Look what @bobollie made for me. Thank you matey.

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The future of money is here and it's in our hands

The Future of money project started out as a blog post, a few weeks prior to this year's Sibos. It was a post that galvanised small businesses with a vision for the future of trasaction, payments and new economic models, to not only donate their time but their money to build this vision for the future. This is a vision that cuts out the banks and relies on communities to find ways and means to build new transactional models.

The Future of Money from KS12 on Vimeo.

I'm fascinated to see where this goes next. It feels like it's created amazing connection across the world. This is the start of the money revolution keep your eyes peeled.

Sir Ken Robinson: Bring on the learning revolution!

Anyone who saw Sir Ken Robinson's first Ted talk in 2006, will be pleased that he returned this year in a follow up to the talk that persuaded TED's organisers that they might just be on to something.

The first talk is absolutely essential viewing.

The second is just as engaging.

 

Human augmentation and human restoration

Via RWW this morning I was taking a look at the 2010 Gartner hype cycle as below.

Gartner2010_hype_cycle

It's pretty fascinating stuff. However there was one tag right at the bottom of the cycle that I knew very little about, i.e. human augmentation. A quick search bought up the video posted below. It's frankly quite amazing stuff. It's over an hour long, but if you have the time it'll be worthwhile. I haven't finished watching yet - work and that - but really it's astounding from the off.

 

There's more info from MIT World and additional resources here.

 

 

 

The shifting summer holiday paradigm

800px-oak_park_bench

I started running again recently. There are myriad reasons why it's
good for me, not least the fact that I get to run in places that I
wouldn't normally have occasion to visit. My running coincided with
the beginning of the summer holidays and as I huffed and puffed around
the back streets I dragged past a bench that I've gone past many times
before. You've probably seen loads of benches like it. Someone, or
some body placed it there years ago, but you've never seen a single
person actually sat on it. You've probably wondered why the hell it
was ever built in the first place.

On that particular night though there were three kids sat on and in
front of it, about 14/15 years old chilled out, enjoying the early
evening sun (yes there was sun this summer) and just having a very
pleasant looking time. Three days later on the same route I passed the
same bench, but this time there were 5 or 6 kids hanging out. Same
vibe, quiet, chatty and relaxed. There was a mix of boys and girls and
they looked pretty cool (what do I know, I stopped being able to read
that barometer years ago). It had a lovely feel to it, not so much
incongruous, as unusual that this was where they'd chosen to be.
Granted it had a little bit of greenery, some shade from the sun with
the trees, but nevertheless it was basically in the middle of a
suburban sprawl with no shops nearby, no real 'entertainment' on hand,
just a bench as a focal point and few opinions.

My running's continued sporadically over the summer holidays and
rather than varying the routes as is my normal practice I've been
following the same pattern and as the weeks went by the size of the
group that was gathering around this previously unloved bench grew to
around 20. I started to enjoy running past it. It was convivial,
quiet, considered and above all fun.

Then it began to change. As I ran past it seemed slightly more
fractious. The group was bigger, there was alcohol, it was rowdier,
there were factions, the conviviality had gone and as I ran on, two of
the original kids I'd seen weeks before were walking away.

I went on holiday at the end of August, returning at the end of the
school break at which point I resumed my slow painful fitness regime.
When I ran past everything was different. The original kids had gone
and had been replaced by a completely different group of individuals.
Obviously I'm looking at this as the parent of kids not a million
miles off this age, but they were oiky, 'orrible, oily individuals.
There was a lot more drinking, a lot more shouting and the original
spirit was gone. Come yesterday evening, two days after the schools
had gone back there were four kids left drunk and surrounded by
litter.

The bench was over. The cool kids had moved on. The spirit had
disappeared. The paradigm had shifted. I’d like to think the cool kids
had found another anonymous bench. If I’m honest they’re probably back
at school, but it suits my romantic side that they’re all happy
chatting in Pleasantville just a few streets away.

Now inevitably this whole episode has led me to muse on the nature of
social networks, their adoption and possible future abandonment. I
watch brands pour millions of dollars/pounds through specific channels
and often think ‘I really hope they don’t ruin this’, because if they
do their audience won’t stick around they’ll just move on elsewhere,
not only that they’ll switch that brand off ‘FOREVER’ because that’s
the choice being online gives you.

Facebook popped up out of nowhere 5 years ago, 515 million users on
the late majority are still ploughing in, with brands following in
their hoards, but there’s really no reason to believe that Facebook
won’t go as soon as it came.

Facebook’s sudden disappearance is unlikely, but it’s important to
understand when the cool kids leave and where they’ve gone, because
they’re the ones who’ll spark the next big thing and as a brand you
need to know about that and be prepared to act upon it. I’m not going
to go into how in this post as that’s a whole different issue and in
fact the answer may be, ‘do nothing, hang back’.

The point is, you have to be fluid, you can’t be too brash and you
have to consider the huge range of variables that may open up to you
through digital channels and be prepared to embrace them.
Concentrating in just the one area and using it and abusing it for
every last drop of value is a dangerous game and can ultimately leave
you in the wilderness, with a bunch of ‘friends’ that left for a
better bench long ago.

Possibly the most competitive event on earth. Introducing the Hope Cove kids sandcastle making comp. #uksm #uksoundmap #findbritain

High tide at Thurlestone Sands, South Hams, Devon #uksm

The kids have rearranged the furniture

Apparently the 60s never happened in Kingsbridge

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The ;-) isn't really enough is it?