Tags / chris anderson

Tagged with “chris anderson” (10) activity chart

  1. Chris Anderson: The Makers Revolution - The Long Now

    We’re now entering the third industrial revolution, Anderson said. The first one, which began with the spinning jenny in 1776, doubled the human life span and set population soaring. From the demographic perspective, "it’s as if nothing happened before the Industrial Revolution."

    The next revolution was digital. Formerly industrial processes like printing were democratized with desktop publishing. The "cognitive surplus" of formerly passive consumers was released into an endless variety of personal creativity. Then distribution was democratized by the Web, which is "scale agnostic and credentials agnostic." Anyone can potentially reach 7 billion people.

    The third revolution is digital manufacturing, which combines the gains of the first two revolutions. Factory robots, which anyone can hire, have become general purpose and extremely fast. They allow "lights-out manufacturing," that goes all night and all weekend.

    "This will reverse the arrow of globalization," Anderson said. "The centuries of quest for cheaper labor is over. Labor arbitrage no longer drives trade." The advantages of speed and flexibility give the advantage to "locavore" manufacturing because "Closer is faster." Innovation is released from the dead weight of large-batch commitments. Designers now can sit next to the robots building their designs and make adjustments in real time.

    Thus the Makers Movement. Since 2006, Maker Faires, Hackerspaces, and TechShops (equipped with laser cutters, 3D printers, and CAD design software) have proliferated in the US and around the world. Anderson said he got chills when, with the free CAD program Autodesk 123D, he finished designing an object and moused up to click the button that used to say "Print." This one said "Make." A 3D printer commenced building his design.

    Playing with Minecraft, "kids are becoming fluent in polygons." With programs like 123D Catch you can take a series of photos with your iPhone of any object, and the software will create a computer model of it. "There is no copyright on physical stuff," Anderson pointed out. The slogan that liberated music was "Rip. Mix. Burn." The new slogan is "Rip. Mod. Make."

    I asked Anderson, "But isn’t this Makers thing kind of trivial, just trailing-edge innovation?" "That’s why it’s so powerful," Anderson said. "Remember how trivial the first personal computers seemed?"

    — by Stewart Brand

    http://longnow.org/seminars/02013/feb/19/makers-revolution/

    —Huffduffed by adactio 3 months ago

  2. Come Fly with Me, Let’s Fly, Let’s Fly Away - The New Disruptors - Mule Radio Syndicate

    Chris Anderson was the editor in chief of Wired Magazine for over a decade, during which time he wrote an “accidental” trilogy of three books: The Long Tail, Free, and Makers. His latest book details how a mild obsession with do-it-yourself drones (pilotless planes) sucked him into the maker community, and to co-found a business now producing millions in sales. We talk about the maker movement, the revolution of atoms that’s underway, and his drones. (He left Wired just after we recorded this podcast to work full-time as chief of his business, 3D Robotics.)

    —Huffduffed by jamesh 6 months ago

  3. Boing Boing Boing 004 (2006-10-08)

    This week on the Boing Boing Boing podcast: the Boingers chat with Wired Editor-in-Chief Chris Anderson.

    —Huffduffed by LukeBacon 11 months ago

  4. From Indymedia to Demand Media: Participation, Surveillance, and the Transformation of Journalism

    Chris Anderson

    In the late 1990s, advances in digital content creation and distribution raised hopes that journalism and the media were becoming radically democratized. While these hopes have been borne out to some degree, old hierarchies and fissures are reasserting themselves as new forms of journalism become normalized. What’s more, digital technology affords more than just participation; it affords surveillance and algorithmically driven visions of consumption. This conversational talk will address these issues, with a jumping off point being a comparison of different journalistic “visions of their audience.”

    —Huffduffed by jamesh one year ago

  5. Triangulation 16: Chris Anderson

    Editor-in-chief of Wired, author of The Long Tail: Why the Future of Business Is Selling Less of More, and Founder of DIYdrones.com, Chris Anderson, is this week’s guest.

    —Huffduffed by briansuda one year ago

  6. The New Price Point? ‘Free’

    Journalist Chris Anderson believes that businesses can profit by giving their material away on the Internet. His new book Free: The Future of a Radical Price explains how "free" can become a marketing technique, helping businesses gain credibility in an economy that increasingly values reputation.

    —Huffduffed by benjaminjtaylor 3 years ago

  7. Chris Anderson and The Long Tail | EconTalk

    From http://www.econtalk.org/archives/2006/08/chris_anderson.html

    Russ Roberts talks with Chris Anderson of Wired Magazine about the ideas in his new book, The Long Tail: Why the Future of Business is Selling Less of More. Topics include the weird world of internet distribution and production, how the Sears catalog of the 1890s was the predecessor to Amazon books in the 1990s, the economics of choice and the role of filters, and the challenges of wrapping our minds around emergent phenomena.

    —Huffduffed by michele 4 years ago

  8. Chris Anderson on Free | EconTalk

    From http://www.econtalk.org/archives/2008/05/chris_anderson_1.html

    Chris Anderson talks with EconTalk host Russ Roberts about his next book project based on the idea that many delightful things in the world are increasingly free—internet-based email with infinite storage, on-line encyclopedias and even podcasts, to name just a few. Why is this trend happening? Is it restricted to the internet? Is there really any such thing as a free lunch? Is free a penny cheaper than a penny or a lot cheaper than that? The conversation also covers whether economics has anything to say about free.

    —Huffduffed by michele 4 years ago

  9. Chris Anderson: DIY Drones - Making Minimum UAVs

    Individuals around the world are building relatively inexpensive aircraft (fixed wing and helicopters) that can fly autonomously. These UAV’s take pictures or videos and transmit them to the ground, follow navigational waypoints for aerial mapping and scientific surveys, and more. In this Where 2.0 session, Anderson shares a personal story of how he and his son started with model planes and added cell phones and robotic kids toys to build amazing UAV’s for less than $1,000.

    By automatically taking GPS-tagged pictures, UAVs can populate Google Maps and other GIS services with ultra high resolution (3 cm or better) with timely aerial photography. Anderson demonstrates real excitement for the yet undiscovered applications of these new toys, now cheap enough for enthusiasts around the world to build and share with the help of the DIY Drones community.

    http://itc.conversationsnetwork.org/shows/detail3934.html

    —Huffduffed by Clampants 4 years ago

  10. FREE: The Economics of Abundance and the Price of Zero

    O’Reilly Media Tools of Change Conference 30 minutes, 13.8mb, recorded 2007-06-19

    http://itc.conversationsnetwork.org/shows/detail3328.html

    —Huffduffed by eby 4 years ago