So, there I was on Tues­day night, with an invite to go to the inaug­ural mo:life net­work­ing night and feel­ing very res­ist­ant. Mobile phone con­tent pro­du­cers? I knew it was import­ant to keep in touch with the industry and the person organ­ising it is someone I really like (she was the pro­du­cer of Sounds like Techno). But I was wor­ried it would be like the early days of the mul­ti­me­dia industry and the get-togeth­ers we used to have in East Sydney (that’s how I ori­gin­ally met Richard Fidler, because his part­ner is a mul­ti­me­dia artist and they used to go to it). It’s not that I didn’t used to enjoy it: I did. But I’ve changed. Or at least I’d like to think so.

Anyhow… I went. Partly because I thought it would be good to touch base for use in my teach­ing, partly for old times’ sake. I was keenly aware that I was no longer the editor of a magazine that would make use of this net­work­ing; that I was not a freel­ance journ­al­ist likely to cover it; that I am not myself a con­tent cre­ator in this arena. 

I was sur­prised how much I enjoyed myself. The space is great – Keren lives there as well as it being a funky artspace. And there was a very inter­est­ing present­a­tion by some people about a closed pilot for a mobile/broadband series called Girl Friday.

But it does call for some ser­i­ous exam­in­a­tion here: if this is no longer ‘my industry’, what is?

And then when that was done, drjon and I played my first game of Scrabble with my grand­father’s old Scrabble set. That was very, very good.

And last night, I caught up with jon­ck­her for a drink and con­ver­sa­tion that meandered every­where and back again. That was good too.