Seoul Digital Forum 2014
Unlike for the 2012 edition*, I decided not to attend SDF 2014 with a "Press" card, but to remain in the audience... which still leaves opportunities to chat with innovators, particularly when they are launching impromptu roundtables at the cafe**, like Alan Mycroft, the enthusiastic father of Raspberry Pi who succeeded in bringing fun back into computer science and students back to both schools and playgrounds. Needless to say, Mycroft wishes Korea's education system were less destructive for creativity.
By the way: this country would be a much better place if failures were recognized as an indispensable component of innovation. In the wake of the Sewol tragedy more than ever, we must learn how to learn from our mistakes, instead of just firing people before they accumulate experience.
And let's not deter those who are willing to try, or turn down a 15 year-old because he's 15 year-old. Let's keep in mind that at that ripe age, Jack Andraka invented his 3-cent cancer detector:
Andraka also called for a democratization of science papers, which should be available for free - knowledge as a human right - twitter.com/theseoulvillage/status/469346406327529473 |
1982, Korea's maiden internet network (the first outside the US). Meet its father, Kilnam Chon, at Seoul Digital Forum. twitter.com/theseoulvillage/status/468913159601152002 |
Innovators need to be empowered, though, and that's what Mark Randall loves to do. At Adobe, he pushed the suggestion box to the next level by offering a "Kickbox" to all collaborators willing to develop a pet project. Nothing revolutionary, but a concrete message: we give you a process, some money, total freedom, so that you can give your best. And it works.
In any case, never forget to have fun. Like Guy Hoffman when he improvises on piano with his robot. Hoffman's take at anthropomorphy in robotics is not of the 'creepy' kind, like Hiroshi Ishiguro's*: instead of reaching for the most realistic humanoid, he focuses on human-robot interactions, UI/UX, and particularly body language, a universal, emotionally loaded language that speaks volumes.
Travis, Hoffman's latest cute bot was on stage at the Dongdaemun Design Plaza, for a closer look and a more comprehensive understanding of his work, check his TEDx talk in Jaifa (more videos on his website - http://guyhoffman.com/category/topvideo):
As computers around us keep getting smarter, and as the best brains collaborate to decypher the human brain and make the next computers even smarter***, it's somehow reassuring to see masses embrace a technophobic human relying on his own intellect. But there as well, it takes a lot of work to make your creation look brilliant: "Sherlock" co-author Steven Moffat confessed that neither Benedict Cumberbatch nor himself were superior minds. And I presume that a robotic arm would have certainly come in handy for Moffat's book signing marathon - this waiting line tells a lot about Sherlock's popularity in Korea:
twitter.com/theseoulvillage/status/469293346062495744 |
Yes, there were a few dull talks too - but again, failures are part of the innovation process. And the young participants to the first Global Hackathon will learn as much from their failures as from their successes. Maybe the Australian leader of the winning team will even learn to share the stage more gracefully in the future - but he doesn't need that if he's looking for a Job(s).
The 11th edition of SDF is over but, as a famous cyborg said, "I'll be back".
mot-bile 2014
* see "Seoul Digital Forum: Return To The Future"
** I wish I had more time to chat with KIM Sangbae, a MIT expert in biomimetics who does amazing things by learning from geckos, cheetahs, meshworms or cockroaches (check the (vi)vids on http://biomimetics.mit.edu/videos). The following day, in his talk, KIM showed the part of BBC's fascinating 'Meat eaters' with the cheetah, pointing out the position and the role of the tail during the hunt, but what strikes me each time I watch this slow motion masterpiece is the eerie stability of the predator's head, like a Steadicam locked on its prey.
*** looking forward to the findings and applications of the Blue Brain and Human Brain projects (Henry Markram - EPFL)... and to tasting the cherry-mushroom mix recommended by Cognitive Cooking (Rob High - IBM Watson).
SDF 2014, the program:
Wednesday May 21
09:00-09:10 Opening Ceremony & Keynote Address Opening & Congratulatory Remarks
09:10 - 09:30 ‘‘The Beginning of ‘New TIME’”
09:30 - 10:00 [KEY1 ‘Connect’] CHON Kilnam
10:00 - 10:30 [KEY2 ‘Capture’] Luis von AHN
10:50 - 11:10 [KEY3 ‘Resonance’] AN Yongil
11:10 - 11:30 [KEY4 ‘Unprejudiced’] WI Euiseok
11:30 - 11:50 [KEY5 ‘Wear’] Eric FRIEDMAN
12:50 - 13:10 [KEY6 ‘Programmable’] Alan MYCROFT
13:10 - 13:30 [KEY7 ‘Working Together’] Lia NAVARRO
13:30 - 13:50 [KEY8 ‘Borderless’] Tony LYU
13:50 - 14:30 [KEY9 ‘Simply Brilliant’]Alfredo MOSER, Illac DIAZ, Claire RIGBY
15:10 - 15:35 [KEY10 ‘Universal’]Sylvia CHAN-OLMSTED, RHEE June Woong
15:35 - 15:55 [KEY11 ‘Empathy’] Laura and Chris AMICO
16:00 - 16:20 [KEY12 ‘Emotional Innovation’] Kwame FERREIRA
16:20 - 16:40 [KEY13 ‘Understanding’] Simon Seojoon KIM
16:40 - 17:20 [KEY14 ‘Radical Connectivity’] Nicco MELE, YOON Youngchul
Thursday May 22
09:00-09:50 Keynote Address
09:10 - 09:50 [KEY15 ‘Uncommon Sense’] Steven MOFFAT & Sue VERTUE
09:50 - 10:10 [KEY16 ‘Brain-reading’] Henry MARKRAM
10:10 - 10:30 [KEY17 ‘Mind-reading’] Rob HIGH
10:50 - 11:10 [KEY18 ‘Moving Design’] KIM Bongjin
11:10 - 11:30 [KEY19 ‘Cure’] YUN Kyongsik, CHO Dongcharn
11:30 - 12:00 [KEY20 ‘Communication & Reflection’] HWANG Kyung-Sig & SON Wha-Chul
13:20 - 13:40 [KEY21 ‘Bridging by Sharing’] LEE Sangchul
13:40 - 14:00 [KEY22 ‘Creativity Within’] Mark RANDALL
14:00 - 14:20 [KEY23 ‘Unwalled Curiosity’] Jack ANDRAKA
14:20 - 14:40 [KEY24 ‘Seeing without Seeing’] Pete ECKERT
15:10 - 15:30 [KEY25 ‘Truth’] KWON Hyejin
15:30 - 15:50 [KEY26 ‘Learn from Nature’] KIM Sangbae
16:00 - 16:20 [KEY27 ‘A Duet’] Guy HOFFMAN
16:20 - 17:00 [KEY28 ‘Amplify’] Daniel Dae KIM, CHANG Tae You, KIM Younghyun, PARK Sangyean
17:10 - 17:50 [KEY29 ‘Hope’] The 1st Global Hackathon Ceremony (“善 Challenge”)
17:50 - 17:55 Closing Remarks · The End
Alternate programs:
SDF DeepDive I - Gaming as Illness and Social Remedies by Graduate School of Culture Technology, KAIST (14:30-17:00 Wednesday May 21) - LEE Dongman, SHIN Yee-jin, PARK Juyong, DOH Young Yim, KIM Huy Kang, SONG Gil-young, Jake SONG, LEE Wonjae, Park Jun Hyun, WOO Jae Joon
SDF DeepDive II - The 1st Global Hackathon “善 Challenge”by AppCenter with SBS Foundation (For 4 days & 3 nights Monday-Thursday May 19-22) - 100 contestants from 16 nations
SDF DeepDive III - Master Class for Media Writing: The Formula for Successful Storytellingby Korea TV & Radio Writers Association with SBS Foundation (14:00-18:40 Thursday May 22) - Steven MOFFAT, Ekuni KAORI