Live at Pop!Tech 10

Today is the first day of Pop!Tech, a three-day conference featuring the most creative, innovative and dangerous thinkers on the planet.

Yahoo has a giant satellite truck out front of the quaint Opera House here in Camden, Maine. They are beaming the audio and video of the presentations and musical performances directly to Houston, parsing the files and streaming to viewers on-line in real-time.

This morning you can listen presentations for free by such luminaries as musicisn Brian Eno, the inventor of SimCity Will Wright, columnist Tom Freidman and futurist Kevin Kelly.

To listen in and to contribute to the conversation, visit http://live.poptech.org/

I'll be inside the Opera House, with a mobile paint studio set up way up in the loge seats producing large graffiti works for each speaker. All paintings created during the conference can be seen on MissingLink at: http://alphachimp.missinglink.biz/poptech/poptech-2006-dangerous-ideas

You can see the results from past years at
/poptech/simpleviewer2005/

Click below to see the schedule of speakers, with times listed being US Eastern Standard. Hope you catch some of the show!

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POP!TECH SCHEDULE
=====================

Thursday, October 19
-------------------
9:00 AM Emergence with Brian Eno and Will Wright
10:30 AM Break
11:00 AM Technology's Embrace with Kevin Kelly,
Marianne Weems, and Hasan Elahi
12:30 PM Lunch Break
2:00 PM GreenShift with Tom Friedman, Steward Brand,
Lester Brown, and Robert Freling
4:00 PM Break
4:30 PM Fabricating the Future with Bruce Sterling,
Blaine Brownell, and Alex Steffen
6:30 PM Free time for dinner and friends
9:00 PM Three-Minute Miracles: Open Mic Night

Friday, October 20
-------------------
9:00 AM Taking on Superpowers with Juan Enriquez,
Tom Barnett, and The Yes Men
10:30 AM Break
11:00 AM Identity Reframed with Ayaan Hirsi Ali
and Kwame Anthony Appiah
12:30 PM Lunch Break
2:00 PM On Faith with Martin Marty and Richard Dawkins
3:00 PM
3:30 PM Pop!Tech Social
4:30 PM The Edge of Learning with Education Fellows,
Erin McKean, and Losang Rabgey

Saturday, October 21
-------------------
9:00 AM Tails and Tales with Chris Anderson, Kent Nichols, and Ze Frank
10:30 AM Break
11:00 AM Community Cures with Victoria Hale, Neema Mgana, and Zinhle Thabethe
12:30 PM Lunch Break
2:00 PM Artful Invention with Clifford Ross and Homaro Cantu
3:30 PM The Neo-Futurists
4:00 PM Break
4:30 PM Risk and Revolution with Roger Brent and Craig Venter
5:30 PM Wrap-up with Bob Metcalfe and John Sculley

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peterdurand

Peter Durand is an artist, educator & visual facilitator based in Houston, Texas.

He is the founder of Alphachimp LLC, a visual facilitation company that helps clients understand and communicate complex systems visually. He is a leader in graphic facilitation and a professor at Northwestern University Pritzker School of Law.

Monkey on the Move

From Jarrell McAlister:

Robot Vacuum + Animatronic Chimp = Sheer Terror

Some experiements should never see the light of day!

From YouTube. Where else?

peterdurand

Peter Durand is an artist, educator & visual facilitator based in Houston, Texas.

He is the founder of Alphachimp LLC, a visual facilitation company that helps clients understand and communicate complex systems visually. He is a leader in graphic facilitation and a professor at Northwestern University Pritzker School of Law.

Tri-Dave & Operation Caterpillar

Life in the Middle East is no bowl of cherries for the US military. But that doesn't mean that a life without access to wine, women, water, trees, bathrooms, shopping malls or ice cream parlors needs to be boring.

Just witness the results of the moustache-growing competition (code named Operation Caterpillar) launched by the comrades of our good friend and Navy SeeBee, Tri-Dave.

Other extreme sports experienced by the crew: catching up on LOST episodes on DVD, watching a broadcast football game in the middle of the night, and betting on another soldier's attempt to eat an entire block of cheese for $50.

Get more of an insight into life at http://www.tridave.blogspot.com/:

Overall the base has everything you could ask for and in some instances the amenities are better than most stateside bases. I live in a PCB (Pre-Constructed Building) in the “1400 Block” neighborhood. It is like a “suburb” of tract housing with a bunch of buildings, all exactly the same, for berthing. Each one holds up to 50+ people so the troops are really packed in. As an Officer, we have more room and I even get a corner since I am the senior person in my building. There are bunk beds galore and a bunk of wall lockers that I was able to use for privacy screening. I created a little pod and even put my Seabee Flag over the entry for a little more privacy. All the lights are on one switch so you have to get used to sleeping with lights on or getting ready in the dark, but it should not be too terrible.

[The outside temperature this August: 120 degrees Fahrenheit]

peterdurand

Peter Durand is an artist, educator & visual facilitator based in Houston, Texas.

He is the founder of Alphachimp LLC, a visual facilitation company that helps clients understand and communicate complex systems visually. He is a leader in graphic facilitation and a professor at Northwestern University Pritzker School of Law.

D.I.R.T.: The Art and Science of Bioremediation

Few experiences top the drive from Northern Indiana into South Chicago. First, you are hit by the noxious exhalations from putrescent organic matter; this is the massive methane-belching dump. [photo by trailerafire]

Then the Skyway takes you and your vehicle a hundred feet in the air, affording an exhilerating view of Gary, Indiana: deserted mills, refineries sending flames into the night sky, expanses of industrial miasma, abandoned by the knowledge economy.

Take the route through Northern New Jersey that flies by the car window of Tony Soprano, and you too may feel a drop in your gut and an exhileration in your chest. There are few sights more disheartening or inspiring than driving through America's industrial wastelands.

It was here that landscape architect and vanguard of the bioremediation movement, Julie Bargmann, grew up -- cruising through the New Jersey Turnpike, under powerlines, past the oil refineries and through America's dumping ground, The Meadowlands.

According to Wikipedia, Bioremediation can be defined as any process that uses microorganisms, fungi, green plants or their enzymes to return the environment altered by contaminants to its original condition. Bioremediation may be employed to attack specific soil contaminants, such as chlorinated hydrocarbons that are degraded by bacteria, or a more general approach may be taken, such as oil spills that are broken down by multiple techniques including the addition of nitrate and/or sulfate fertilizers to facilitate the decomposition of crude oil by indigenous or exogenous bacteria.

Archinect writer and landscape architect Heather Ring, interviews Bargmann who is collaborating with others to reclaim some of the millions of acres in America currently considered industrial blight. [read interview]

Now she dedicates her research and practice, D.I.R.T. (Dump It Right There) Studio, to taking on abandoned railyards, closed quarries and landfills, disused factories and former coal mines. And with more than half a million contaminated sites in the US alone, there's a strong argument for remediating what's been used, rather than sprawling out and building new. Her practice is a critical one, which means there's no erasing the evidence. Instead, she works to transform the waste produced by a century of manufacturing and consumption into something culturally and ecologically productive. She's got a pink hard-hat and a quick wit, and a willingness to get her hands dirty and talk about things like "beauty," in a way that redefines it for us all.

From University of Virginia faculty profile:
Julie Bargmann is internationally recognized as an innovative designer in building regenerative landscapes and with interdisciplinary design education. Her on-going design research Project D.I.R.T. (Design Investigations Reclaiming Terrain) continues to excavate the creative potential of disturbed landscapes.

Design research infuses projects at the D.I.R.T. studio (Dump It Right There) where past and present industrial along with urban processes lay the groundwork for ecological systems, cultural constructs and emerging technologies. From closed quarries to abandoned coal mines, fallow factories and urban railyards, Bargmann joins teams of architects, artists, engineers, historians and scientists to imagine the next evolution of these working landscapes.

From Worldchanging, Sarah Rich writes on the nature of transformation (from nature to industry to art):
"That experience of profound beauty amidst industrial decay encapsulates our changing perception of land. It's unmistakable in contemporary art such as Ed Burtynsky's Manufactured Landscapes or The Canary Project's photos of altered geographies, which portray places we'd once have concealed from public view, and surely never granted status as art."

peterdurand

Peter Durand is an artist, educator & visual facilitator based in Houston, Texas.

He is the founder of Alphachimp LLC, a visual facilitation company that helps clients understand and communicate complex systems visually. He is a leader in graphic facilitation and a professor at Northwestern University Pritzker School of Law.

Harvest Art in Massachusetts


From graphic facilitator Kelvy Bird:

"Come enjoy the harvest!"

RECEPTION Friday, October 13, from 6-9 PM
Gallery at 38 Cameron, with Beth Galston and Lou Jones
38 Cameron Avenue, Cambridge, MA
Through December 29: Tues and Wed 12-5 or by appointment 617-492-2848

Preview | Exhibit | Map
Sacred Sense at The Nave Gallery
Clarendon Hill Presbyterian Church, 155 Powderhouse Blvd., Somerville MA
Through October 15: Fri 5-8, Sat 1-5, Sun 1-3
Preview | Exhibit | Map
Malden Contemporary at the Gallery at Elm Street
First Parish in Malden - 2 Elm Street, Malden MA
Through November 12: Tues and Fri 10am-1pm, Sat 10am-2pm, Sun 10am-1pm
Preview | Exhibit | Map

peterdurand

Peter Durand is an artist, educator & visual facilitator based in Houston, Texas.

He is the founder of Alphachimp LLC, a visual facilitation company that helps clients understand and communicate complex systems visually. He is a leader in graphic facilitation and a professor at Northwestern University Pritzker School of Law.

Monkey Management

Being a primate isn't easy. Especially since, as one myself, I find other primates so unpredictable and silly. Not to mention, sneaky and overly scatological.

Brad Farris of Anchor Advisors in the Chicagoland area, sent us a link to serve as a helpful guide for those primates who have to manage the time and energy of their fellow simians: The One Minute Manager Meets the Monkey by Kenneth Blanchard, William, Jr. Oncken, Hal Burrows.

The scientific community has also begun to realize that primates really -- I know it's hard to believe -- can not be "managed". In the light-heartedly titled paper, Animal Behavior Research Findings Facilitate Comprehensive Captive Animal Care: The Birth of Behavioral Management, the authors describe the startling discovery:
It is clear that the major focus of current environmental enhancement programs is more than just providing supplemental toys for animals to manipulate. This is true regardless of whether animals are housed in a research laboratory or zoological collection. The concept of behavioral management addresses questions about animal behavior as a critical and integral component of the overall health and well-being of these animals.
So, is your work environment more like a research laboratory or a zoological collection? Has management (including yourself) tried to make the beasts more manageable by implementing "environmental enhancement programs" such as casual Fridays, office birthday parties, wacky furniture or (on the high-end of the enhancement program spectrum) a Foosball table? At corporate off-sites, are your breakout tables strewn with "supplemental toys for animals to manipulate"?

If so, beware! They may be making a stab at morphing your unwieldy, monkey-like tendancies into more malleable behavior that fits nicely into their matrixed structure.

From About-Goal-Setting.com:


So, effective management means 'monkey management'!

But just how can a manager be helpful to others while at the same time keeping the monkeys where they belong, fairly and squarely on the backs of the persons responsible for them?

The whole scenario just described and the way to manage monkeys is explained in "The One Minute Manager Meets the Monkey".

This paperback is brilliant!

By using the Four Rules of Monkey Management, managers learn to become effective supervisors of time, energy, and talent - especially their own.

Achieve a balance between supervision and delegation.

Make sure your personal library has a copy of "The One Minute Manager Meets the Monkey".


peterdurand

Peter Durand is an artist, educator & visual facilitator based in Houston, Texas.

He is the founder of Alphachimp LLC, a visual facilitation company that helps clients understand and communicate complex systems visually. He is a leader in graphic facilitation and a professor at Northwestern University Pritzker School of Law.

Rearranging the Human Family Tree

from Washingotn University in St. Louis:
Modern Humans, not Neandertals, may be evolution's "odd man out" By Neil Schoenherr

Sept. 7, 2006 -- Could it be that in the great evolutionary "family tree," it is we Modern Humans, not the brow-ridged, large-nosed Neandertals, who are the odd uncle out?

New research published in the August, 2006 journal Current Anthropology by Neandertal and early modern human expert, Erik Trinkaus, Ph.D., professor of anthropology at Washington University in St. Louis, suggests that rather than the standard straight line from chimps to early humans to us with Neandertals off on a side graph, it's equally valid, perhaps more valid based on the fossil record, that the line should extend from the common ancestor to the Neandertals, and Modern Humans should be the branch off that.


The most unusual characteristics throughout human anatomy occur in Modern Humans (right), argues Trinkaus, not in Neadertals (left).

peterdurand

Peter Durand is an artist, educator & visual facilitator based in Houston, Texas.

He is the founder of Alphachimp LLC, a visual facilitation company that helps clients understand and communicate complex systems visually. He is a leader in graphic facilitation and a professor at Northwestern University Pritzker School of Law.

Out of the Rubble

For the last five years, individuals and communities have been creating memorial images to both mourn and celebrate the lives lost on 9/11.

Fiber artist Nellie Durand describes the creation of "Out of the Rubble" a large quilt with every name of 9/11 victims that hung for several years in St. Paul's Chapel, located just east of where the Twin Towers stood.

Nellie writes in her blog:

At some point, it occurred to me that more than death and destruction resulted from that pile of rubble. All of the love, support, strength of spirit, and help that poured out from so very many people both literally and spiritually to the people of New York City was very much a part of this tragedy.

Nellie's work is simultaneously expansive and experimental while retaining a strong need for order and meaning. She saves every scrap of cloth and snippet of string. Every time she cleans a palette of leftover paint, the rag is saved, and--often times years later--it ends up being the perfect element to tie a composition together.
Two weekends after 9/11, I demonstrated a quilt piecing technique (Ricky Tims Harmonic Convergence) to my daughter-in-law, Jeanette, and niece-in-law, Diane. Four fabrics are required and Jeanette had brought red, white, blue, and a waving flag print to make a patriotic banner to hang from her porch in Oak Park, Illinois. She couldn't find a flag to buy. Every source was sold out. Seeing her result, I decided to make one for our cottage. The fabrics I chose were a hand-dyed red, a blue skyline print, a black/white graphic, and Jeanette's waving flag print.

In the process of piecing, the three buildings of the WTC that imploded appeared. Right then I knew this piece was not just a banner. I immediately replaced all the black/white graphic pieces with the other three fabrics in the area around the buildings.

About that time, someone observed that this skyline fabric depicted the buildings of New York City. I had purchased that fabric sometime ago on the chance that I just may need a city skyline for a piece I might make in the future.

Nellie Durand's work can be seen at Good Goods in Saugatuck, Michigan. She is a frequent finalist in the highly competitive TVA quilt show in Knoxville, Tennessee. She winters with her husband and world's greatest Elvis fan, Lee, in Farragut, Tennessee.
Nellie Durand Show at Good Goods

peterdurand

Peter Durand is an artist, educator & visual facilitator based in Houston, Texas.

He is the founder of Alphachimp LLC, a visual facilitation company that helps clients understand and communicate complex systems visually. He is a leader in graphic facilitation and a professor at Northwestern University Pritzker School of Law.

Seriykotik1970

America has some new money.

The government has been phasing new designs for the $20, $10 and $5. But it all pales in comparison with money of the rest of the world. Explore the beautiful engravings and watermarks of global banknotes through the lens of Seriykotik1970.

This photographer has dozens of intriguing sets on Flickr, all ethereal and filled with old world nostalgia.

From seriykotik1970:

Lyudmilla Konstantinovna was so captivated by the dashing young museum assistant's winning smile and eloquent if wordy compliments that she thought nothing of getting married and spending her honeymoon in the bone vaults of the St Petersburg Imperial Museum of Comparative Osteology.

peterdurand

Peter Durand is an artist, educator & visual facilitator based in Houston, Texas.

He is the founder of Alphachimp LLC, a visual facilitation company that helps clients understand and communicate complex systems visually. He is a leader in graphic facilitation and a professor at Northwestern University Pritzker School of Law.