Came across this whilst doing some convergence research. Fantastic.
"Alfred Sirleaf is an analog blogger. He take runs the "Daily News", a news hut by the side of a major road in the middle of Monrovia. He started it a number of years ago, stating that he wanted to get news into the hands of those who couldn't afford newspapers, in the language that they could understand."
Had a really interesting evening at the at abrahams event hosted by Arup on the theme of "collaborleaders". at abrahams is curated by abrahams and Claire Curtice Publicists with this event chaired by Sophie Howarth from the School of Life. The evening highlights were Philip Sheppard playing an impromptu cello solo and then later joining Steve Lodder and John Etheridge to show how three musicians can come together and improvise a piece of music - collaboration at its best. The video below is a bit shakey - i had to improvise ;-) but watch how the three are continually watching each other - to quote one of the general observations from the evening "the non verbal communication amongst the collaborators was visible".
re the cello "it's a Banks probably made near here in 1750" i wonder which of todays tools we will be using in 2250
re workshops - can you be forced to collaborate or do have to want to collaborate?
re architect and designer - "the collaboration only involved about 4 hours of working together with each other" but then many hours of the teams working together towards the finished product
re can it be built - "not yes you can, but yes we can"
re the ego in the collaboration - the economist does not have signed articles it is a team effort by the editing staff.
and finally... a poem by Roger McGough for the egotistical collaborator
The Leader
I wanna be the leader
I wanna be the leader
Can I be the leader?
Can I? I can?
Promise? Promise?
Yippee I'm the leader
I'm the leader
The World Economic Forum on Africa are using our Drivers of Change voting application to solicit public opinion prior to the event on the challenges African countries need to be the most prepared for in the coming year. The highest ranked Drivers of Change will be used in a session during the event. 1200 votes had been cast by with one week to go before the public vote closes on Thursday 11th.
a memory primer for Duncan Wilson on emerging technologies for an increasingly networked and distributed physically virtual world. It is a collection of all things to do with ubiquitous computing and other drivers of change in the built environment.