Tim Gasperak

122 Followers
189 Following
63 Posts

I bring together committed groups of people to make sense of complex, stuck problems in new ways and find ways to enact social change together.

#Boulder, #Colorado, USA

Principal, Strange Attractor LLC | Board member, Bateson Idea Group

#Design #TransitionDesign #StrategicDesign #UXDesign #Complexity #SystemsThinking #ChangeManagement #Sustainability #WarmData #GregoryBateson #Climbing #Cycling #BikePacking #tfr

Strange Attractorhttps://strange-attractor.org/
Bateson Idea Grouphttps://batesonideagroup.org/
ORCiDhttps://orcid.org/0000-0003-3872-6862
Twitterhttps://twitter.com/gasperak

I'm saddened by the number of friends and acquaintances lost to climbing-related accidents in recent years.

Bailee lit up any room or any activity with her magnetic, infectious smile and laughter, and our community is reeling from this news.

https://gripped.com/news/climber-dies-after-fall-in-colorados-alpine/

#Boulder #Colorado #climbing

Climber Dies After Fall in Colorado's Alpine - Gripped Magazine

The climber was ascending a classic rock ridge on Ypsilon Mountain in Rocky Mountain National Park

Gripped Magazine

@mammoth This open bug issue for the iOS app is a showstopper for me. If this isn't fixed as a high priority, I will stop using the app. For me, the iOS app is completely unusable in its current form if posts are missing from the timeline.

https://github.com/TheBLVD/mammoth/issues/58

Timeline doesn't fetch all post since the last read/watched post · Issue #58 · TheBLVD/mammoth

Describe the bug If the timeline is automatically or manually updated, the timeline fetches only posts of the past 60 minutes instead of all posts since the last read/watched posts. To Reproduce Op...

GitHub
*I'm too much of an anarchist to think that job has to equal vocation. If anything in this time we live in, any decent, vaguely morally conscious UX designer should be busy counter-designing the shit they're being paid to make imo. Stop giving your all to fucking capital you eejits.

Megan Devine’s voice and orientation to grief has been a clear beam of light for me within a year of hazy fog. I think this recent podcast conversation with Mark Groves should be essential listening for everyone.

More and more I'm convinced that one of the most important gifts we can give anyone in life – including ourselves – is to be seen, heard, and understood.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rDM2B-0eU_M

It’s Okay That You’re Not Okay: Coping with Grief & Loss with Megan Devine | The Mark Groves Podcast

YouTube

“If the pursuit of profit is considered as the only means of salvation for mankind, turnover becomes the absolute priority, and, consequently, the existent has to be disregarded or ignored or suppressed.”

—John Berger, The Shape of a Pocket

At some point the wave of tech layoffs should start to impact CompSci, HCI, UX education which has provided unquestioned tuition dollars for many institutions almost since the dot com crash 20 years ago.

Otoh, grad study is counter cyclical, with (privileged) redundants taking the opportunity to redirect their practice by 'going back to school.'

Now is the moment Universities need boldly comprehensive & critical programs in responsible innovation & cosmopolitan degrowth.

Where are they?

Reading about the politics of care (Matters of Care), and it occurs to me how science has become in many senses irresponsible in the way it objectifies and detaches itself from matters of concern (we expect this of business: move along, nothing to see here). This, of course, was Bruno Latour's point.

Maria Puig de la Bellacasa: Matters of care in technoscience

https://doi.org/10.1177/0306312710380301

We have a flawed notion of valuing "independence" over all else, and scorn at any notion of "dependence" on others.
The truth is as humans, as a society, humans are INTERDEPENDENT on each other.
We might benefit from remembering & understanding this.

". . . [P]eople’s tendency to define themselves against one another. Imagine two people getting into an argument about some minor political disagreement but, after an hour, ending up taking positions so intransigent that they find themselves on completely opposite sides of some ideological divide — even taking extreme positions they would never embrace under ordinary circumstances, just to show how much they completely reject the other’s points. They start out as moderate social democrats of slightly different flavors; before a few heated hours are over, one has somehow become a Leninist, the other an advocate of the ideas of Milton Friedman. We know this kind of thing can happen in arguments. Bateson suggested such processes can become institutionalized on a cultural level as well. How, he asked, do boys and girls in Papua New Guinea come to behave differently, despite the fact that no one ever explicitly instructs them about how boys and girls are supposed to behave? It’s not just by imitating their elders; it’s also because boys and girls each learn to find the behaviour of the opposite sex distasteful and try to be as little like them as possible. What start as minor learned differences become exaggerated until women come to think of themselves as, and then increasingly actually become, everything that men are not. And, of course, men do the same thing towards women.

Bateson was interested in the psychological processes within societies, but there’s every reason to believe something similar happens between societies as well. People come to define themselves against their neighbours. Urbanites thus become urbane, as barbarians become more barbarous. If ‘national character’ can really be said to exist, it can only be as a result of such schismogenic processes: English people trying to become as little as possible like French, French people as little like Germans, and so on. If nothing else, they will all definitely exaggerate their differences in arguing with one another."

#GregoryBateson #DavidGraeber #DavidWengorw #DawnOfEverything #schismogenisis

Watching the fallout from the recent storm and thinking about how every major climate crisis is also an infant feeding crisis, a maternal health crisis, a structural racism amplification crisis, an infectious disease crisis, a food security crisis, a no-sick leave crisis, a housing shortage crisis, etc, etc, etc....and how on the other hand every climate crisis avoided (by mitigation and by better planning and more equity) avoids all these ripples of suffering.