matthew fuller on Mon, 27 Mar 2000 16:14:33 +0200 (CEST) |
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[Nettime-bold] The Container update: interview with mervin Jarman |
mervin Jarman (mervin@mongrel.org.uk) is an artist and organiser with an eye for infrastructure. He is currently back in London for a couple of weeks having completed the first stages of The Container project. A thorough and ambitious mobile media lab being put together to begin getting both town and country Jamaicans online. The full inventive weight that is going to be released by this project looks set to be phenomenal. This interview was carried out via a series of email exchanges in mid-March. Matthew Fuller: The Container is now in Palmers Cross Jamaica and being readied for conversion. How are you going to change a forty-foot shipping container into a mobile media laboratory? What is the thing going to look like - at least in your mind's eye? mervin Jarman: Conversion will require an insulation layer made up of compacted foam forthe inside. This is to reduce the heat accumulation and is the first layer on the inside. Then we will, with the use of thin ply-board, produce a smooth painted surface for the interior wall. Of course the unit will be wired fo rboth telephone and electricity to IEEE standard. In terms of infrastructure there will be a partition at the far end of the container to house a small administration office taking up about 8ft sq. I am also seeing a tea counter for our expected English visitors who can't go through the day without their cups of tea. And of course any other snacks available in the container. This will then give way to the remaining length of the container:28sq ft. to be dedicated to workstations and storage/shelve space in which the general running of the container will be conducted. Entry will remain at the rear where the doors swing open outwardly and 3-4 bay windows will be installed down one side to offer as much natural lighting as possible. the interior should end up looking like a well-maintained corporate office, that is the look of it. The feeling will be another thing. Externally, the unit must be very attractively decorated so that people will take a curious interest in its presence, it should be eye-catching and also informative in its visualisation. An overall comment would be a well decorated bandwagon that will let people know that the Container is in town. MF: You have arranged for five co-workers on The Container to teach themselves up using some of the first few Macs that have been shipped over so that they can go on to teach others. What is the general level of familiarity with computers in Jamaica? - and beyond straightforward desktop use, in what sort of ways is the internet entering different parts of Jamaican society? mJ: Tricky! Let me answer this back to front: in the areas that the container will be targeting the few persons who I have met who have actually used a computer only got as far as creating a word document or to fill in a spreadsheet as it relates to their job. The internet doesn't even start to come into it as (thanks to the local telephone company) most people believe that they need a separate telephone line to get connected - an expensive commodity.The level of familiarity is virtually non-existent. These people are not part of the 5%ters having access who may be found in some communities. It is sad, as those who know the little that they know see this as an advantage and as a means of separating themselves from those who do not know. A kind of hierarchical structure with knowledge prejudice dominant. Given,(thanks to the mis-information given to the Container before departure), the amount of time lost in getting the Container through Customs and off the Wharf a number of goals were not achieved. It was my intention to find and train up a team of people who would in turn be able to start to introduce the ideas of working with computers to the greater community whilst the container was being converted. They would then effectively be the source of local contact for the project. What transpired was that within the two weeks that I had remaining in Jamaica because of a previously agreed engagement in LA @ the California Arts Institute, I proceeded to conduct 5, 1 to 1 crash courses with the five community workers who had volunteered to work with the project. For the project to get maximum community awareness in its limited state I also did a two days workshop with children from the Palmers Cross Primary and Junior High School. This of course was immediately translated to the parents and so I was receiving a number of inquiries on how they could get involved in the programme. MF: What are the most pressing needs for The Container at the moment? What are you planning to do or to get hold of next in order to take things to the next stage? mJ: As you know, when The Container left London for the first time we only had a few redundant computers donated to the project. I guess people never took me serious enough and didn't actually think I was going to do it. So many people on the onset was like 'Yes we will help. We will do this and that.' But when it really came down to it, most of them chickened out. So right now I am re-launching the appeal for donation of computer hardware, software and accessories. The container will be converted on my return to Jamaica in April - the Minister of Commerce and Technology - Phillip Paulwell has assured me that his ministry will be supporting the project and I have also met with Mrs Joshiah from the Jamaica's branch of UNESCO who have indicated their interest to work with us. The most important thing to me now is to source the container with the necessary equipment that will initiate the earliest start to the project and this is easiest achieved if the mongrel population chips in with us on this drive to collect and deliver as much of thesupplies needed for the container as possible (see Essentials under about the container http://www.container.access-it.org.uk ) MF: If you are getting help from the Jamaican Ministry of Technology and UNESCO - why do you need people in Europe and the States with access to money or equipment to support the Container? mJ: Where the Gov. and UNESCO may very well be able to support transportation and maintenance for the Container it is doubtful that they would be able to give all that we need, after all it is written "god help those who help themselves" neither or but!!! In other words the initial capital to get the kit together must be raised by us or by people who support the project. MF: At the moment the world is experiencing a serious change. Capitalism is re-inventing itself into a purer form and becoming global on a far greater scale than previously. Money-power is becoming centralised and more rapid and intense in the way it moves, with a greater number of financial transactions of larger amounts made by institutions of increasingly densely concentrated control. This has been matched with the move towards centralisation of decision-making on a political and economic basis and combined with a global decentralisation of production. Where do different social formations in Jamaica sit in relation to these processes? How can the Container, as itself something of a bent vector of globalisation, learn from the everyday practices of the communities it is involved with to turn the situation to advantage? mJ: Jamaica, both politically and socially, is not ready nor are they aware of the implications of the tremendous tidal wave of infrastructural change and the decentralising effects as you put it. without wanting to sound obnoxious, if they did they would not be hastening to be major consumers of the technology instead there would be a serious drive as to how to become major producers of this technology. As is commonly known around the world Jamaica is one of the largest selling commodity producers. Anywhere you go you just have to look at the shelves in the major superstores for 'Made in Jamaica' - though ordinary Jamaicans living abroad can hardly afford to buy a tin of Ackee. It then stands to reasoning that we should be hastening to identify our niche within this emerging technology as in every economy is necessary to succeed. When you look at the social dichotomy of Jamaica and the multi-levels of talents and acquired/applied skills base it would be indeed interesting to see the kind of products that could come out of the island at the moment those 5% are happy to just consume the stuff that's been rammed down their throats - and don't get me wrong because inside Jamaica we have guys that could run circles around any of Microsoft geeks but unfortunately they are mute. The Container in Jamaica is a virgin thing - it's totally new - and the targeted group of people that the Container will primarily be resourcing are equally virgins to the technology that the Container will host. I am quite excited at the possibilities that will be created as a result of this combination also giving the variety of participants from the international forum that will be applying their services and skills to the Container. I believe that the work coming out of the Container is going to be of exceptionally high quality and that the relevance as diverse as it will be tremendously in the favour of the collaborative energies that had gone into producing it. MF: At the moment, most software is built by an increasingly small number of companies for an increasing number of people doing a wider range of things yet defined by an increasingly narrow cultural, technical and social understanding of what digital technology is or might be. You've mentioned office software so far - what are the other types of software commonly in use in Jamaica - particularly at a street level (ie music) and in what way do you think, if the possibility were there, the people who the Container is involved with might actually inflect or change the culture of software? mJ: the infusion of software into Jamaica's street culture is virtually non-existent. It therefore doesn't offer any opportunity for the eventual end user/consumer to question its emergence and implications. As it happens technology and software in Jamaica is a 'take it or leave it' situation. It is ironic when you look at the reverse here in the UK or even in the wider technologically developed or assumed tech.developed countries - as this debate is being carried by the likes of Mongrel and other such organisations/critical technology advocates. Myself being affiliated with the mongrel crew have indeed seen fit to question the levels under which we have to consume the technology. Living in the UK does not make me exceptional, it's just that intermedience of the technology and in this case software and its delivery has a far greater responsibility to its consumers. This allows for critical debates and deconstruction. Without programmes like the Container, global communities like Jamaica and others would never be in a position to offer up questions. Check it in the past. When we offer up real revolutionaries they have all been jailed. Marcus, Peter, and look what they did to the Legacy of Bob. That's why I think the Container is such an incredible and revolutionary project because it allows street-level emergence into what would be an other wise unchallenged consortium of global culturalisation and then where would we be? What would happen to our dynamics as it relates to production, be that in the Music, Art and Craft, in the way we conduct businesses, and develop our own customised software to satisfy our specifics? It sounds as if I'm going on. But this is something I feel very strongly about. No system should impose its will and/or cultural identity on another, the only way for software and technology to be truly dynamic is to decentralise the decision making process open up the formats to customisation on a more trans-culture and gender context. MF: I think the Container is going to be very much about finding real answers to all these problems. Where do you expect to be in six months time? What do you expect to be going on in the Container? mJ: Somewhere in Jamaica on a beach. In six months the container will have expected to complete a number of workshops with various communities and with support from a number of international artist, this will be demonstrative of the potentials of the Container. In six months time, I assume most if not all the necessary sponsorship and collaborators would have identified themselves so that the Container can be galvanised as part of Jamaica's street culture. Also this is round about when the first major link up via the Container and the UK is expected..... but on that I'll simply say 'watch this space' for breaking news about that! MF: mervin, thanks. mJ: No thank you for taking the time out, and tracking us down. MF: For those reading this interview who want to make something happen, here's that list of items needed to get the Container up and running.... Essential List List of equipment for use in the Container unit: VSat Connection1 Server 14 Computers Mac& PC1 A2 Colour Printer1 A4 Laser Printer1 A3 Colour Scanner Video System Audio System 1 Data Projector 2 CD Re/Writer Word Processing Software PC/MacDesk Top Publishing Software PC/MacMultimedia Software PC/MacWeb Publishing Software PC/MacDatabase Software PC/MacAnti-Virus Software PC/MacOther Software List of supplies for converting the Container unit:3 Double Glazed Bay Windows Hard Plastic 1 Double Glazed Double Door Hard Plastic 180 ft Compressed Foam 40 X 8 ft of Hard Wearing Carpet Disability Access - Portable Lift 2 Air Conditioning Units 4 Standing/Hanging Fans 30 running ft of Desk Top 20 Chairs 2 Petrol 110 - 240 Electric Generator Electrical Distribution Box, Fittings and Accessories 3 double tube Florescent Lamps 8 Gallons of Interior and Exterior Metal Paint 2 Drinking Fountain X 10 Bottles 2 Kettles 1 Coffee Percolator Security Alarm System and any thing else you can off that will be of use to us _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold