Joao Pires

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Stories By Joao Pires

  • Communication and Revolutions

    In the last days of 2010 the youth of Middle East started a movement that come to be known as the Arab Spring. A series of revolutions, fuelled by discontent of the status quo in Middle East and North Africa swept the region. The leaders, most of them dictators, were taken by surprise by the strength of the movement. Although the discontent about how their countries were run was the main reason behind most of these revolutions, they were only possible due to Social Media. Tools like Twitter and WhatsApp made it possible for people to communicate and share their views. It made possible for the people to realise that they were not alone! The situation regarding Social Media has been complicated in Turkey especially since Erdogan come to power, some 13 years ago. For the last years, and mainly since the Arab Spring began, it's common practice for Turkey to block access to sites like Twitter, Facebook or YouTube. The President himself swore to "wipe out" Twitter, after allegations of corruption in his inner circle. What the Turkish government has been doing for the last decade and half regarding Social Media and the internet at large, is nothing new. The most important tool to maintain power, and to grab power is communication. A simple message can make or break a revolution, Erdogan know about this. Since the printing press and the rise of literacy, communication has been one of the most important aspects of any political or military action. All revolutions begin with three objectives – acquisition of arms, control of strategic access points and control of communications. When in 1918 the Bolsheviks took power from the Tsar, one of their first targets was the telegraph posts. Later, when Hitler rose to power he made it a priority to have an office dedicated to communications with Leni Riefenstahl helming the efforts. Later in the XX Century miss communication led to the fall of the Berlin Wall. The point is, communications, passing your message and having the people know what you think can – and will – change the course of history. Yesterday's events in Turkey were a surprise to the outside world, maybe not so much to the Turkish leaders. Everything is speculation at this point. What isn't speculation though, is that the coup failed. The story of the coup is one of mismanaged communication. When news of what was happening first came out, the story being told was that the army operatives had taken control of state TV and was in control of a bridge in the Bosporus, troops were marching in Ankara and president Erdogan's location was unknown. Everything was running smooth for the perpetrators until Erdogan used the tools he despised in his favor. At some point during the night, Erdogan made a Face Time call to a private TV asking for his supporters to go on to the street and show their support. That message was the turning point during the night. Other messages were sent, mainly SMS to journalists and friends, asking the people to take on the street. At first, the news coming out were that only a few people were supporting the president, soon the support reached critical mass, and unless the military were ready to kill their countrymen, they had lost before being able to win. The military failed to take control of the communications, it failed to capture President Erdogan and eventually failed to do was it set out to do, a forceful regime change in Turkey. What is about to change in Turkey is unknown, but what we can know for sure is that Erdogan, now more than ever, knows how communication and especially social media, can be a game where you win or you die...

    By Joao Pires Read More
  • What I've Learned From Pokémon Go!

    It was just a few days ago that Pokémon Go! saw the light of day, brought by the people that gave us Ingress, just a few years ago. Back then Niantic was still a part of Google – their paths have since parted. When I first started playing the game I was immediately hooked. The first day alone I was level 7 with more than 15 Pokémon's caught – and this was accomplished while Niantic servers were on fire. During the weekend that followed I kept playing. Saturday alone I walked close to 17 Kms (10 miles) in my home city. But as my levelling was slowing down – which I assumed was normal – an idea started crawling in my mind. In the time I've played the game I've meet a few people playing just like I did. I captured some Gyms, learned a few quirks of the game – never leave your best Pokémon on a Gym – I enjoyed my time. But today I quit. Yes, I quit the game that in its week old infancy. The quitting part wasn't because of a particular thing Niantic did. I quit the game because of everything Niantic did! Pokémon Go! is addictive! Coincidence or not, the weekend I was binging on Pokémon Go! was also the weekend I bought a brand new Apple Watch. Although the game doesn't support Apple Watch – Niantic and The Pokémon Company are selling a bracelet after all – I used it in conjunction with the game to track how I did fitness wise. And how I did surprise me. For those who don't know, the Apple Watch has a fitness app that will display 3 circles - they indicate how you're doing on your daily activity. After a few days if you keep up with the good work you start getting achievements and medals. It's a fitness game, to a degree, just like Pokémon Go! is a fitness game – you have to do stuff in real life to get a pixel reward! But why am I quitting Pokémon Go! you insist? Well here's what I learned from the last few days. I really like having battery on my phone! Niantic's game sucks the life of every device it's running on, be it an iPhone 6S with its 1715mAh capacity, or my boyfriend's Nexus 6 with its 3220mAh battery. In fact, the Nexus was losing battery at twice the rate the iPhone was! Also, standing in the same place doing nothing but waiting is not really that great for your workout – I'm being generous here calling walking a workout, but it's the closest I've been to actually workout in the last 3 years. While playing Pokémon Go! the player is invited to use items to lure Pokémon (and people). These items last for 30 mins, and from my experience a Pokémon spawns every 5 minutes or so, which means you'll be sitting for 30 minutes in the same place to catch some 6 or so Pokémon. Meanwhile you keep losing battery! Last thing that had learned in the last week and had me decide quitting the game is that, this game is really, really addictive! I mean, I've played World of Warcraft in a semi-successful guild, and in Star Wars: The Old Republic I was raid leader for a server's top PVE guild, so I know an addictive game when I play one. That being said, I never dreamed of a game and woke up to check if I had enough potions for tomorrow. I even played the game a little bit at work – which is rather useless since my company's office is in the middle of nowhere. Pokémon Go! is too good for me. It was killing my productivity, I wasn't doing that much workout as I intended, and by devices were screaming in dear agony for more juice. And with that, I quit! I mean, I didn't quit QUIT, I will be playing the game, from time to time, just not every possible walking hour. I will try and catch all Pokémon – I am a digital hoarded. But I will not keep my iPhone upside down with the screen turned off in hopes of saving batter, and I will not have my headphone in my head all the time trying to find out when have I reached that Poke Stop. What I will do however is keep exercising. I'll walk at least some 15 Km's every day. I'll keep being active, and I'll keep being a digital hoarder. What I will not do however, is hurt my productivity because of a game – no matter how good it is, nor how good it can potentially be to you!

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