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Saturday, October 1, 2016

The (Piece of) Cake is a Lie

You know that feeling at 2 am during a bout of fever induced insomnia that you have a brilliant idea that’s creative and distracting and not at all-over complicated?

Hi.

My name is Jessica and I’ll be hiding from the current election by writing the shit you tell me to. (I’ll run a twitter poll a few days ahead of a post and you get to vote what my prompt is.)


(There is no such thing as) A Piece of Cake


An old job of mine had a philosophy. “Watch one. Do one. Teach one.” And until you got to part three, “Teach one”, your mind didn’t expand to the full complexity of the task you were undertaking.

This was generally my experience:

  • Watch one: Match the key. Put the key in slot. Press button. Remove keys.
  •  Do one: A customer presents you with a key. Examine the hieroglyphics’ and match it one of the 40 available options. Read the instructions on this machine with 10 different examples on how you can saw off your own hand, and carefully decide which way is “up”….
  •  Teach one: Breath. Give yourself a pep-talk. Look them in the eye. Present the master key. Tell them about the hieroglyphics’ they won’t actually read until being stared down by the soccer mom that found them hiding in aisle 4…

Over the years I’ve had time to absorb that philosophy. I recognize now that it was a way of 1) building a community where the employees would rely on each other and 2) skimp out of paying for teaching materials, but the phrase still stuck with me. The steps mirror how much of knowledge is using in the world, and suddenly those six words explain so much.

Watch one: The internet loves to tell you how easy something is. LOVES to tell you that flipping this one switch turns all the lights on, and all you need is the light. (I say “the internet”, but we all know who I mean.) You just need a lightbulb to see in the dark. They forget the metal bits holding it out of the wall. The wires inside of the lightbulb performing a science experiment, or the wires providing that experiment with energy. The internet forgets the wires in your wall, and the walls protecting you from those wires. That the wire comes into your house because of math and infrastructure and money. During your “Watch” phase, you know that there is a problem, and a solution, and hey, flipping the switch is a piece of cake, right?

Do one: One of my favorite things about learning: the deeper you dive in, the more complex your subject becomes. Zoom in. Zoom in. Things you weren’t even aware of 10 days before are now interacting with each other and creating this thing you knew was possible, but couldn’t imagine had more than 5 parts. Once, where a simple item stood, there are now lines of code, and 10 different metals, and this physics problem that you didn’t even think was needed. It’s just an alarm clock. The outside is so simple. A few buttons, smooth black finish, and an LED screen. Never mind the fact that time itself a concept debated in the high halls of philosophy, all you need it to do is wake you up. The “Do” phase makes one suddenly aware that the piece of cake is part of a bigger confectionary treat, and there are a few switches to take care of.


Teach one: Experts are my favorite people. No, I’ll restate that. Nerds are my favorite people. Someone who has a deep and intense love for a THING, and love to tell you about their THING, and want you to love it for all of the complexity they get out of their THING, are my favorite people. There are nerds about TV shows and nerds about cell phones and nerds about gardening and nerds about plumbing. There are people that can speak Klingon in binary and I find that to be beautiful.

Those that can’t do, “Teach”. Well, only if “can’t do” means that stopping at flipping the switches is enough for them.

Tomorrow's prompt, chosen by twitter, is "Just Watch Me".


Friday, June 3, 2016

Gender Options - Sims 4 update

There has been a lot of progress made in getting game companies to take notice of their impact on the queer community. Whether it be only programming in heterosexual romances, making lewd or harmful jokes on a queer persons behalf, or forcing gender roles into their male and female characters, there is a long history of restricting a queer person’s ability to identify with the characters they play or interact with in games.


Which is why the latest EA update for Sims 4 is so welcome. Many developers have been taking note of campaigns like FemFreq and #INeedDiverseGames, listening to the requests of under-served fans, and taking the time to get these things right. It looks like Sims 4 is a great example of this. In a FREE updated (which, with the state of DLC these days, also surprises me) they have completely overhauled their Create a Sim options, and unrestricted options that use to be gender coded.




From their statement: 

The Sims is made by a diverse team for a diverse audience, and it's really important to us that players are able to be creative and express themselves through our games. We want to make sure players can create characters they can identify with or relate to through powerful tools that give them influence over a Sims gender, age, ethnicity, body type and more.


The Sims community have been playing with gender mods for a long time now, it’s great to see the EA take on their own design and make it better.

Thursday, June 2, 2016

Pride Month - Show Me The Money!

Look at these shoes. LOOK AT THEM!
They are just one in a line of Pride shoes Converse has recently posted to their website. Here, have a link: http://www.converse.com/us/en/regular/chuck-taylor-all-star-pride/154793C.html

We live in a highly capitalistic world. Money is influence, power, and control. Companies want to acquire it, and people need to spend it. But we now live in a world where many of us have options opened up to us. And we have more information about those options. Who runs the company, where the money is going, how they treat their employees. We share that information, and social media makes it ever-so-easy. The small ecosystem of social influence you and your friends have on each other is now tool, and one being used by enough people that money has gotten involved. More and more, people are deciding that their money is a vote. Ticks in the Progressive boxes, if you will. And enough people are voting to cause a snowball effect. In local, country, and even global economies, companies are taking notice of the social atmosphere, and courting the Progressive’s in response. Money goes where the majority is, and the majority wants progress.

Adweek ran an article dissecting the relationship between progressive companies and local (U.S.) politics, and how companies have shifted based on public opinion.


Wednesday, June 1, 2016

It’s Pride Month. Time for something different.

I consider myself an activist. I don’t have the largest voice, sure, but I use it to point out and boost those things we like to call capital P Progressive. Usually that takes the form of Yelling About Things We Don’t Have Yet. Things like gender equality, queer rights across the full spectrum, and a whole host of things that require a deep breath and a moment to focus before diving in. But it’s Pride Month. A month full of weekends of colorful parades commemorating the queer Progressives of a generation past. A month in which to inspire the generations after. A month of reminding ourselves that It’s Not All Bad.

On that note, I’m going to use Pride Month as an excuse to remind ourselves that It’s Not All Bad is an okay thing to talk about too. My mind likes to dwell in the Why Isn’t It Better Yet, time for some Things Got Better.

Each day I want to highlight at least one thing in the queer space that made me smile. It has to be current, It has to be inclusive and/or intersectional, and it has to be happy. For example, this is the first time the Pride Flag has been raised on Parliament Hill in Canada. https://twitter.com/seamusoregan/status/738108360361422848. Very Cool.


Pride Month is about celebrating. And I’m going to do just that.