Population of Newcastle is around 300,000. For a point of reference, the population of Manchester is around 500,000.

Although I’m never really sure what the difference is between city, urban and metro populations.

Catching up with my good friend Ben from EASy, and really interesting to learn there was a stream at the most recent ALIFE conference on the socio-technical aspects of alife. The practical and societal applications always interested me so it’s great to see it’s a current of thought in the field.
Seems like there’s quite a lot of crossover between the doughnut diagram and the sustainable development goals. Or at least I recall quite a few of the planetary boundaries and social foundations being discussed in the sustainable development MOOC I did a while back.
Arriving in Newcastle on a Saturday night you learn that it’s a destination for a lot of stag dos and hen nights.

Looking forward to getting out today on the quayside and seeing the Tyne and the bridges and some of the cultural quarter.

Been watching The Big Life Fix recently. I like the premise – using design and technology to help solve problems for people – usually physical so far in the series. I find it a bit hokey sometimes in the way it’s produced, they try to make dramatic tension more than needed I think.  The human side is really interesting, but I think they could just focus on one challenge per episode, and include more info on the technical challenges and solutions. It’d also be cool if they presented it more of a collaboration than the kind of ‘star’ designer way it is now. That said, it’s uplifting to see tech being used for positive human purposes.

I liked the recent hack for the chap who is deaf, to help him follow group conversations. I think a Raspberry Pi and an Amazon Dot were involved.

Listening to the episode on economics. Starts off making the same point as Kate Raworth in Doughnut Economics, that the majority of economics education focuses only on one very narrow view of economics (neo-classical).
Listened to Owls at Dawn episode on the accelerationist manifesto. Good stuff. Good discussion of how the left should organise, horizontal vs vertical, how the left should use tech.  But with a bit more philosophical chat, for example what do they even mean by tech?

Also a bit on what they actually mean by accelerate, as that’s kind of an overloaded term now.

A mix of both horizontal and vertical seems like a sensible conclusion. I keep in mind Kevin Carson’s rebuttal to Inventing the Future though, maintaining that they straw man folk politics.

Watched The City & The City
Final episode of The City & The City was really good.  David Morrissey really grew on me as Borlu.  I read a few reviews after finishing, quite a few a bit sniffy. But I really liked it.

I guess a point if criticism, it didn’t really explore the whole idea of ‘unseeing’. There’s a lot in that, but we ended up more focusing on the mystery and the personal relationships.