future

Transcendent Man Delayed

by Brian on 03-22-2011

in belief,economics,science

Just noticed there’s a new documentary about Ray Kurzweil and his big ideas (transhumanism, artificial intelligence, technological singularity, etc.). The movie’s called Transcendent Man: … offering [Kurzweil's] vision of a future in which we will merge with our machines, can live forever, and are billions of times more intelligent…all within the next thirty years. I saw him talk [...]

{ 0 comments }

I’ve heard great things about Zadie Smith’s work as a writer, but I had a hard time bringing myself to click on this link. The essay is about Facebook, and the generation that made it, and the movie that everyone’s talking about. It also references Jaron Lanier’s critique of the internet and adds to a growing [...]

{ 3 comments }

“Books are being replaced by reading,“ to borrow a phrase from Jack Shafer. Digital technology “distances us from the old magic conjured by books” by giving us better ways to get what’s inside them. Of course the tactile experience is lost, but that’s only a sentimental attachment — not without genuine value, but not without considerable influence from purely [...]

{ 0 comments }

Let’s look at the genuine potential of new technology instead of dwelling on what’s being replaced — whether in remorse or celebration… This began as a response to Nicholas Carr’s Experiments in Delinkification a few months ago. I sat on it until Scott Rosenberg brought the topic up again this week with a series of [...]

{ 1 comment }

Companies pay amazing amounts of money to get answers from consultants with overdeveloped confidence in their own intuition. Managers rely on focus groups—a dozen people riffing on something they know little about—to set strategies. And yet, companies won’t experiment to find evidence of the right way forward. Quote from Dan Ariely’s column in the Harvard Business Review, [...]

{ 2 comments }

Generativity: maybe the most important word we’ll use in the next 10 years. It applies to all aspects of the challenges we face: social, technological, cultural, intellectual, economic. There’s a big article in the newest Atlantic that got me thinking about it: How a New Jobless Era Will Transform America: If it persists much longer, this [...]

{ 1 comment }

I was going to do this Thursday night but I got sidetracked.  Dan Brown at the The London Free Press took up my challenge (which was “both 100% ironic and 100% sincere at the same time”) to “take a few hours or a few months to figure out what really matters” and compose it into [...]

{ 2 comments }

It’s about preparing for the future. Since we don’t know what the future will bring, we can’t know exactly how to prepare. What we can be sure of is that we’ll need to be creative, nimble, knowledgeable, open, adventurous, experienced… We need to be ready to capitalize on emerging opportunities and challenges (ones that never [...]

{ 0 comments }

I highly recommend the current issue of The Atlantic. I went out and bought it yesterday morning. Yes: bought… It has me thinking about magazines, why I like them so much (especially ambitiously intellectual magazines like The Atlantic) and what role publications like this will have in the future — or more specifically, how they will manage to adapt [...]

{ 5 comments }

Something Positive

by Brian on 12-31-2008

in art,belief,business,civics

… for the new year. I don’t know if I’ll post again between now and then. I hope I will but in case I don’t I want to cross the threshold with a better lead post than one titled “Shameless Self-Friggin-Promotion.” Hey I’ve got different sides — as many as anyone. I don’t usually like [...]

{ 4 comments }

Generation We

by Brian on 10-29-2008

in civics

Yet another factor that’s contributing to massive changes in our world: Gen We. Demography has interested me since way back when I read Boom, Bust & Echo in high school (it was one of the only books I read in high school), but this newest generation is really getting fascinating…

{ 0 comments }

Designing Through Challenges

by Brian on 10-26-2008

in business,civics

Tim Brown of IDEO shares my curiosity:  I am very interested in what new behaviors might emerge this time around and ultimately what innovations they may inspire. Will it be something to do with people changing their attitude toward saving versus spending? Will the growing uncertainty of the world encourage us to look for lives that [...]

{ 1 comment }