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Tagged with “innovation” (52) activity chart

  1. Neal Stephenson on Stranger Than Fiction

    Welcome to Stranger Than Fiction, a new six-episode podcast from Slate, the New America Foundation, and Arizona State University. Each week, Tim Wu—a Future Tense fellow at New America, the author of The Master Switch, and a professor at Columbia Law School—talks to a contemporary science fiction writer about whether we’re living in the future.

    In the debut episode, Wu talks to Neal Stephenson, the award-winning science fiction author of Snow Crash, The Diamond Age, Cryptonomicon, and more. They discuss the purpose of science fiction, geek culture, and whether—contrary to our constant hand-wringing about “everything changing so fast”—innovation has really slowed down.

    —Huffduffed by Clampants one day ago

  2. The Bottom Line with Evan Davis – 15 Nov 2012

    Planet New – the world of wonderfully innovative ideas that give rise to new products. There are many arguments about how to solve the world’s economic problems. But if there’s one solution that most will agree on it’s that we need more new products to drive capitalism and make us richer. Evan Davis and guests discuss the importance of innovation for the global economy and the impediments to this kind of creativity. They also swap thoughts on the ‘pivot’ – when to change your mind in business.

    —Huffduffed by boxman 6 months ago

  3. The Fat Duck | Heston Blumenthal | Cooking Statement

    ‘Molecular gastronomy’ was coined in the 1991 as a suitably serious-sounding term that would help pave the way for a conference on culinary science.

    Since then, however, it has become a convenient, catch-all-phrase to describe science-driven cooking. It explains little and misleads a lot.

    In 2006 Heston was involved in producing a statement to explain how his motivations and intentions weren’t confined to the sphere of molecular gastronomy.

    ONE Three basic principles guide our cooking: excellence, openness, and integrity.
    We are motivated above all by an aspiration to excellence. We wish to work with ingredients of the finest quality, and to realize the full potential of the food we choose to prepare, whether it is a single shot of espresso or a multicourse tasting menu.

    TWO Our cooking values tradition, builds on it, and along with tradition is part of the ongoing evolution of our craft.
    The world’s culinary traditions are collective, cumulative inventions, a heritage created by hundreds of generations of cooks. Tradition is the base which all cooks who aspire to excellence must know and master. Our open approach builds on the best that tradition has to offer.

    THREE We embrace innovation - new ingredients, techniques, appliances, information, and ideas - whenever it can make a real contribution to our cooking.
    We do not pursue novelty for its own sake. We may use modern thickeners, sugar substitutes, enzymes, liquid nitrogen, sous-vide, dehydration, and other nontraditional means, but these do not define our cooking. They are a few of the many tools that we are fortunate to have available as we strive to make delicious and stimulating dishes.

    FOUR We believe that cooking can affect people in profound ways, and that a spirit of collaboration and sharing is essential to true progress in developing this potential.
    The act of eating engages all the senses as well as the mind. Preparing and serving food could therefore be the most complex and comprehensive of the performing arts. To explore the full expressive potential of food and cooking, we collaborate with scientists, from food chemists to psychologists, with artisans and artists (from all walks of the performing arts), architects, designers, industrial engineers. We also believe in the importance of collaboration and generosity among cooks: a readiness to share ideas and information, together with full acknowledgment of those who invent new techniques and dishes.

    http://www.thefatduck.co.uk/Heston-Blumenthal/Cooking-Statement/

    —Huffduffed by briansuda 6 months ago

  4. Steve Jobs 1983 talk to Center for Design Innovation

    At the 1983 International Design Conference at Aspen, a young Steve Jobs predicted that within two years, the market would see more computers than automobiles. He also said the computers would likely be poorly designed, though they didn’t have to be. It was difficult for the audience to understand the deep sense in which he meant this commitment to good design. Beyond mere “gift-wrapping,” the emerging graphical interfaces were to signal computational functions that most could not even imagine. How might we be comparably limited today? What new futures might be realized in a year or two – let alone 29 years from now? We listened to Steve Harberger’s cassette recording of this little-known Jobs speech, followed by viewing a contemporary recording of the TEDx talk by Ryan Chin. He’s envisioning “smart cities” with a wireless infrastructure that mitigates congestion through “sharable, collapsible, rechargeable CityCars, GreenWheel bicycles, and RoboScooters,” along with knowledge of our habits using different modes of transportation. Join in the discussion! Consider what to do when imagination cannot keep pace with technology development.

    —Huffduffed by vanderwal 7 months ago

  5. Four Thought: Russell Davies

    Russell Davies takes us from GeoCities to beyond social media to the next innovations in about 20 wonderful minutes. Makers, hackers, and doers around the internet of things with personal use as a focus is the hook, but I may have said too much. A great listen and relisten lay ahead.

    —Huffduffed by vanderwal 9 months ago

  6. Big Picture Science: Nano Nano

    Think small to solve big problems. That, in a nutshell, is the promise of nanotechnology. In this barely visible world, batteries charge 100 times faster and drugs go straight to their targets in the body. Discover some of these nano breakthroughs and how what you can’t see can help you…

    …or hurt you? What if tiny machines turn out to be nothing but trouble? We’ll look at the health and safety risks of nanotech.

    Plus, scaling up in science fiction: why a Godzilla-sized insect is fun, but just doesn’t fly.

    http://radio.seti.org/blog/2012/07/big-picture-science-nano-nano/

    —Huffduffed by Clampants 9 months ago

  7. The ‘Creative Class’ Revisited

    A decade ago, on the other side of two wars, an economic meltdown, and mass unemployment, economist Richard Florida made a big splash asserting the economic power and glory of what he dubbed the “creative class.”

    A new social class, he said, of writers and dancers and artists, innovators in science and medicine, technology and media.Freelancers and free thinkers whose open minds were reshaping the world and firing up a lot of wealth. Suddenly, every ambitious city and town wanted to be a creative class magnet.

    Ten years on, how’s that all going?

    http://onpoint.wbur.org/2012/07/12/the-creative-class

    —Huffduffed by Clampants 10 months ago

  8. TED Radio Hour: Steven Johnson: Is the “Eureka” Moment a Myth? : NPR

    Author Steven Johnson says that ideas don’t come in a stroke of genius — they emerge from a network of people, places and real-world constraints.

    http://www.npr.org/2012/06/08/154457665/is-the-eureka-moment-a-myth

    —Huffduffed by briansuda 11 months ago

  9. TED Radio Hour: Matt Ridley: What Happens When Ideas Have Sex? : NPR

    Our planet’s biodiversity comes from the adaptation of sexual reproduction —€” the ability to recombine the DNA of two parents into a wholly unique organism. Science writer Matt Ridley says that ideas reproduce just like the humans who think them up.

    http://www.npr.org/2012/06/08/154452486/what-happens-when-ideas-have-sex

    —Huffduffed by briansuda 11 months ago

  10. Saul Griffith on Living the Examined Life and Flying Giant Kites (Part One)

    After becoming a renewable energy entrepreneur (think massive kites), Saul Griffith started wondering about the greenness of his own life—so he started counting. The exercise became an exploration, which resulted in the website WattzOn.com, a powerful opensource tool for personal impact calculation. Using the Embodied Energy Database, you can finally determine “the impact of wearing underwear versus taking holiday in Europe.” Griffith explains how WattzOn works (and how you can help perfect it), and why we miss the point when we obsess over

    —Huffduffed by briansuda one year ago

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