being discussed now and in the future (a bulletin board /
> marketplace / idea wall)
>
> 2. Next you choose to enter a space by turning on your video chat.
>
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> *Note: The following features seem helpful but not necessary:*
>
> 3. When you arrive in a space, you see a shared notes area available to
> all participants.
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> 4. There is a way to raise your hand to indicate that you'd like to speak.
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> 5. There is a way to share a quick message such as ("I have to step away
> for a moment").
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> *Thanks so much for any advice. I look forward to hearing what you have
> in mind!*
>
>
> Lucas Cioffi
>
> Founder, QiqoChat
>
> Charlottesville, VA
>
> Mobile: 917-528-1831
>
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