crispinheath's posterous
Dad of 3, sometime triathlete and social media casualty.
If you're loking for my worky stuff
http://squone.blogspot.com/
If you're looking for the quirkier stuff www.sixyearslate.posterous.com.
Dad of 3, sometime triathlete and social media casualty.
If you're loking for my worky stuff
http://squone.blogspot.com/
If you're looking for the quirkier stuff www.sixyearslate.posterous.com.
Web Designers vs Web Developers is brought to you by Wix.com
Use creative design to make a Free Website
You are most welcome to share this infographic with your audience.
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.
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.
Via RWW this morning I was taking a look at the 2010 Gartner hype cycle as below.
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.
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.
The ;-) isn't really enough is it?