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Dawdlr: Slow Media?

November 29, 2007 08:00 PM | Posted in:

In a world that's moving so fast it's hard to keep track of when you are, let alone where, there's a need for experiences that move at more relaxed paces. This basic need for deliberately moderated and human-speed experiences better tuned to the way that people make and understand meaning is the origin of the Slow Food movement.

Naturally, there's room for a virtual analog of slow food. I'm calling this kind of mediated experience that flows at a kinder, gentler pace "slow media". Dawdlr, "a global community of friends and strangers answering one simple question: what are you doing, you know, more generally?" is a good example.

dawdlr_image.jpg

Assembled one postcard at a time, Dawdlr exemplifies the collective form of Slow Media, one you can contribute to by creating some content using a standard interface and then submitting it for publication, as long as it carried the proper postage. The paper blog - now updated and known as papercast - might be a precursor.

What are some other examples of Slow Media? Back in January of 2007, AdBusters asked, "Isn't it time to slow down?" during their national slowdown week.

Slow food has a website, annual gatherings, publications, a manifesto, even a mascot / icon - the snail of course. What's next for slow media? Maybe a slow wiki, made up of image-mapped screen shots of chalkboards with writing?

local tags: culture, experience, media, slow_media

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