Friday, 24 February 2017

SB2 - Minimalism / Digital minimalism - Research

So from a podcast I listen to called optimal living daily, I found a blogger called cal Newport he's an associate professor in the department of computer science at Georgetown University so an Internet man with some interesting philosophies on the subject. One being digital minimalism.  while reading through cal Newport's blog. 

He is aware of our use of social media sayings '
I’m critical, for example, of our culture’s increasingly Orwellian allegiance to social media and am indifferent to my smartphone.'. 


'The modern minimalism movement is led by a loose collection of bloggers, podcasters, and writers who advocate a simpler life in which you focus on a small number of things that return the most meaning and value'. 

Here’s how my friends Joshua and Ryan (aka, The Minimalists) describe the movement:
Minimalism is a lifestyle that helps people question what things add value to their lives. By clearing the clutter from life’s path, we can all make room for the most important aspects of life: health, relationships, passion, growth, and contribution.
These ideals of a simpler life however are not new, what is new is how they are now being shared through blogs, videos etc. Using this theory which newport follows he has come up with digital minimalism. 


Digital minimalism is a philosophy that helps you question what digital communication tools (and behaviors surrounding these tools) add the most value to your life. It is motivated by the belief that intentionally and aggressively clearing away low-value digital noise, and optimizing your use of the tools that really matter, can significantly improve your life.


Core Principles 


  • Missing out is not negative. Many digital maximalists, who spend their days immersed in a dreary slog of apps and clicks, justify their behavior by listing all of the potential benefits they would miss if they began culling services from their life. I don’t buy this argument. There’s an infinite selection of activities in the world that might bring some value. If you insist on labeling every activity avoided as value lost, then no matter how frantically you fill your time, it’s unavoidable that the final tally of your daily experience will be infinitely negative. It’s more sensical to instead measure the value gained by the activities you do embrace and then attempt to maximize this positive value.
  • Less can be more. A natural consequence of the preceding principle is that you should avoid wasting your limited time and attention on low-value online activities, and instead focus on the much smaller number of activities that return the most value for your life. This is a basic 80/20 analysis: doing less, but focusing on higher quality, can generate more total value.
  • Start from first principles. Digital maximalists tend to accept any online activity that conceivably offers some value. As most such activities can offer you something (few people would write an app or launch a web site with no obvious purpose) this filter is essentially meaningless. A more productive approach is to start by identifying the principles that you as a human find most important — the foundation on which you hope to build a good life. Once identified, you can use these principles as a more effective filter by asking the following question of a given activity: will this add significant value to something I find to be significantly important to my life?
  • The best is different than the rest. Assume a given online activity generates a positive response to the question from the preceding principle. This is not enough. You should then follow up by asking: is this activity “the best” way to add value to this area of my life? For a given core principle, there may be many activities that can offer some relevant value, but you should focus on finding the small number of activities that offer the most such value. The difference between the “best” and “good enough” in this context can be significant. For example, someone recently told me that she uses Twitter because she values being exposed to diverse news sources (she cited, in particular, how major newspapers were ignoring aspects of the Dakota pipeline protests). I don’t doubt that Twitter can help support this important principle of being informed, but is a Twitter feed really the best use of all the Internet has to offer to achieve this goal?
  • Digital clutter is stressful. The traditional minimalists correctly noted that living among lots of physical clutter is stressful. The same is true of your online life. Incessant clicking and scrolling generates a background hum of anxiety. Drastically reducing the number of thing you do in your digital life can by itself have a significant calming impact. This value should not be underestimated.
  • Attention is scarce and fragile. You have a finite amount of attention to expend each day. If aimed carefully, your attention can bring you great meaning and satisfaction. At the same time, however, hundreds of billions of dollars have been invested into companies whose sole purpose is to hijack as much of your attention as possible and push it toward targets optimized to create value for a small number of people in Northern California. This is scary and demands diligence on your part. As I’ve written before, this is my main concern with large attention economy conglomerates like Twitter and Facebook: it’s not that they’re worthless, but instead it’s the fact that they’re engineered to be as addictive as possible.
  • Many of the best uses of the online world support better living offline. We’re not evolved for digital life, which is why binges of online activities often leave us in a confused state of strung out exhaustion. This explains why many of the highest return online activities are those that take advantage of the Internet to improve important aspects of your offline life. Digital networks, for example, can help you find or form a community that resonates with you, but the real value often comes when you put down your phone and go out and engage with this new community IRL.
  • Be wary of tools that solve a problem that didn’t exist before the tool. GPS helped solve a problem that existed for a long time before it came along (how do I get where I want to go?), so did Google (how do I find this piece of information I need?). Snapchat, by contrast, did not. Be wary of tools in this latter category as they tend to exist mainly to create addictive new behaviors that support ad sales.
  • Activity trumps passivity. Humans, deep down, are craftsmen. We find great satisfaction in creating something valuable that didn’t exist before. Some of the most fulfilling online activities, therefore, are those that involve you creating things, as oppose to simply consuming. I’m yet to meet someone who feels exhilarated after an evening of trawling clickbait, yet I know many who do feel that way after committing a key module to an open source repository.

"The bottom line of this general thinking is that a simple, carefully curated, minimalist digital life is not a rejection of technology or a reactionary act of skepticism; it is, by contrast, an embrace of the immense value these new tools can offer…if we’re willing to do the hard work of figuring out how to best leverage them on behalf of the things we truly care about."




http://calnewport.com/blog/2017/02/13/facebook-phreaks-and-the-fight-to-reclaim-time-and-attention/

SB2 - Ideas - Research - Notes

Social medias affect on mental health 

Ideas



  • Using Yagun as a principle for helping move away from our mobiles
  • Looking into digital minimalism and how this could help


Notes


http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/275361.php


  1. 'According to Dr. Shannon M. Rauch, of Benedictine University at Mesa, AZ, one of the main reasons we use social media is for self-distraction and boredom relief.' - Very important because there is defiantly an element of using our mobiles to simple distract ourself moving us away from what is happening around us. Sometimes to maybe help with aniexty?
  2. What is interesting is that the researchers found that people who are more anxious and socially insecure are more likely to use the social networking site.
  3.  many users who are addicted to Facebook use the site as a way of gaining attention and boosting their self-esteem. - Can this have reverse effects however? maybe when it does go how they wanted eg someone leaving a bad comment?
  4. The research team, led by Dar Meshi of the Freie Universität in Germany, found that individuals who gained positive feedback about themselves on Facebook showed stronger activity in the nucleus accumbens of the brain - a region associated with "reward" processing. This stronger activity correlated with greater Facebook use.
  5. Another concern regarding social media use is cyber bullying
  6. Social networking sites could be a useful tool in identifying individuals with mental health issues.
http://calnewport.com/blog/2016/12/18/on-digital-minimalism/

  1. I’m critical, for example, of our culture’s increasingly Orwellian allegiance to social media and am indifferent to my smartphone. - He notes there is an issue here.
  2. Minimalism is a lifestyle that helps people question what things add value to their lives. By clearing the clutter from life’s path, we can all make room for the most important aspects of life: health, relationships, passion, growth, and contribution.
  3. Digital minimalism is a philosophy that helps you question what digital communication tools (and behaviors surrounding these tools) add the most value to your life. It is motivated by the belief that intentionally and aggressively clearing away low-value digital noise, and optimizing your use of the tools that really matter, can significantly improve your life.
  4. Is it possible to set up news on social media eg facebook
  5. Digital clutter is stressful. The traditional minimalists correctly noted that living among lots of physical clutter is stressful. The same is true of your online life. Incessant clicking and scrolling generates a background hum of anxiety. Drastically reducing the number of thing you do in your digital life can by itself have a significant calming impact. This value should not be underestimated.
  6. , carefully curated, minimalist digital life is not a rejection of technology or a reactionary act of skepticism; it is, by contrast, an embrace of the immense value these new tools can offer…if we’re willing to do the hard work of figuring out how to best leverage them on behalf of the things we truly care about.




Quotes 



http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/275361.php



"On the surface, Facebook provides an invaluable resource for fulfilling the basic human need for social connection," says Kross. "But rather than enhance well-being, we found that Facebook use predicts the opposite result - it undermines it." Ethan Cross


"For those who post status updates, the reinforcements keep coming in the form of supportive comments and 'likes.' And of course we know that behaviors that are consistently reinforced will be repeated, so it becomes hard for a person who has developed this habit to simply stop."



"If an emotional change in one person spreads and causes a change in many, then we may be dramatically underestimating the effectiveness of efforts to improve mental and physical health."


http://calnewport.com/blog/2016/12/18/on-digital-minimalism/

Ditgital Minimalism 

  • Missing out is not negative. Many digital maximalists, who spend their days immersed in a dreary slog of apps and clicks, justify their behavior by listing all of the potential benefits they would miss if they began culling services from their life. I don’t buy this argument. There’s an infinite selection of activities in the world that might bring some value. If you insist on labeling every activity avoided as value lost, then no matter how frantically you fill your time, it’s unavoidable that the final tally of your daily experience will be infinitely negative. It’s more sensical to instead measure the value gained by the activities you do embrace and then attempt to maximize this positive value.
  • Less can be more. A natural consequence of the preceding principle is that you should avoid wasting your limited time and attention on low-value online activities, and instead focus on the much smaller number of activities that return the most value for your life. This is a basic 80/20 analysis: doing less, but focusing on higher quality, can generate more total value.
  • Start from first principles. Digital maximalists tend to accept any online activity that conceivably offers some value. As most such activities can offer you something (few people would write an app or launch a web site with no obvious purpose) this filter is essentially meaningless. A more productive approach is to start by identifying the principles that you as a human find most important — the foundation on which you hope to build a good life. Once identified, you can use these principles as a more effective filter by asking the following question of a given activity: will this add significant value to something I find to be significantly important to my life?
  • The best is different than the rest. Assume a given online activity generates a positive response to the question from the preceding principle. This is not enough. You should then follow up by asking: is this activity “the best” way to add value to this area of my life? For a given core principle, there may be many activities that can offer some relevant value, but you should focus on finding the small number of activities that offer the most such value. The difference between the “best” and “good enough” in this context can be significant. For example, someone recently told me that she uses Twitter because she values being exposed to diverse news sources (she cited, in particular, how major newspapers were ignoring aspects of the Dakota pipeline protests). I don’t doubt that Twitter can help support this important principle of being informed, but is a Twitter feed really the best use of all the Internet has to offer to achieve this goal?
  • Digital clutter is stressful. The traditional minimalists correctly noted that living among lots of physical clutter is stressful. The same is true of your online life. Incessant clicking and scrolling generates a background hum of anxiety. Drastically reducing the number of thing you do in your digital life can by itself have a significant calming impact. This value should not be underestimated.
  • Attention is scarce and fragile. You have a finite amount of attention to expend each day. If aimed carefully, your attention can bring you great meaning and satisfaction. At the same time, however, hundreds of billions of dollars have been invested into companies whose sole purpose is to hijack as much of your attention as possible and push it toward targets optimized to create value for a small number of people in Northern California. This is scary and demands diligence on your part. As I’ve written before, this is my main concern with large attention economy conglomerates like Twitter and Facebook: it’s not that they’re worthless, but instead it’s the fact that they’re engineered to be as addictive as possible.
  • Many of the best uses of the online world support better living offline. We’re not evolved for digital life, which is why binges of online activities often leave us in a confused state of strung out exhaustion. This explains why many of the highest return online activities are those that take advantage of the Internet to improve important aspects of your offline life. Digital networks, for example, can help you find or form a community that resonates with you, but the real value often comes when you put down your phone and go out and engage with this new community IRL.
  • Be wary of tools that solve a problem that didn’t exist before the tool. GPS helped solve a problem that existed for a long time before it came along (how do I get where I want to go?), so did Google (how do I find this piece of information I need?). Snapchat, by contrast, did not. Be wary of tools in this latter category as they tend to exist mainly to create addictive new behaviors that support ad sales.
  • Activity trumps passivity. Humans, deep down, are craftsmen. We find great satisfaction in creating something valuable that didn’t exist before. Some of the most fulfilling online activities, therefore, are those that involve you creating things, as oppose to simply consuming. I’m yet to meet someone who feels exhilarated after an evening of trawling clickbait, yet I know many who do feel that way after committing a key module to an open source repository.



Food waste and how to reduce it


Food Packaging 

Wednesday, 22 February 2017

SB1 - New wave Typeography - Wolfgang Weiner - Research

Inspiration
















SB1 - Trends - Research

As this is a project which will be going up in an exhibition and seen by many I do think it is nessary to do some research into current trends, However I also understand my work should not be driven by these trends they should just be nodded at.



SB1 - Bicyclism - Research

The celebration of bicycles and all who ride them! 'an angular gathering of culture, tradition, practicality and beauty, powered by nothing more than your legs. And isn’t that a thing to celebrate? ' Boff Whalley 


Yorkshire legends 

  • Beryl Burton
  • Pettewr Robinson
  • Brian Robinson
  • Brian Trippett
  •  Tom Simpson
http://www.livingnorth.com/yorkshire/people-places/yorkshire%E2%80%99s-golden-age-cycling


Ideas

  • rayograph of old bike parts and human parts
  • Collage of old images 
  • Otley cycling club posters 
  • Print onto news paper because they handed out new papers
  • Holme moss - yorkshire difficult ride
  • Look at some bike badger design
  • Take inspiration from clothing pics




Older Image Collage







Quotes 





  • I’ve got a bike
    You can ride it if you like
    It’s got a basket, a bell that rings
    And things to make it look good.
  • Leeds - Live it, Love it. / Leeds - Live it, Love it, Leave it. 
  • 'If you stop moving forward, you'll fall off' 
  • 'Im a cyclist but also a pedestrian, car owner, lover' 

Interview 

And with the Bicyclism exhibition at Leeds City Museum what appeals to you about being on two wheels in Leeds?
I’ve always loved bicycles. But the Bicyclism exhibition seemed like a great opportunity to really dig around in that love and work out what the politics of cycling really are. Reading and learning about the suffragettes’ championing of the bicycle, listening to Leeds old folk talking about their bikes, knowing that the bicycle can represent a return to a simple, uncluttered, cheap, green way of moving around… that all went into the Bicyclism project.


Community Cycling 
I could photograph people on bicycles myself. 




Tuesday, 21 February 2017

SB1 - Chosen topics for Posters

Bicyclism / Jenny Harris

2014’s Bicyclism exhibition and newspaper was part of the city’s Tour de France celebrations and explored the city’s wider cultural, historical and sporting links to cycling with collaborators Casey Orr, Boff Whalley and Jenny Harris. Leeds Inspired supported the project with a £14,000 grant.
Leeds has a long and fascinating history of cycling, which often springs from its access to the Yorkshire Dales. What better advertisement for a large city than to be able to escape its workday bustle, quickly and easily on two wheels? Bicyclism was a broad sweep across the area’s cycling culture and highlighted the connections between the city’s cyclists, who often ride for a thousand different reasons.
The photographic exhibition at Leeds City Museum and mass-produced one-off colour newspaper featured crowd-sourced images of 20th and 21st Century Leeds residents on their bikes alongside 40 new cycling portraits by photographer Casey Orr. 
Over 100 photos were submitted to the project by local people and previous Leeds residents from their home photo collections, some these came from photo drop-in days at Armley Mills and Abbey House Museums. The Bicyclism exhibition at Leeds City Museum ran for two weeks and attracted 10,823 visitors; five thousand newspapers were distributed at venues and cycle shops across the city and given to all attendees of the Bike Show.
Students from Leeds Beckett created an animated film that was played on a loop in the exhibition, together with a musical soundtrack composed by Chumbawamba founder Boff Whalley, using bicycles as instruments. The song was performed at a special opening event ‘Bicyclism Live!’ in the Museum on Thursday 26th June to a packed audience. Boff also researched and wrote an essay on the bicycle for the newspaper.
Bicyclism was featured in the Yorkshire Festival programme and was an essential part of the city’s contribution to the Tour de France 2014. 

Cyclism is a similar event. 
https://leedsgallery.com/whats-on/exhibitions/cyclism/
http://www.leedsinspired.co.uk/blog/bicyclism-rides-stage-tour
https://theculturevulture.co.uk/blog/reviews/bicyclism/
https://intotheorchard.com/tag/boff-whalley/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beryl_Burton orignaly ment to be about her


What is it celbrating - The cultural heritage of bicycles in everyday life. Looking at the link between humans and cycleing.

Why is this important - This is important because cycleing is a part of many peoples everyday life it is often quickly over looked by non cyclist as just another 'bloody' cyclist. 





Wednesday, 15 February 2017

SB1 - Photograms - rayographs - Research

So I found this really awesome technique for producing images with photographic paper without taking actual photos. I was thinking about using bicycle parts as the images focus to create simple forms which would represent the simplicity of riding. In addition to this It fits my chosen event very well because it was a photography exhibition. Next I will be getting in touch with vernon street to see if I could use the dark room, I have a friend in photography called Anisha who has already said she will help teach me this process. Once learnt I can experiment further with it.


Man Ray - rayographs - http://www.theartstory.org/artist-ray-man.htm



Cameraless photogrpahs - http://www.vam.ac.uk/content/articles/c/camera-less-photography-
techniques/


http://www.yorkshireeveningpost.co.uk/news/royal-nod-to-celebrate-history-of-leeds-children-s-day-1-6440738


SB2 - Social Media and mental health - Research

Summary

While looking into the skill and wisdom gap which is a current issue that relates to the fast pass we are created in tech,  I began to think about social media and wisdom. The idea that now we have genrations which are being brought up on social media and there is little out there to tell us about the affects. I want to research into this area more in-depth maybe set myself out as an experiment by recording my usage etc of social media. I think that this is an important matter as technology is becoming such a big part of our lives.

Inspiration 

A big part of my inspiration for this topic was a 2 series of podcasts by ted radio hour.

  • Screen time - Part 1 - its normal for su to always be Glued to our screens. so how are they changing us, and how will they shape our future? This hour TED speakers explore our ambivalent relationships with our screens. / This part looks into 
  • Screen time - Part 2 - When we go online, we present a digital version of ourselves. How we do transform when we interact inside our screens? In this episode, TED speaker explore the expanding role of our "second selves". / This part looks into how our online personas can actually take over our real life personas, For there example they speak to a lady who made a rasisic joke on twitter which then ruined her life. 
Ideas

Quick thoughts I had on the subject 

  • Was looking into my own social media consumption, how it makes me feel etc. 
  • Isocial media nightmares examples I had of this was my flatmate had posted a photo of her and her new bf on facebook but forgot she was still logged into her ex boyfriends account.
  • Rosie was also telling me about one time where a o2 employee posted a picture of her boobs on her facebook while trying to send himself the image. 
  • Is tech destorying empathy - http://www.livescience.com/51392-will-tech-bring-humanity-together-or-tear-it-apart.html

PPP - Research - Collaboration Brief - PPP

Royal Opera House

Encourage culturally engaged young people to experience ballet for the first time.
Brief
The Royal Opera House and AKA, the international entertainment marketing agency, are challenging you to create a campaign that will encourage culturally engaged young people aged 20-30 to experience ballet for the first time.
Why Ballet, what can it bring to young peoples’ lives?
Ballet exists in many forms from the lyric narrative beauty of a Swan Lake to the abstract modernism of Wayne McGregor’s Chroma. Like opera it deals with the big human themes – life, love, death, loss, passion, joy, anger and humour – all things that we deal with in everyday life.
We believe in sharing this beautiful art form as widely available as possible, which is why we bring world-class composers, conductors, dancers, writers, artists, technicians, craftsmen, and administrators together in our iconic theatre to make it happen, and publicise what we do as broadly and inclusively as we can. 
The Problem
While some young people might attend the ballet once a year as a special occasion, we find that in some areas our audience is not as diverse as the population as a whole, and, in particular, young people are under-represented.  We want to change this and engage and inspire more young people to be part of our audience if we are to ensure the long-term survival of ballet as an art form.
To quote The Royal Ballet’s founder, ‘Somebody must always be doing something new, or life would get very dull.’ We are always doing something new on stage and we want you to help us do something new off-stage to communicate it to young people.
The people we’re talking about for the purpose of this brief are those aged between 20 and 30 who already attend plays, gigs, and exhibitions, but who don’t consider ballet. Why? Because they simply think it isn’t for them.
We want to challenge this perception, and to invite these young people to give opera a try – which is where you come in. 
The Creative Challenge
We – that’s the Royal Opera House and our advertising agency AKA – would like you to come up with a creative concept or idea that dispels the preconceptions and celebrates the beauty and emotion that ballet brings to the stage, something that challenges our target audience to look at ballet as an art form that could be a new love in their lives. Break down those preconceptions that have become a barrier to attendance. We’d like to you show them that ballet as an art form isn’t what they think is it – and moreover that it is for them.
Our target audience currently think that
• Ballet is old fashioned, filled with tutus, musically dry, stuffy, formal and traditional and not relevant to contemporary life
• Ballet is for the wealthy middle England and old people, not ‘people like me’
• You have to understand the language of choreography to understand or enjoy it
• There are certain accepted opinions about ballet, and open interpretation or appreciation of it is not welcome
• Ballet is just men in tights and ladies en pointe pretending they are in a fairy-tale
• Ballet is mainly for girls
We would like to communicate to them instead
• Ballet can be exciting and alive and a thrill to watch - it’s everything from graceful and beautiful to violent and passionate
• Ballets may have been created for the Royal Courts of Europe many, many years ago, but new ones are being created all the time – it’s a modern and energetic artform
• Because it deals with the big human themes – life, love, death, loss, passion, joy, anger, humour – it’s relevant to everyone, and everyone can understand it
• Ballets can draw from a wide range of influences from fashion to literature and rock/pop music to full orchestral work. There are no rules. 
Creative Considerations
You need to show how your idea will work as an advertising campaign – across digital, print, out of home and social media advertising.
Creative needs to feature the Royal Opera House logo.
You can download the logo and the brand guidelines here: roh.org.uk/for/press-and-communications/branding.
Deliverables & Additional Information
Find out more what the Royal Opera House does and to see for yourself how we talk about ourselves:
Please adhere to the Deliverables outlined in the Student Awards section of the YCN website.
Any supporting information referenced in the brief can be found in the accompanying Project Pack at the YCN website.




Key Words & sentences


  • culturally engaged young people
  •  first time.
  • aged 20-30
  • Why Ballet, what can it bring to young peoples’ lives?
  • Wayne McGregor’s Chroma.
  •  life, love, death, loss, passion, joy, anger and humour
  • Somebody must always be doing something new, or life would get very dull.
  • ispels the preconceptions and celebrates the beauty and emotion that ballet brings to the stage
  • preconceptions
  • composers, conductors, dancers, writers, artists, technicians, craftsmen,



Notes 


  • Website has very outdated feel to it. 
  • Behance could be a great place to attract additional audience through beautifully presented project
  • The creative process behind the dance is extremely interesting and relatable to other creatives. 
  • Music could be a great way to target audience
  • Looking at the creatives behind the ballet corography 
  • We connect the ballet to old photos. 
  • Lots of advertising campaigns seem to be aimed at women
  • We need to speak to the public 20-30 uni students to get an idea of what there pre conceptions of ballet is, this could be in a survey form possible. maybe use redit 
  • I think its important to get the message of ballet could be a number of possibilities, it is not only one thing. 
  • Social media should be a part of the advertising maybe
  • Maybe create a concept which can target individual performances in a range of ways. 

Friday, 10 February 2017

Lecture - Issue Orientated design

Ethics of design

CND Logo -

May 1968 poster - Student based revolution - Protests against goverment




Africa brigade anti-war march poster - 1971

Black panthers posters - Emory douglas 1970

Contribution to Ficciones typografika by erik brandt

Grafika fidalga, brazil

9 + 1  ways of being political by julia hoffman

Young socialist campaign

Politikally by jane chang mei

A bunch of crock

disobedient objects

Thursday, 9 February 2017

SB1 - Exploring Roundhay park - Research

I decided explore roundhay park as an option for my celebration poster as I recently visited the park and found it quite magnificent, it was huge! The park was orginaly used as a hunting ground in the medevial times, This could have been an intresting topic however I dont think I fully agree with the celebration of animal hunting.

It was home to a number of music events


SB2 - Critical Thinking / skill & wisdom gap - Research

Because we are progressing so quickly we tend to not question what we are doing there is a lack of critical thinking, this ultimately could be human kinds biggest down fall when we come to think about climate change, transhumanism, DNA editing, Social media etc.  We have so much information around us which we take in however do we really understand what it all means?

Examples

  • Puting chemicals on our food to stop bugs - This could result in long term health effects.
  • Reposting a article we have read but not really thought about - This could really damage a faith or race.
  • Cloning food sources - What are the effects of this?
  • Getting anxious and then looking at our phones instead of addressing the anxiety.
  • Why are we posting our entire lives on social media?
  • Do we hate people because our friends do?

Problem 
We are moving very fast and with a lack of wisdom Is there consequences, IT could get picked up and literally ruin someones life. we could be using it to fulfill something deep down which is missing. It could be used by others, we don't actually own what we put out there. 

How can I help solve 

By getting people to think about the future and critical think in the present.

How can I do this 
  • Show people examples of others who have not thought critically befor creating
  • Economical Materialism
  • Fake social media lives.
  • A website where everyone can see you.
  • Using snap chat religiously and recording how I feel. Writing down how watching my friends out for instance has made me feel.

Questions
What effect mentally is tech having on our lives?
Looking at how we post our entire lives on social media without ever thinking about why we are doing it?

Why do we want to see what others are doing and how does this make us feel about ourself?

Key words 
Skill & wisdom gap - Critical thinking - Mental health - Tech


 Why do we do it?

I would like to investigate into our relationship with social media and the reasons we are using applications such as snapchat. What goes through someones head befor they post. Does it give us a sense of achievement. surely this will make us fundamentally different to our older generations.