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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
Unplanned hiatus over? Hopefully? Some unexpected events took me away from having much free hobby time and gemini and most of my other hobbies have been nixed for a bit. I do smolZINE for fun and while I think I did a good job of staying on schedule for quite a while, I just don't know if that schedule will workout consistently going forward. I think I'll keep the every other week schedule as my goal but it will likely be a guideline rather than a hard schedule. Issues may be late or sometimes missed. I'm not going to beat myself up about it and just release issues as time permits. smolZINE continues on but will be a bit more sporadic and/or brief at times. Thank you for you understanding.
We also have a very special contribution to this issue that reflects on the ideas that drew a lot of us to gemini. Don't miss The small things Manifesto, it's great.
Are you a fan of read it later services such Wallabag, Pocket or Instapaper? If you are then geminaut nytpu has a treat for you. They have just released Lasso, a read it later service for gemini!
A fun capsule with a non-typical navigation structure that is more of a narrative than the usual plain list of links. Some fun links to explore in this one.
The capsule of the author of new gemini client "vimini". Links to other projects and a gemlog here as well. The capsule is available in English and Spanish.
A good variety to discover in this capsule including recipes, music, tech stuff and a gemlog.
by Andrew Roach
Many of the major technological and cultural innovations of the last several hundred years have served to flatten the world, eliminate or obviate distance, and bring us closer together as people. Printing, transportation, telephone, radio, television, home video, and the internet have each, in their own way, made our impact on the world bigger, and made parts of the world smaller.
But this came at a price.
Technology is not a net good, or even a neutral force. Technology is a Force Multiplier. It reshapes the world to fit the vision of those who design it, regulate it, and wield it. Oil companies poison our lakes and rivers, slowly boiling our planet. Facebook tracks everything we do online and uses that data to make us miserable. Disney owns an outsized portion of modern folklore. The FCC decides who gets to launch a radio station, and under what circumstances. Television turns reasonable people in to rabid fans of raving monsters, and turns raving monsters in to celebrities, politicians and thought leaders.
It does not have to be this way.
It is this way thanks to a combination of factors, most of which can be summarized as “The Profit Motive.” For some companies, making people angry is a surefire way to drive Engagement, and driving Engagement is a surefire way to make money. For other companies, the money lies in controlling our access to our own culture, gatekeeping who is allowed to tell stories, and when, and how. For these major corporations, there is no incentive to Help, to Improve. There’s no money in making the world a better place.
It will not be easy.
Most new technologies, but especially Digital technologies, experience a period between inception and corporatization during which they florish as a result of a bunch of disparate people with distinct goals who Explore the space that the technology creates, often without regard for profit of any kind, or at least with some motivation beyond pure profit. Then there is, usually, a period of contraction and consolidation around the things that have made the most money (or, in the case of television, have had the most Regulatory support from the corrupt FCC) and you’re left with HBO/DISCOVERY, Disney, Facebook, and Joe Rogan.
But we can reject the profit motive!
Local theater still happens, in spite of the fact that it stopped being profitable ~100 years ago. Local music still happens, in spite of the fact that only 1 band in 100 is going to make their living making music, and significantly fewer than that are ever going to Make It. Small creators make video games in their spare time because they enjoy it. Hundreds of people work together to run free and open alternatives to major social media networks, funded out of their own pockets.
Ars Enim Mutare; Art for change
These things happen in isolation, from creators who make things because the want to make things. They toil, often in isolation, for little reward. This is a call to action for solidarity, and support and intentional creation. We can reshape the world, and support one another as we do it. We can opt out of activities that enrich corporations that seek to make us suffer or to destroy us. We can (and must) become our own media.
Small things are art, media, technology, and culture created by People who are treated fairly, for people who are treated fairly, shared freely and sustainably. There are no corporate overlords, no gatekeepers, no Web Scale Technologies, and no ways to get rich.
Because, in a world where Creation and Communication are heavilly commercialized, the act of Creating a Thing or building a community that doesn’t enrich our corporate overlords is a radical act.
Because big complicated communities and systems are hard to manage without the resources of a government or corporation. If we keep things at the Human Scale, rather than the Global Scale, we stand a chance of being successful at the Human Scale (that is to say, surviving and sustaining, building relationships, etc.)
Because 4 corporations control 90% of our news and entertainment media, three corporations control the vast majority of online communication, and no corporations give a single damn if we live or die. Too much power is consolidated in the hands of too few.
They buy off our politicians, influence who gets elected, write some of our laws, and ignore the ones that are inconvient. They’ve rigged the game such that they’re the only ones big enough to play.
We, as individuals and small communities, need to work together.
We must carve a new path.
This is a political document, describing the intentions, motivations, and views of a small group of people practicing community scale creation. Following these artistic, social, and technological principles might help lead to more fair and just societies.
We live in an era of unparalleled abundance, unevenly distributed. The Abundance created from our labor, from our creation, from our communities, is stolen from us, bundled up and smashed against the abundance of our neighbors, and sold back to us.
They leave us with artificial scarcity, while they feast on the abundance of our labor. This Large abundance enriches a powerful few at the expense of a disenfranchised many. The few and powerful have convinced themselves, or pretend among themselves, that the abundance they steal from us is something that they create, and that it can Grow Forever.
This is, of course, nonsense. Nothing can grow forever. Indiscriment growth is harmful and destructive, and the consolidation of wealth and power in to the hands of so few is both destructive and useless. Capitalism, in it’s current form, is a cancer that will consume and destroy everything
This large abundance goes to waste, and those who create it are forced to make do on the scraps that remain. Every dollar in the pocket of a billionaire, not being spent, gathering dust, collecting interest, is a dollars worth of food that is not on a worker’s table.
We do not have to accept this. In fact, we cannot accept this. We must reject the illusion of infinite growth, support one another, and embrace our small abundance.
We are building a movement, but we are building a movement Made of People. Small groups of people form communities. Groups of communities form networks. Networks of small communities can accomplish more and make decisions faster than one large group.
We can and should care about our neighbors, our community members. We look out for one another. We tell our stories. We protect our community, and make sure everyone is fed and housed to the best of our abilities.
Big technology is extractive, oppressive, and a tool for indoctrination and radicalization. Small technology is technology for People. Human scale technology. Understandable, implementable, respectful. It does not spy on you, it does not steal from you, it does not seek to manipulate you.
Small Technology is a Big Topic that deserves more words than I’ll give it here.
Write a blog, start a newsletter, maybe use the fediverse. Whatever you end up doing, avoid Facebook and google wherever you can.
Send an email, run an element server, don’t let Gmail and Facebook control your communication.
Syncthing and nextcloud work as well as dropbox, and don’t spy on you.
Host your own website. Use wordpress or neocities or some other platform. If you don’t want to pay to rent a server, run something like yunohost on a raspberry pi in a closet in your home. It won’t be available 100% of the time, and it won’t be fast, but it’ll be Good Enough and you’ll learn a lot along the way.
Free tools for creation exist and are great. Look at Krita, glimpse, kdenlive, and dozens of others. All of the work I do is powered by free software.
Make things because you like to make them. Share things because you want to share them. People have done this since the dawn of time. Members of the Arts and Crafts group the Roycrofter were self publishing zines in the 1890s using letterpress, Lainsville TV and The Videofreex were producing independent television with the first consumer video cameras.
You don’t need budget, you don’t need technology, you just need something to say.
This is a list of things that are small. Not every thing on this list will conform to every principle of the small things manifesto, but they all have a similar flavor.
By their very nature, Zines (self published, DIY magazines) are Small. They’re usually hand made. They’re usually distributed freely or cheaply. Go embrace Zines and Comix from your local book or record store.
The internet does not have to belong to Amazon and Google and Facebook. Projects like Gemini imagine a new kind of web. Projects like the fediverse (see Mastodon or Hometown) create an alternative to Twitter and Facebook. Tilde servers, and places like SDF provide a place for communities of tech enthusiasts to get together outside the control of a massive corporation.
Email is, outside of gmail and yahoo mail, still Federated and peer to peer.
Services like Peertube (which powers New Ellijay TV) allow sharing even videos from underpowered simple computers on home internet connections, and projects like yunohost simplify the maintenance and deployment for self hosting on simple cheap computers.
Most podcasts are Small Media, even if they don’t consider themselves to be. They’re independently produced media distributed using small technology (RSS). Corporations like Spotify and Apple and Google have attempted to gatekeep podcasts, but anyone can go to most podcast’s website and download and subscribe with any podcatcher.
Many podcasts lean in to this, distributing under an entirely open license.
Most podcasts start real rough around the edges, not only is that Fine, it’s also Good. Embrace imprefections. Reject perfection.
Lots of small music gets made every day. Most DIY/Punk is small music, but to my mind there has never been a more perfect example of the Ethos of Small Production than All Hail West Texas by The Mountain Goats. Recorded on the internal mic of a boombox, it’s a Deeply emotional and absolutely perfect record that lives in, reslishes in, its flaws. “Hail Satan, tonight.”
It’s not CC licensed, but it predates the entire concept, so I can’t fault it.
...
Continued at:
https://ajroach42.com/the-small-things-manifesto/
Editor's Note:
I would like to thank Andrew for not only allowing me to publish this in smolZINE but for writing it in the first place and acting on it with his whole heart. It's great to see and it is inspiring and encouraging. Hopefully we see plenty of others join in and make our world a better place. Please do go on over to the original manifesto and read the whole thing. Also, checkout all the amazing things they are doing over there in Ellijay to make their community and beyond what they want it to be.
by carriunix
. . . . . . . . . ♙ ♔ . . . . . . . . . . . . . ♟ ♙ . . ♞ . . . . . . ♜ . ♝ . . . ♖ ♖ . . . . ♙ . . . ♚ . . . . . . . . . . . . Black (♟) mate in 4.
by kelbot
To play Stinky Pinky you will need to read the two descriptions below. They each describe a word and the two words rhyme. Example: 1. Smelly, 2. Finger; Answer: Stinky Pinky. Get it? You can email your answer to the address found at the bottom of each smolZINE to confirm if you are correct. The first to answer wins...uhhh I haven't figured that out yet so my congrats will have to do for now.
1. Very small
2. Reflective
Please consider taking part in making this zine better and more diverse by contributing your thoughts and finds. If you are interested in contributing a short article or capsule picks email me at: smolzine (at) cyberbot.space.
If you have any feedback or just want to discuss anything related to gemini or smolZINE hit me up at the above email or ping me on the fediverse at kelbot@retro.social and/or use the #smolZINE tag.
Thank you to the following geminauts for their contributions to this issue of smolZINE.