Pierre’s logs

levers for change + all things sustainable 
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The Future of User Interfaces: a dozen potential future user interfaces that we’ll be seeing over the next few years

User interfaces—the way we interact with our technologies—have evolved a lot over the years.

From the original punch cards and printouts to monitors, mouses, and keyboards, all the way to the track pad, voice recognition, and interfaces designed to make it easier for the disabled to use computers, interfaces have progressed rapidly within the last few decades.

But there’s still a long way to go and there are many possible directions that future interface designs could take. We’re already seeing some start to crop up and its exciting to think about how they’ll change our lives.

In this article are than a dozen potential future user interfaces that we’ll be seeing over the next few years (and some further into the future).

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Filed under  //   design   future   hardware   interface   user experience  

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Sustainability is becoming mainstream, customers are demanding it and it is becoming clear that it can make good economic sense

Some standouts for me from the conference [Agriculture 2.0] (in order of appearance not importance!)

Tod Murphy from Vermont’s Farmer’s Diner. He talked about working with farmers and creating a business that was successful and practical. Love that his diner serves the farmers he buys products from.

Carol Kramer LeBlanc, from US Department of Agriculture where she serves as the director of Sustainable Development. Her talk was interesting because she outlined all the new programs available to farmers. Cannot wait to see the impact of these new programs in our rural communities!

Diana Endicott from Good Natured Farms a cooperative of 18 family farms in Kansas and Missouri. Very inspiring woman and organization. Great model for farmers getting together to save rural communities.

Craig Wichner who founded Vital Farmland, LP which invests in farmland and turns it into organic/sustainable farms. Would love to talk to him about all the farmland we have in upstate New York!

Pam Marrone, from Marrone Biopesticides an organic pesticide alternative manufacturer. Very impressed with her presentation, frankly a lot of the talk went over my head but from what I gathered she is a one-woman scientific powerhouse that has been creating patented biopesticides. Seems like there is a lot of exciting stuff that is and will be coming out of her company. Very cool.

Melina Shannon-DiPietro from Yale Sustainable Food Projects who spoke about the energy and commitment of today’s college student. Very inspiring and true, young people want to change the world with their minds and bodies. Cannot wait to see the energy these young people bring to farming and food in America!

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Filed under  //   ag20   agriculture   business   change   food   future   social change   sustainability   sustainable  

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Worldchanging.com: 10 Big, Really Hard Things We Can Do to Save the Planet

Article Photo
There are no simple steps worth caring about. We'll only head off disaster by taking steps -- together -- that are massive, societal and thorough. Most of what needs to be done involves political engagement, systems redesign, and cultural change. It can't be done in an afternoon and then forgotten about.
So screw the little things. Here are 10 big, difficult, world-changing concepts we can get behind.
  1. ELIMINATE NUCLEAR WEAPONS
  2. STABILIZE THE BOTTOM BILLION
  3. CREATE A GLOBALLY TRANSPARENT SOCIETY
  4. BE PREPARED, GLOBALLY
  5. EMPOWER WOMEN
  6. ENABLE A FUTURE FORWARD DIET
  7. DOCUMENT ALL LIFE
  8. NEGOTIATE AN EFFECTIVE CLIMATE TREATY
  9. BUILD BRIGHT GREEN CITIES
  10. BUILD NO NEW HIGHWAYS
Read more >> worldchanging.com

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Filed under  //   cities   climate   future   green   human rights   life   nuclear weapons   save the world   sustainability  

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Future of PR: When Agencies Represent Communities –Not Brands by Jeremiah

If communities assert control over what products they want, will (PR) agencies follow suit?

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Filed under  //   community   future   pr   strategy  

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the wisdom project | a thousand tomorrows

In tribal society, the elders were the undisputed decisionmakers, as those worshipped for their wisdom. They could rely on multigenerational experience and understanding. In the knowledge society, we tend to forget the step of wisdom, which is at the lonely top of the ladder starting from data, to information, to knowledge.

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Filed under  //   elders   future   knowledge   knowledge society   organization 2.0   society  

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The Future of Money


Chinese symbol for friendship

  • The global money system no longer works in our best interests; we need a serious overhaul of money - and of our attitude towards it.  Based on the four mega-trends of monetary instability, the ageing global population, the information revolution, and climate change, Bernard Lietaer looks at different scenarios of what the world might be like in 2020.
    1. The Corporate Millennium: governments are disbanded, central banks become irrelevant, and the world is run with Big Brother control by huge corporations with their own currencies.
    2. Caring Communities: after a monetary crash, people retreat into small, self-sustaining communities, like tribes.
    3. Hell on Earth: in which the breakdown of life as we know it is followed by a highly individualistic free-for-all, resulting in an ever more obscene gulf between rich and poor.
    4. Sustainable Abundance: envisages a world where we take better care of the environment, re-engage the poor and the unemployed in mainstream society and give back time and fufilment to the over-worked, while providing the elderly with a high level of personal care.
     A society of Sustainable Abundance is achievable - but only if we are willing to re-think our money system and use money innovations that have already proven effective somewhere in the world today.

    http://www.lietaer.com/books/futureofmoney.html
  • If the thought of eliminating money still troubles you, consider this: If a group of people with gold, diamonds and money were stranded on an island that had no resources such as food, clean air and water, their wealth would be irrelevant to their survival. It is only when resources are scarce that money can be used to control their distribution. One could not, for example, sell the air we breathe or water abundantly flowing down from a mountain stream. Although air and water are valuable, in abundance they cannot be sold.
    Money is only important in a society when certain resources for survival must be rationed and the people accept money as an exchange medium for the scarce resources. Money is a social convention, an agreement if you will. It is neither a natural resource nor does it represent one. It is not necessary for survival unless we have been conditioned to accept it as such.

    http://www.thevenusproject.com/anewResource.php
  • Advantages of open money

    • Decentralized: no need for a centralized issuer like a bank, which means no threats from a centralized power.
    • Free: no interest is practiced because there is no issuer that makes a business of it. The only cost is the one of the infrastructure, which is a flat marginal cost, not an exponential one like in the interest.
    • Peer-to-peer: the total quantity of money in the community is determined in realtime by peer-to-peer exchange. There is no centralized authority that determines how much, where and when the quantity of money should be allocated. These can be seen as distributed fractal feedback loops to regulate the system and make it resilient.
    • Controlled by the people: the rules of circulation, credit limits, taxes, decision making processes, etc, are controlled by the community itself. These settings can be configured via software.
    • Sufficient: because based on mutual credit?, i.e. there's never a lack of money since it is created upon the needs/wants streaming.
    • Holoptical: transparent between users, and users have access to the meta level of the system to understand and regulate its whole equilibrium.
    • Adapted to all needs and all communities: whether communities are based on a local territory or a virtual one, each community exists because it has a circulating offer/demand within it. It can be time exchange, objects, services, knowledge... in a competitive or collaborative economy. Mainstream currencies only serve competitive markets, open money serves whatever market since it is sufficient and can be applied in any context.
    • Connected to any "real" or "virtual" value: any community currency can be based on a "real" value (time, gold, kilowatt, kilo of potatoes, oil, distance...) or a "virtual" value (i.e. no relation to anything in the real world, it is just a unit of exchange used by the community)

    http://www.thetransitioner.org/wen/tiki-index.php?page=Open+Money

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Filed under  //   economy   future   future of money   lietaer   money   sustainability   transitioner  

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Lilypad : A floating ecopolis for climate refugees

PROGRAM : Floating Ecopolis for Climate Refugees / Mixing Uses
LOCATION : Oceans
SURFACE AREA : 500.000 m²
PERSPECTIVES : Philippe Steels www.pixelab.be
ARCHITECT : Vincent Callebaut http://vincent.callebaut.org

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Filed under  //   architecture   climate   future   refugee   urban  

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