
After the documentary we took about a kilometer walk from ODD headquarters to Berea Centre to “people watch”. Basically this exercise was to observe people and identify our surroundings. The walk itself was an act to observe the details of the pavement and street against the people who negotiate them. Back at headquarters, we each jotted down points of what we had seen or experienced during the “people watch”. The idea of people watching was an exercise to listen, observe and speak less. In order to represent people ethically, there is a need to ‘’connect’’ our data driven work and the reality from which the data emerges — the walk and people watching was an attempt to make this critical connection.
We then had a discussion about the difference and implications of three key-words (borrowed from the principles of photography) which are closely linked to our work;
- Framing: in photography and composition, the idea of framing is the creation of a image. The question here was, how can we better frame data upon computing it?
- Representation: the idea of art as a presentation or representation of reality. ODD works with data which is supposed to represent a solution or problem, it is important to understand that the act of framing is a delicate one, is the data still representing the reality once it has gone through spreadsheets, computation and preparation?
- Presentation: can one unadulteratedly present reality through DATA? And since this is our work, we ought to constantly ask ourselves, how can we get better at this?
Open Data Durban is not an organisation that just builds cool websites or applications. Open Data Durban is an organisation that is trying to facilitate social change. During this session, we were able to identify the importance of user centric design meaning that our work is based on solving problems for the community. We realised that we need to empathise and try to understand the problems of the people and therefore can we only fully drive social change and make a difference in the community.


