Date archives "December 2013"

Trend of the Day: Contextual Economics

Contextual economics understands that the economy itself contains at least three spheres. In addition to the for-profit business sphere—the focus of mainstream economics—there is also the core sphere, consisting of families and communities; this is the focus of a good deal of work in feminist and social economics. Third is the public purpose sphere, which… Continue reading

Conceptology of Learning and Leading at Work

* Paper: A Conceptology of Learning and Leading at Work. By Rune Kvist Olsen. Description: “The purpose with the “Conceptology of Learning and Leading at Work” is to construct and establish an alternative belief system that would entitle everyone in the workplace the same conditions and access of mutual trust and personal freedom. The intention… Continue reading

Project of the Day: the Share Exchange community meeting place in Santa Rosa, California

Cat Johnson explains: “One of the nation’s first local economy centers, the Share Exchange in Santa Rosa, Calif. is a community meeting place, a collaborative co-working space, a local made marketplace and a non-profit promoting local economies. “Share Exchange is at the crossroads of the localization movement and the shift to sharing,” says co-founder Kelley… Continue reading

Podcast of the Day/C-Realm: Douglas Rushkoff on… Everything!

Excerpted from the C-Realm Podcast: KMO welcomes Douglas Rushkoff back to the C-Realm Podcast to talk about the themes of his most recent book, Present Shock: When Everything Happens now, and between tangets related to Scientology, the IRS, Colbert Report schwag, ceremonial magick, the faded out look of rock stars who’ve had their juju drained by millions of… Continue reading

Can Bytes Save the Future? The Money Value Delusion

by Terje Bongard King Midas got his highest wish granted: All he touched turned to gold. Here seen with his golden daughter. He starved to death shortly after. On behalf of us all, investors make the same mistake as King Midas did. Human behavioural ecology knows why this paradox exists. Would it help if everybody knew?… Continue reading

Trend of the Day: Occlusive Reality

Occlusive Reality Aaron Rosa writes: “As Augmented Reality (AR) tentatively moves from obscurity to ubiquity, we find ourselves constantly enticed by the purported capabilities and glossy demonstration videos of this technology. While major corporate players seek to establish unique identities in this emerging information space, their design fictions focus on a product’s ability to improve… Continue reading

Lessons from cliodynamics: how fear of revolution promotes egalitarian policies

Excerpted from Peter Turchin: “The US political system has been under the influence of wealthy elites ever since the American Revolution. In some historical periods it worked primarily for the benefit of the wealthy. In others, it pursued policies that benefited the society as a whole. Take the minimum wage, which grew during the Great… Continue reading

Essay of the Day: Enabling Co-operative Enterprises To Grow the Green Economy

Enabling Co-operative Enterprises to Grow the Green Economy = Report: Sharing Prosperity. Enabling co-operative enterprises to grow the green economy. By Mike Lewis and Pat Conaty. Cymru/Wales Summary Pat Conaty: “The recommendations grew out of deliberative discussions at a Mid Wales conference that we ran this summer to help community based local food, co-operative energy… Continue reading

Project of the Day: the Lisa S Open Source Drone Autopilot System

An Open Source Drone Autopilot System based on the Lisa/S chip! KLINT FINLEY explains: “The Lisa/S chip is 4 square-centimeters — about the same size as a Euro coin. But this 1.9-gram sliver of silicon includes everything you need to autopilot an aerial drone. It’s the world’s smallest drone autopilot system — over 30 grams… Continue reading

Publicly Supported vs Centrally Controlled Education

Excerpted from CAROL BLACK: “In “developed” societies, we are so accustomed to centralized control over learning that it has become functionally invisible to us, and most people accept it as natural, inevitable, and consistent with the principles of freedom and democracy. We assume that this central authority, because it is associated with something that seems… Continue reading

Podcast of the Day/XE: Gar Alperovitz on the next US revolution

From our friends at The Extraenviromentalist Podcast. Alperovitz talks about the US, but his analysis applies worldwide. The episode also features a presentation by Stefano and Vera Zamagni on the co-op movement in Italy. http://www.xepodcast.com/extraenvironmentalist/063-nextUSrevolution.mp3 From the episode notes: With a media ecosystem focused almost entirely the corporate system, burgeoning elements of a new economy revolution escape the mainstream eye. As… Continue reading

Challenges and Promises for an Open Science and Technology Movement

* Essay: Do-it-yourself biology: Challenges and Promises for an Open Science and Technology Movement. By Thomas Landrain, Remi Sussan et al. Systems and Synthetic Biology, Vol 7., No. 1-2 Abstract “The do-it-yourself biology (DIYbio) community is emerging as a movement that fosters open access to resources permitting modern molecular biology, and synthetic biology among others…. Continue reading

Essay of the Day: Autonomous Politics and its Problems

* Essay: Autonomous Politics and its Problems: Thinking the Passage from Social to Political. Ezequiel Adamovsky Ezequiel Adamovsky writes: “My aim in this article is to present some hypotheses on issues of strategy for anti-capitalist emancipatory movements. The idea is to rethink the conditions for an effective politics, with the capacity to radically change the… Continue reading