Date archives "November 2013"

Book of the Day: Moral Origins

Moral Origins. By Christopher Boehm. By Jag Bhalla: Christopher Boehm in Moral Origins concludes, after intensive analysis of 50 representative hunter-gatherer cultures, that our ancestors likely experienced a “radical political change,” evolving from a hierarchic “apelike ‘might is right’…social order,” to become more egalitarian. About 250,000 years ago, their survival became a team sport because… Continue reading

New Report Summarizes the Economics and the Commons Conference 2013

Republished from Jessica Conrad in Shareable magazine: (see the original for more links) “The Heinrich Boll Foundation just released a detailed, educational, and inspiring report summarizing the international conference it hosted in Berlin, Germany May 22-24, 2013. Two hundred commoners from around the globe converged at the Economics and the Commons Conference (ECC) to explore… Continue reading

Crowd-sourcing radiation levels – Russian start-up turns smart phones into multi-purpose radiation detectors

Will radiation levels in the future be crowd-sourced? Russian inventor and Intersoft Eurasia CEO Vladimir Yelin seems to think so. He has developed a cheap smart-phone add-on that can be either retrofitted or directly incorporated into your phone. The software that comes with the DO-RA radiation meter can report radiation levels automatically to a central… Continue reading

Project of the Day: Everyday Growing Cultures

Everyday Growing Cultures Farida Vis writes: “Focusing on two distinct yet connected communities: allotment, growing communities (plot holders; allotment societies; those waiting for plots; allotment governing bodies) and the open data community (open data activists; developers; local government; data journalists). Allotment and open data communities may initially seem unconnected, but they share many concerns: around ideas of knowledge… Continue reading

Openness as a Competitive Advantage for Hardware and Manufacturing Eco-Systems

Excerpted from Simone Cicero: “Let’s think to Apple for a while: it’s by far one of the most successful product and user driven innovation ecosystems of the computing history. Despite its software is open at least in terms of interfaces (APIs), Apple keeps its hardware strongly closed, also using non-standard interfaces, for example in power… Continue reading

The Open Allocation Task Distribution and Management Method at GitHub

Excerpted from Chris Dannen: “Open allocation is one theory that answers one of the most crucial questions for any company: how to innovate and make that innovation repeatable. There are four essential problems with systematized innovation, and in most businesses, structure can be a solution. McKinsey says that 62% of corporate executives report manipulating company… Continue reading

Book of the Day: Re-Thinking Social Protection

* Book: Francine Mestrum: Building Another World: Re-thinking Social Protection. Global Social Justice, 2013 Description by the author:  “This is a proposal for a new concept of social protection. It is particularly important at the moment that international organizations start to make their proposals for ‘social protection’. The ILO came out with its ‘social protection… Continue reading