Ever had anyone tell you that the years are getting shorter, or are going faster? Have you ever said it yourself?

When you think about it, there is actually a very basic reason why this seems the case, and it’s got nothing to do with advanced physics, temporal mechanics, or anything along those lines.

It’s all to do with percentages.

Consider for instance, what a year was like when you were 4 years old. It was, quite honestly, a bloody long time – a quarter of your life. At 4, a year was taking 25% of your life to date to pass you by. In the scale of accumulated memories and experiences, a quarter of your life to date is a very long time indeed.

Jump forward to when you were 10 – at that point a year was a tenth of your life. Still long enough, but with the benefit of further memories and more experiences, it didn’t seem quite as long.

Now you’re twenty – a year is just a twentieth of your life to date.

Thirty – it’s just one thirtieth of your life to date.

I’m now 37 – so a year to me represents just one thirty-seventh of my life experiences thus far – there really is no joking to the saying “the years are going faster”. In fact, the older you get, the faster those years are indeed going. My grandmother turned 90 last month – she’s at the point where sometimes it must seem that years are come and gone in the blink of an eye.

If you graph it, the truth becomes abundantly obvious:

Age vs a Year as a Percent of your LifeIt’s no wonder that with each passing year we think the years are passing faster – when we consider the length of a year against the length of our lives, each year does indeed pass faster and faster, until they seem a blur.

It’s certainly better than the alternative!

 

2010 has been a big year for me in terms of personal growth – a permanent mohawk and tattoo are the most visible manifestations of my changes, and obviously I’ve been making big plans, with Darren, for a move to Melbourne in 2011. Mind you, one of the best compliments I got this year was when @rodos said at a storage blogger event, by way of introduction, “You’re one of the few bloggers who looks like the profile pic”.

Oh yeah, before I forget, here’s the current state of Icarus (I’ve got another session next week!):

Icarus, Session 4

For me though, much of my life revolves around music. If I’m not listening to it, I’m still hearing it in my head most of the time – it’s like I have a personal soundtrack 99% of my waking hours. It can be remarkably settling.

So, here’s some of the songs that have been occupying my head space in 2010 – in no particular order – noting that they don’t have to have been made in 2010 – they’re just the songs that have grabbed my attention this year:

Most recently, we have Caro Emerald’s “A Night Like This”; quite frankly, the entire album is sublime. In fact, sublime is a complete injustice to the quality of Caro’s talents:

Having finally(!) acquired the sound track, The Diva Dance from The Fifth Element has often accompanied me on all sorts of occasions, including being on repeat for sometimes half a day at a time. This clip showing it in the Fifth Element doesn’t really do it justice – what is amazing is that there’s no manipulation involved at all; that’s really an opera singer throwing out those notes:

Gin Wigmore’s S.O.S has been a mental life-saver for me this year. It’s so full of energy, life and happiness that it is truly a song of sheer bliss for me:

Going for something more relaxing, “Breathe” by Alexi Murdoch has been frequent compelling listening to me. I discovered Alexi Murdoch via Stargate Universe, and treasure the show just for that reason alone. Alexi Murdoch is a damn fine artist:

Now, I have to say – I loathe heavy metal and thrash metal. So it came as a complete surprise to fall in love with “You Won’t Know”, by “Brand New”, also featured in Stargate Universe:

Continuing the Science Fiction influence, Doctor Who introduced me to “Chances” by Athlete:

And jumping briefly back to Heavy Metal, a friend introduced me to Marilyn Manson’s take on “This is Halloween”:

Over time I’ve learnt to appreciate Marilyn Manson – in very small doses – as an extremely talented artist. His take on “This is Halloween” is just amazing.

A friend introduced me to Charlotte Sometimes (and then promptly forgot he had – lol!) … her song AEIOU is a pretty good representation of what she can do:

Kate Miller-Heidke’s Facebook song, “Are you Fucking Kidding Me?” has to be heard to be believed. It’s brilliant, absolutely (fucking!) brilliant:

I’m a huge ELO fan, and I came to Lily Allen late, so I was amazed when I heard her version of Mr Blue Sky:

Going for the more contemporary, I’ve had “Hey, Soul Sister!” running around in my head for months:

From American Idol, Crystal Bowersox completely blew me away with her version of “Me and Bobby McGee” … it’s a song I loathed until I heard her singing it:

Finally – because I could go on for months, but I have to select a cut-off point, I can’t count the number of times I’ve been driving along and listening to Adam Lambert’s “Fever”:

There you have it, if you want to get in my head, listen to those songs on repeat for a few days, and you’ve got a good idea of what I was hearing on a daily basis throughout 2010!

 

If you’re not familiar with cargo cults, you might want to read up on them. To summarise though, they sprang up around the Pacific Islands in particular, and mainly had their roots in villagers noticing behaviours associated with more advanced societies using islands for staging and delivery of goods, then imitating that behaviour. From the aforelinked Wikipedia article:

Cargo cult activity in the Pacific region increased significantly during and immediately after World War II, when the residents of these regions observed the Japanese and American combatants bringing in large amounts of material. When the war ended, the military bases closed and the flow of goods and materials ceased. In an attempt to attract further deliveries of goods, followers of the cults engaged in ritualistic practices such as building crude imitation landing strips, aircraft and radio equipment, and mimicking the behaviour that they had observed of the military personnel operating them.

Wikipedia goes on to say that most cargo cults have died out, but I beg to differ. If anything, cargo cults have sprung up in a great number of places in the world over the last few years in particular, and are growing apace. If you’re wondering where, let’s consider a few scenarios:

  • Microsoft observes that Apple builds well-designed retail stores which results in a significant boost to profit, so they mimic the design of the stores the hopes of reviving a failing brand;
  • Various companies previously in the portable music market observe the success of Apple with the iPod and develop similarly shaped devices in the hopes of saving their failing brands;
  • Google observes the success of Apple with the iPhone and significantly changes its proposed Android platform from a traditional smartphone design to a touchscreen design in the hope of achieving similar results;
  • Various phone manufacturers, struggling to to transform the small but lucrative smart phone market attempt to mimic Apple’s iPhone design and OS with similarly shaped devices and similar icon layouts;
  • Companies like Samsung, Acer, RIM, etc., observe Apple’s success with the iPad and slavishly imitate the overall design, in the hopes of inserting themselves into the market.

The sheer number of tech companies out there now that are falling into a cargo cult mentality around Apple’s product set is staggering. From all of them the implicit message is the same: innovation is dead, long live imitation.

It’s actually a pretty sad state of affairs that globally a significant percentage of the technology industry has descended to cargo cult mentalities towards product development and market expansion. The really sad thing is that journalists and companies world-wide are frantically looking for the next “i* Killer” … I pity them if they find one! Who will the cargo cults imitate then? The industry has developed such a parasitic dependency on the vision of a single organisation that one thing is abundantly clear: the cargo cult technology companies won’t survive without Apple.

 

I previously had my suspicions about Wikileaks. I still do have some reservations about the actual purpose of the head of Wikileaks, but my reservations about Wikileaks have mostly been turned around over the last twelve months.

You see, over the last year I’ve been thinking more and more about what’s wrong with politics, and in particular, democracy. In its noblest form, democracy should be about elected officials leading the way, pushing society gently but firmly forward in terms of rights, moral attitude and humanitarianism.

But politics has become sullied by the lowest common denominator – best summarised as 30 second news sound bites. All too frequently, politicians are in a race to the finish, and societal evolution be damned. The most obvious facts are ignored to appease a few vocal minority groups who happen to live in marginal electorates.

You know why they live in marginal electorates? Because of the 30 second news sound bite. It’s because they’re less educated, or because they’re less tolerant, and likely they’re struggling too, and so they’re waiting for that sound grab that comes from a politician saying that they’ll “stop the boats” or “stop the pink wave” or whatever nonsense might promise a quick solution to a problem that needs complex analysis and humanitarian responses. But too many politicians in a democracy will say whatever needs to be said in order to get an extra vote. Democracy hangs by a razors edge in those electorates, and whichever way it falls, it isn’t pretty. The United States is showing us graphically, daily, the consequences of bigots taking over.

Coming back to Wikileaks, I’d suggest it’s a natural consequence of:

(a) The evolving internet;

(b) An information-rich society;

(c) A connected class that demands full transparency.

All three of these vectors create the “perfect storm” for existing governments (particularly democracies).

Centuries ago, Thomas Hobbes wrote Leviathan, which outlined the notion of a “social contract” – the implicit contract undertaken between a citizen and government on birth. Such “contracts” form the basis of constitutions, bills of rights, etc.

Human history is a continuous example of people developing ways to store and disseminate information faster and more efficiently. We moved from body language and inarticulate grunts to a spoken language, introduced art for the keeping of historical stories, introduced the written language, the printed book, the computer, the network, and then the internet. Information – the ability to retain, share and learn from it, generation after generation, has been the single most important driving factor in human development.

Just like idiots who insist that evolution has stopped, anyone who thinks that information has reached its pinnacle in terms of evolving how society works is at best utterly misguided.

So what does this have to do with Wikileaks? Absolutely everything.

I’m definitely a member of what I referred to as the “connected class”; if you believe we live in a class-less society, you’re really confused. Every Western country in particular is divided into classes based on income strata, if nothing else.

And look where that’s getting us.

I’m not advocating throwing away money, but it’s clear that classes decided purely on income aren’t exactly helping. The connected class is going to adjust that traditional income strata class structure. And by “adjust” I mean “significantly disrupt”.

I’m – and others like me – in Generation X are only the first wave of the connected class. It’s a global class, unhindered by borders, timezones and (increasingly) language where information is naturally shared and people stay in contact with one another without even thinking about it. It’s the class of people who check email or twitter when they go to the loo at 3 in the morning, who watch TV while they surf the net, who blog or participate in forums, who have friends, real friends on Facebook they’ve never physically met. It’s the people who see themselves belonging to a global network that is so much bigger than where they live or who they physically associate with.

The second wave of the connected class is starting to find its voice. Generation Y. Gen-X’ers like myself started growing up without all this information, we’re still hindered by a sense of awe at times. Gen-Y’ers are a whole different beast. For them, information and connectivity has been nigh on omnipresent during their development, and where it hasn’t been for them, it certainly will be for Generation Z.

And the connected class are already demanding a better government process. More transparency, we cry! More accountability, we cry! Less censorship, we demand.

The only thing slowing down the connected class now is the corruption of the “manifesto” by pirates, crackers and people with no respect for truly valid intellectual property. I’m not by any means insisting that all forms of intellectual property (and/or patents) are valid, but it certainly shouldn’t be open slather. That is, there’s a confusion currently between two radically different “war-cries”:

  1. “information should be free”
  2. “information frees”

The real manifesto of the connected class should be the latter, not the former. It is not the case that all information should be “free”. In an information-rich society, people who work hard to develop new information should be compensated in some form for that work. But it should be a truth, universally acknowledged, that information frees (the mind).

With freedom, information brings a change to how government has worked over the centuries. The connected class is no longer prepared to blindly accept a government that insists “there are some things you shouldn’t know”. I’m not declaring open season on the most vile pornography you can think of; that’s what some people think I’m suggesting when I argue against internet censorship – but it’s no longer up to governments to secretly determine what we can and cannot see. Governments are made of people, who are corruptible. Government appointed committees and bodies are made up of people, who are corruptible. Only all the people remain out of the reach of corporate and “special interest” taint. That’s why, for what it’s worth, I think an internet democracy is a natural consequence of an internet/connected society, too. That’s how you stop bogans ruling governments, and why we’re starting to see an increasing role in democracies such as Australia of the independents.

An internet/connected class is about society reaching an ethically founded self-regulation. That means individuals having a voice, and speaking out against secrets and back room deals, rejecting illegal or unfounded reasons for government sponsored violence.

Those who argue that a loss of privacy is inevitable use the illegitimate argument that “if you’re not doing anything wrong it shouldn’t matter if people know what you’re doing”. I believe it’s equally invalid to say “if governments weren’t doing anything wrong, it wouldn’t matter if people know what they’re doing”. You can’t make progress on the basis of doubly-negative arguments. The real, legitimate argument is that the the connected class is finding its voice, and saying, without equivocation, without reluctance, without hesitation and with absolute moral certainty the following three things:

  • We demand a greater and ongoing say in how our governments and society works;
  • We demand full accountability of government;
  • We demand full transparency of government.

Many governments are struggling with the implications of sites like Wikileaks. What they don’t yet realise (or if they have, they’re too afraid to admit it) is the real implication: this is Wikileaks v1.0. Just wait until Generation Y takes over, and we have Wikileaks 2.0. Then just wait until Generation Z takes over, and we have Wikileaks 3.0.

Plato, in the Republic, discusses society lead by “Philosopher Kings”. Personally I think that’s potentially as dangerous as the current models we have for government. But what we’re seeing, in crystal clarity, is the start of the “Philosopher Arbiters” – the connected class is

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