Robin Good: Curation as a Business Model — Be Trusted! Be Useful!

Academia, Civil Society, Collective Intelligence, Commerce, Cultural Intelligence
Robin Good
Robin Good

Mitch Free writes on Forbes about the unique business value that curation can bring to those markets where there is already an abundance of choices. “The web has revolutionized access to information. If you travel to a new city, you don’t have to wait to ask a hotel concierge or local contact which restaurants are worth your time: that information is at your fingertips long before you arrive. The web’s universality and ubiquity are also its weaknesses, however: even if all are listed online, choosing from the 25,000 restaurants in New York City still requires a local’s advice. While “curation” might bring to mind the image of a red-jacketed museum staffer scowling at you for taking flash photographs, in the digital age it’s becoming an increasingly critical – and lucrative – business model. No longer is access to information precious in itself. Information is overwhelmingly available, and those in a position to tame the tidal wave into a useful format offer a valuable service.” The articles uses as a reference example the case of a new restaurant listing site that curates the best 100 restaurants in 100 cities by charging qualifying restaurants. Rightful. Interesting. 7/10

Curation By Connection Encourages “Average Experts” To Tame The Web

The power of the web is a hot topic for business journals and Internet startups, notably its ability to turn a simple idea into a powerful force by leveraging existing social interactions and letting people share what’s important to them. No longer do we rely on a few experts and advertisers to dole out information according to their own priorities, and passively consume that information. On the contrary, content can be created and curated by literally thousands of ‘average’ people with above average interest and insight, and spread across huge aggregations of likeminded people.

I’ve been watching closely the up-and-coming site “One Hundred Tables,” a restaurant listing site that’s built on a simple idea: one hundred featured restaurants in each of one hundred cities. Founder Tony Akston has created a million-dollar business model by charging just $100 to be listed, a sum a restaurant can recoup by snagging just one new regular.  The concept is simple, the site is low in cost to host and maintain, and it offers something every entrepreneur strives for: overwhelming value for the customer. The price point is almost unthinkably reasonable given the opportunity for return – a rare business “no brainer.” The real earning potential is in the exponential multiplication of small transactions – a staple concept for web-based businesses.

Read full article.

John Maquire: YouTube (5:28) Jonathan Keats on the Curious Amateur

#OSE Open Source Everything, Cultural Intelligence
John Maguire
John Maguire

Jonathan Keats, conceptual artist and experimental philosopher, reminds us that the heart of progress resides within the curious amateur: those of us who are not encumbered or restrained by the rigidity and dogma of professionalization. This important fact is often forgotten and/or actively suppressed in technocratic plutocracies where the cult of the expert serves to disempower the public.



Berto Jongman: What Do Afghan Insurgents Want?

04 Inter-State Conflict, 05 Civil War, 07 Other Atrocities, 08 Wild Cards, 11 Society, Academia, Civil Society, Cultural Intelligence, Ethics, IO Deeds of Peace, Peace Intelligence
Berto Jongman
Berto Jongman

Understanding Afghan Insurgents – Motivations, Goals, and the Reconciliation and Reintegration Process

Who Are They? What Do They Want? Why Do They Fight?

This paper presents the results of 78 in-depth interviews conducted with self-identified Afghan insurgents. If the interviewees are indeed representative of broader Taliban sentiments, then the future of Afghanistan is grim. It appears that only the return of a ‘pious’ Islamic government will satisfy them.

Author: Andrew Garfield, Alicia Boyd

Series: FPRI Monographs and Essays Issue: 3

SchwartzReport: Blue Death (Poisoned Tap Water) + Radioactive Wastewter from Natural Gas Drilling

03 Environmental Degradation, 05 Energy, 07 Health, Commerce, Corruption, Earth Intelligence, Government

schwartz reportWhen I first began to travel professionally, when I started working for National Geographic, we used to be warned about not drinking the local water from the tap. Today I would be more concerned about the tap water in parts of American than I would be in much of the rest of the world. Here's why. My suggestion to all of you is to have your water tested by a! n independent lab. It only costs a few dollars, and it may give you a surprise.

Unlimited Arsenic and Other Poisons Dumped Daily Into US Waters
DONNA LISENBY – EcoWatch/Reader Supported News

Right now there is another blown-out rig in the Gulf of Mexico, and FOUR major tar sands pipeline leaks in Alberta, Canada. We are experiencing a major continent wide slow motion environmental disaster going on within the carbon energy infrastructure and, as far as I can see, the only person in corporate media who is even talking about it is Rachel Maddow on MSNBC. And today! , the Republicans in the House gutted support for non-carbon energy.

Natural Gas Drilling Produces Radioactive Wastewater
ABRAHM LUSTGARTEN and PROPUBLICA – Scientific American

Continue reading “SchwartzReport: Blue Death (Poisoned Tap Water) + Radioactive Wastewter from Natural Gas Drilling”

SchwartzReport: Swedish Energy From Garbage Others Pay For; San Francisco to Get Its Own Bank

Commercial Intelligence, Cultural Intelligence

schwartz reportHere is some very good news about garbage, at least for Sweden. One can only wonder why we can't seem to muster the political will to do something similar.

Models of Sustainability: Sweden Runs Out of Garbage
ALAN PIERCE – The Pachamama Alliance

Here is the best news I have read about banking in several years.

San Francisco Strikes Blow to Wall Street: City May Now Get Its Own Public Bank
ELLEN BROWN – AlterNet (U.S.)

Continue reading “SchwartzReport: Swedish Energy From Garbage Others Pay For; San Francisco to Get Its Own Bank”

Wolfram|Alpha on Calculations Related to Lowering Sea Level

12 Water, Earth Intelligence
Home Page
Home Page

Phi Beta Iota: We think very highly of Wolfram Alfa and its creator Stephen Wolfram.  Below is the beginning of a conversation about what it would take to lower sea levels and keep them constant so Singapore among other countries, need not worry, at the same time that we leverage solar power to desalinate water and create hydrogen energy.

WE ASKED:

What is the volume of sea water that would have to be desalinated and withdrawn for aquifer replenishment, deforestation, de-desertification, and general land use, to keep sea level at a constant?  Discussion:  the intersection of solar energy and water purification, desalination, and splitting to produce hydrogen power and oxygen is now reaching a tipping point.  We are very close to a price point where it makes sense to actually lower the ocean and restock our clean water, doing this on a world wide basis, a Manhattan Project to create 1000 massive water desalination and power plants world wide.

WOLFRAM ALFA RESPONDED:

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Anthony Judge: Is There Never Enough? Religious Doublespeak on Population and Poverty

Cultural Intelligence, Earth Intelligence, Ethics
Anthony Judge
Anthony Judge

Is There Never Enough?

Religious doublespeak on population and poverty

Introduction
Mass distraction enabling Mass destruction?
Denial of “overpopulation” as a problematic factor
Overpopulation denial as promoted by religions and fellow-travellers
Deficient analytic capacity of religions
Blame-gaming: always someone else's responsibility
Withholding aid as a means of saving future lives?
Hypocrisy of current Papal focus on poverty?
Challenge for a poverty-focused Pope
Towards a realistic simulation of faith-based population policies
LETS indulge the impoverished!?
References

noble gold