In Huntsville (the city I live in), people often joke how "the world has six degrees of separation, but Huntsville has just two." In that spirit I decided to try a an experiment with SocialNetworks to see if I could get two people who didn't know each other to recognize each other as "on the network". The experiment needed the following properties: * A definitive way to determine who was on the network and who was not. * A way for people in the experiment to recognize each other. * A way to avoid false hits - i.e. people who already knew each other would not cause a hit. * A way for a successful hit to be reported back to me. * A way to include those without computer access. To accomplish this, I did the following: * I adapted my chainmail work and created literally hundreds of cheap "fidget toys" - out of 16g galvanized steel at about 0.05$ each to create, about 60$ total. * I gave the fidget toys to everyone I knew for free with the instructions "If you see someone you don't know with one, talk to them, then report back to me" * I distributed the toys for three months. and. . . I finally got a hit! A girl who started working at a new restaurant recognized another playing with the toy and introduced herself - then reported the incident back to me. I knew Huntsville was small. . . Fidget toy pic http://www.mailleartisans.org/gallery/pics/16870firstmobiusball.jpg --LayneThomas ---- There is a similar "experiment" (not in the scientific sense) being done with US and Canadian paper currency at http://www.wheresgeorge.com. See http://directory.google.com/Top/Recreation/Collecting/Paper_Money/Tracking_Bank_Notes/ for the Euro and other currencies. ---- See: SocialNetworks SixDegreesOfSeparationTheory ---- CategoryInteraction