Monthly Archives: October 2007

The Short Shelf Life of Information (and the Long Life of Memes)

A great example of how to use a graphic to convey a ton of information. It shows all the sources and uses of energy consumed by the US, and how much of it is lost, in a single picture. It’s from … Continue reading

Posted in Using Weblogs and Technology, Working Smarter | 13 Comments

Sunday Open Thread — October 7, 2007

Me in Second Life. (Everyone here is beautiful) What I’m Thinking of Writing (and Podcasting) About Soon: Coping With the Strategy Paradox: I met recently with Michael Raynor, who wrote The Strategy Paradox. He’s now looking at what else we … Continue reading

Posted in Our Culture / Ourselves | 6 Comments

Saturday Links for the Week – October 6, 2007

Image from An Inconvenient Truth: Blue curve is average temperature on Earth for the last 650,000 years, red is amount of CO2 in the atmosphere for the same time period. Lower yellow dot is today’s CO2 levels. Top yellow dot … Continue reading

Posted in Our Culture / Ourselves | Comments Off on Saturday Links for the Week – October 6, 2007

Baby Boom in Affluent Nations: Population Bomb Still Ignited

For decades, the United Nations and the US Census Bureau have been accusing those who have called for strong measures to curb global population growth scare-mongers and neo-Malthusians. Restricting population growth is politically very unpopular. It flies in the face … Continue reading

Posted in Collapse Watch | 4 Comments

Sketching the Future of Innovation

Last spring I wrote about Bill Buxton: Many years ago, when e-mail and Internet access were just becoming the norm in business, I met a guy named Bill Buxton, who was then with Alias Research. His passion was trying to … Continue reading

Posted in Working Smarter | 3 Comments

PODCAST #1: An Interview with Chris Corrigan

Capacity for: Actions: 1. ATTENTION sense, probe, observe, listen, find patterns 2. INSTINCT perceive, intuit, let come, know subconsciously 3. APPRECIATION discover, play, learn, laugh, understand, thank, care 4. REFLECTION suspend, consider, open, let go, entertain, explore 5. INTENTION love, … Continue reading

Posted in Collapse Watch | 10 Comments

The Collapse of the US Dollar: A Scenario

Things are worth what people think they’re worth. It’s all psychology. It was psychology that had the stock market trading at unprecedented multiples of earnings in 1929, and people believing there was no end to profts to be made, and … Continue reading

Posted in How the World Really Works | 5 Comments