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@mgorny@social.treehouse.systems
2024-04-25 19:14:34

"""
The case of One Laptop per Child shows us why it is dangerous to ignore the origins of charisma: one risks being perpetually entranced by the newest charismatic technology. This is not to say that cultural change with a technology-centric project is impossible. Still, even more realistic reforms grounded in the realities of their intended beneficiaries sometimes have difficulty gaining broad popular support outside the school unless they add a charismatic gloss of rapid, revolutionary change.
This charismatic pressure can put even open-eyed reformers in a catch-22. They must promise dramatic results to gain the social and financial support for reforms, and then they must either admit to not achieving their goals or pretend that they did achieve them. Either way, funders will declare that the project is finished and withdraw financial support, and then researchers and other observers will begin to note the discrepancies between reformers’ promises and their own observations. Thus, projects that rely on charismatic technologies are often short lived; their resources are cut off before charisma recedes into the background and before the technology becomes part of everyday classroom experience. This catch-22 has dogged efforts for educational reform, development, and cultural change — especially those funded through grants or other short-term funding — for well over a century. As the technology community moves on to the next charismatic device without learning from its failures, this will continue to hamper the possibility of real, if incremental, change.
[…] After all, charisma is ultimately a conservative social force. Even when charismatic technologies promise to quickly and painlessly transform our lives for the better, they appeal precisely because they echo existing stereotypes, confirm the value of existing power relations, and reinforce existing ideologies. Meanwhile, they may divert attention and resources from more complicated, expensive, or politically charged reforms that do not promise a quick fix and are thus less charismatic.
"""
(Morgan G. Ames, The Charisma Machine)

@mgorny@social.treehouse.systems
2024-04-25 19:14:34

"""
The case of One Laptop per Child shows us why it is dangerous to ignore the origins of charisma: one risks being perpetually entranced by the newest charismatic technology. This is not to say that cultural change with a technology-centric project is impossible. Still, even more realistic reforms grounded in the realities of their intended beneficiaries sometimes have difficulty gaining broad popular support outside the school unless they add a charismatic gloss of rapid, revolutionary change.
This charismatic pressure can put even open-eyed reformers in a catch-22. They must promise dramatic results to gain the social and financial support for reforms, and then they must either admit to not achieving their goals or pretend that they did achieve them. Either way, funders will declare that the project is finished and withdraw financial support, and then researchers and other observers will begin to note the discrepancies between reformers’ promises and their own observations. Thus, projects that rely on charismatic technologies are often short lived; their resources are cut off before charisma recedes into the background and before the technology becomes part of everyday classroom experience. This catch-22 has dogged efforts for educational reform, development, and cultural change — especially those funded through grants or other short-term funding — for well over a century. As the technology community moves on to the next charismatic device without learning from its failures, this will continue to hamper the possibility of real, if incremental, change.
[…] After all, charisma is ultimately a conservative social force. Even when charismatic technologies promise to quickly and painlessly transform our lives for the better, they appeal precisely because they echo existing stereotypes, confirm the value of existing power relations, and reinforce existing ideologies. Meanwhile, they may divert attention and resources from more complicated, expensive, or politically charged reforms that do not promise a quick fix and are thus less charismatic.
"""
(Morgan G. Ames, The Charisma Machine)

@mgorny@pol.social
2024-04-24 17:34:06

Prawie skończyłem czytać "The Charisma Machine: The Life, Death, and Legacy of One Laptop per Child", Morgana G. Amesa, i… cóż, czyta się to prawie jak horror.
Kiedyś słyszałem o pierwotnych planach #OLPC, i byłem całkiem rozentuzjazmowany pomysłami na tego laptopa. Nie zdawałem sobie jednak sprawy, że za tym projektem stała głębsza ideologia na temat nauczania, ani jak wielką porażką os…

The lesson from Turkey’s elections: Charisma is key to defeating a strongman
Charisma matters. Only a year ago, Turkey’s opposition failed to unseat Erdogan in general elections despite Turkey’s sputtering economy
— in large part because opposition parties settled on a dull compromise candidate, Kemal Kilicdaroglu.
With Imamoglu as the new hopeful alternative, the dynamic shifted against Erdogan.

A top adviser for Imamoglu told me that in Istanbul and Ankara, opposi…

@mgorny@social.treehouse.systems
2024-04-24 17:34:05

Well, I've almost finished reading "The Charisma Machine: The Life, Death, and Legacy of One Laptop per Child", by Morgan G. Ames and… damn, it reads like a horror story!
I've heard of the early design of #OLPC at some point, and I've felt enthusiastic about the ideas. However, I didn't know that there was a deeper ideology on education behind it, nor how much of a failure the project were.
"""
Even when the charismatic potential of the project was translated, there were technical and social barriers to acting on this potential that had been rendered invisible by the stories of easy cultural change this charismatic machine was supposed to enable. These barriers were exemplified by OLPC leaders' comparison of their laptop to a Trojan horse, a device that would give children opportunities to develop into free thinkers independent of, or counter to, the institutions around them. However, the XO laptop was a different kind of Trojan horse in the classroom, one that hijacked lessons with technical difficulties.
"""
#books @…

@mgorny@social.treehouse.systems
2024-04-24 17:34:05

Well, I've almost finished reading "The Charisma Machine: The Life, Death, and Legacy of One Laptop per Child", by Morgan G. Ames and… damn, it reads like a horror story!
I've heard of the early design of #OLPC at some point, and I've felt enthusiastic about the ideas. However, I didn't know that there was a deeper ideology on education behind it, nor how much of a failure the project were.
"""
Even when the charismatic potential of the project was translated, there were technical and social barriers to acting on this potential that had been rendered invisible by the stories of easy cultural change this charismatic machine was supposed to enable. These barriers were exemplified by OLPC leaders' comparison of their laptop to a Trojan horse, a device that would give children opportunities to develop into free thinkers independent of, or counter to, the institutions around them. However, the XO laptop was a different kind of Trojan horse in the classroom, one that hijacked lessons with technical difficulties.
"""
#books @…

@misterbrisby@social.tchncs.de
2024-02-17 01:21:28

Isaaks #ESC-Song hat durchaus ne nette Melodie, etwas Power und ist komplett auf Englisch - praktisch für das ESC-Publikum.
Aber die Konkurrenz hat vielleicht mehr Charisma und ist spektakulärer.🤔
Als Deutscher hat man in den letzten Jahren ja gelernt, vorsichtig zu sein.
Aber vielleicht werden wir ja diesmal NICHT Letzter.
Vielleicht...
PS: Ich persönlich fand

@theendupdates@podvibes.co
2024-01-29 23:15:41

Sected - Season 1 finale 🐐🗡️☄️
Dramatized British audio sitcom | Total listening time: 1h 59m
A British sitcom podcast about four incompetent souls trying to start their own cult. Can you create a new movement with no ideas, no philosophy, and a leader with the charisma of a plastic plant forgotten in a cupboard? They’ll cert...

@randombaywatch@mastodon.social
2024-03-12 10:55:01

Charisma Carpenter guest stars
Season 5 Episode 5 "Air Buchannon"
#RandomBaywatch #lvdlpx #Baywatch

@theendupdates@podvibes.co
2024-01-29 23:15:41

Sected - Season 1 finale 🐐🗡️☄️
Dramatized British audio sitcom | Total listening time: 1h 59m
A British sitcom podcast about four incompetent souls trying to start their own cult. Can you create a new movement with no ideas, no philosophy, and a leader with the charisma of a plastic plant forgotten in a cupboard? They’ll cert...

@randombaywatch@mastodon.social
2024-02-08 09:55:06

Jeremy Jackson and Charisma Carpenter
Season 5 Episode 5 "Air Buchannon"
#RandomBaywatch #lvdlpx #Baywatch

@mgorny@social.treehouse.systems
2024-02-01 10:28:40

Fairytales: the strong use their strength to help the weak.
Real life: the strong often use their strength to bully the weak. Then the weak bully the weaker.
Since strength is context-dependent, then the "weak" feel that they're justified to use their strengths (brains, charisma, physical attractiveness…) to exact revenge on the people who have other strengths, even if these people have never done anything to them. So the vicious circle emerges.
Or perhaps simply everybody is "weak", and they all just feel that they need to prove otherwise.