[iDC] mobile phones and the networked posse
Mark Shepard
mshepard at andinc.org
Sun Jul 9 00:47:02 EDT 2006
To what extent are our concerns regarding the Networked Public Sphere
tied to a specific historical phase (or regional condition) of the
Internet? How are these concerns problematized by way mobile
communications and wireless networks have evolved since the mid-late
90s?
I'm writing this from Tokyo where I'm with a group of architecture
students studying the city as part of a study abroad program. One
difference noticeable here is the way people access and use the
Internet. Free wifi access is hard to find, and virtually no one is
seen working on a laptop in cafes. Internet cafes here are cavernous
spaces normally one or two floors below ground, consisting of stalls
containing a desktop computer occupied by someone playing World of
Warcraft, sofas for couples playing PSP at dedicated media stations,
and racks of comics for casual reading. They also appear to be
popular places for napping.
As Mimi Ito notes in "Personal, Portable, Pedestrian: Mobile Phones
in Japanese Life" (MIT, 2005), a majority of Japanese access the
Internet via their mobile phones, rather than a laptop or desktop
computer. The Japanese word for mobile phone – keitai, roughly
translated as "something you carry with you" – provides a clue to its
role within Japanese culture. In contrast to “the cellular phone” of
the US (defined by technical infrastructure), and “the mobile” of the
UK (defined by the untethering from fixed location), the Japanese
term “keitai” references a somewhat different set of parameters.
Here, the keitai is truly ubiquitous. Tokyo’s Shibuya crossing, for
example, claims the highest density of mobile phone use in the world.
An overwhelming majority of the Japanese population own phones
equipped with digital still and video cameras, SMS (Short Message
Service) messaging, wireless email and Internet browsers. Mobile
phones have replaced computers as the de facto e-mail terminal of
choice for many Japanese who are not in technology, finance,
engineering or other computer-intensive occupations. This is
particularly true for the young, who most clearly prefer handsets to
laptops. These devices are used less often for voice communications
than for asynchronic exchanges of text and images between close
circles of friends or associates. These exchanges – often conducted
throughout diverse urban spaces such as a subway car, a street
corner, a shopping mall, or a grocery store aisle – interject new
forms of privacy within otherwise "public" domains. Kenichi Fujimoto
refers to the devices themselves as "territory machines" capable of
transforming any space -- a subway train into "(one's) own room and
personal paradise." While late 20th century (and predominately
western) notions of the Internet promised to unlock us from the
limitations of offline relationships and geographic constraints,
keitai space flows in and out of ordinary, everyday activities,
constantly shifting between virtual and physical realms. Here, "the"
Networked Public Sphere is elided by a multiplicity of "networked
posses" - small groups of close acquaintances rather than a
distributed "mass" of virtual actors.
+
mark shepard
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http://www.andinc.org
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