20120730 Open Source Everything Highlights

Highlights
Click on Image to Enlarge

Open Source Everything

TWITTER HASH: #openall

ARCHIVE OF DAILY HIGHLIGHTS: http://tinyurl.com/OSE-ALL

ROOT POST: http://tinyurl.com/OSE-ROOT

THE BOOK: http://tinyurl.com/OSE-Steele

THE PERSON: http://tinyurl.com/Steele2012

TODAY’S HIGHLIGHTS:  All Opens Below Line  Includes Autonomous Internet, Crowd-Funding/Sensing/Sourcing, DIY, and Transparency, Truth, Trust, & True Cost

Continue reading “20120730 Open Source Everything Highlights”

Patrick Meier: Twitter Dashboard & Media Analysis for Crisis Response

Analysis, Civil Society, CrisisWatch reports, Earth Intelligence, Geospatial, Geospatial, IO Deeds of Peace, P2P / Panarchy, Peace Intelligence
Patrick Meier

CrisisTracker: Collaborative Social Media Analysis For Disaster Response

I just had the pleasure of speaking with my new colleague Jakob Rogstadius from Madeira Interactive Technologies Institute (Madeira-TTI). Jakob is working on CrisisTracker, a very interesting platform designed to facilitate collaborative social media analysis for disaster response. The rationale for CrisisTracker is the same one behind Ushahidi's SwiftRiver project and could be hugely helpful for crisis mapping projects carried out by the Standby Volunteer Task Force (SBTF).

Read post see screen shots.

Towards a Twitter Dashboard for the Humanitarian Cluster System

One of the principal Research and Development (R&D) projects I'm spearheading with colleagues at the Qatar Computing Research Institute (QCRI) has been getting a great response from several key contacts at the UN's Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA). In fact, their input has been instrumental in laying the foundations for our early R&D efforts. I therefore highlighted the initiative during my recent talk at the UN's ECOSOC panel in New York, which was moderated by OCHA Under-Secretary General Valerie Amos. The response there was also very positive. So what's the idea? To develop the foundations for a Twitter Dashboard for the Humanitarian Cluster System.

Read post see screen shots.

Tom Atlee: Gifting – and the gifting economy

Collective Intelligence, Economics/True Cost, Gift Intelligence

 

Tom Atlee

Gifting – and the gifting and the gifting economy

Dear friends,

For years I've known people who gave away their professional services as a gift, explicitly encouraging (though not requiring) gifts in return to allow them to continue their work.  I've also loved the idea of “paying it forward” – enjoying as a gift what one has received from others and still giving them money so that people in the future can receive such gifts.

I've also known that the “gift economy” is already a gigantic (though seldom acknowledged) part of the overall economy of the world.  When children come of age they do not receive a bill from their parents for “services rendered”.  Countless home cooked meals, mowed lawns, and love are neither traded nor paid for.  Neighbors and strangers regularly “lend a hand” to each other, donate to causes and volunteer in their communities.  Invisible in the midst of all this, plants pump out oxygen for us, and we exhale carbon dioxide for them, without any dollars moving from hand to leaf or leaf to hand.

For hundreds of thousands of years gift economies have formed the foundation of families, friendships, tribes and communities.  Generosity, kindness, love and gratitude have been the fabric of belonging and the sources of untold abundance.  Reputation and power equity have been guardians of the web of interdependence – relational feedback loops that minimize freeloading and hoarding that can be toxic to community.  As gifts move through the community, its true wealth grows – not only the common wealth of shared resources and mutuality but also the individual wealth of reputation, appreciation and richness of life.

Laid over this profusion of gifting is the logic of exchange – you give me this and I give you that of equal value – and the abstraction we call money that enables us to expand beyond tit-for-tat barter and relationship-bound exchanges.  The less intimacy we have with the people and life around us, the more we need money to ensure proper balance of giving and receiving.  But a shadow of this great gift is that the more we use money, the less intimacy we need with the people and life around us.

Many Links and Posting by Charles Eisenstein on Gift Circles Below the Line.

Continue reading “Tom Atlee: Gifting – and the gifting economy”

20120729 Open Source Everything Highlights

Highlights
Click on Image to Enlarge

Open Source Everything

TWITTER HASH: #openall

ARCHIVE OF DAILY HIGHLIGHTS: http://tinyurl.com/OSE-ALL

ROOT POST: http://tinyurl.com/OSE-ROOT

THE BOOK: http://tinyurl.com/OSE-Steele

THE PERSON: http://tinyurl.com/Steele2012

TODAY’S HIGHLIGHTS:  All Opens Below Line  Includes Autonomous Internet, Crowd-Funding/Sensing/Sourcing, DIY, and Transparency, Truth, Trust, & True Cost

Continue reading “20120729 Open Source Everything Highlights”

John Steiner: Bob Burnett on Renewing Democracy, Shifting Paradigm and Open Letter from Robert Steele

Politics
John Steiner

Renewing Democracy: Shifting the Paradigm

Bob Burnett

Huffington Post, 27 July 2012

Thomas Jefferson believed in renewing democracy by regularly shifting the dominant social paradigm.  Jefferson argued that constitutions should be rewritten every generation, declaring the ³dead should not govern the living.² That explains why contemporary Americans are so fractious: we¹re overdue for a new paradigm.

In computer technology the dominant paradigm has shifted approximately every twenty years.   In 1954 IBM introduced a mass-produced mainframe computer, the 704.  In 1977 the personal computer era began with the introduction of the Commodore PET.  In 1996 Nokia introduced the modern era by introducing the 9000 Communicator, a personal data assistant.

Not every company can adapt to change. In December of 2000, Microsoft stock shares were worth $119.94; it was the most valuable corporation in the world with a market capitalization of $510 billion. When the paradigm shifted to the personal data assistant, Microsoft didn¹t adapt but Apple did.  In October of 2001, Apple introduced the Ipod ­ a digital music player.  Apple followed with the 2007 release of the IPhone and the 2010 introduction of the IPad.  Today Microsoft¹s stock is worth $29.15 per share and its market capitalization is $244B.   In twelve years, Apple¹s stock increased in value from $8.19 to $574; its market cap rose from $4.8B to $538B and it became
the world¹s most valuable company.

In the last eighty years there have been two social paradigm shifts.  In the thirties, Franklin Delano Roosevelt ushered in ³the New Deal² in response to a catastrophic depression.  ³Throughout the nation men and women, forgotten in the political philosophy of the Government, look to us here for guidance and for more equitable opportunity to share in the distribution of national wealth… I pledge myself to a new deal for the American people.²  The New Deal featured “three R's”: relief, recovery, and reform; it provided a safety net for all Americans.

Continue reading “John Steiner: Bob Burnett on Renewing Democracy, Shifting Paradigm and Open Letter from Robert Steele”

Patrick Meier: Introducing GeoXray for Crisis Mapping

Advanced Cyber/IO, Geospatial
Patrick Meier

Introducing GeoXray for Crisis Mapping

My colleague Joel Myhre recently pointed me to Geosemble’s GeoXray platform, which “automatically filters content to your geographic area of interest and to your keywords of interest to provide you with timely, relevant information that enables you and your organization to make better decisions faster.” While I haven’t tested the platform, it seems similar to what Geofeedia offers.

GeoXray says:

GeoXray provides time saving focus – geographically, topically and across time. GeoXray automatically filters content to your geographic area of interest and to your keywords of interest to provide you with timely, relevant information that enables you and your organization to make better decisions faster.

GeoXray serves this triple filtered textual information through an industry standard (Open Geospatial Consortium (OGC)) Application Programming Interface (API) to any OGC compatible client software. Geosemble also provides a powerful Graphical User Interface (GUI) with GeoXray that enables you to immediately begin using and benefiting from GeoXray.

Perhaps the main difference, beyond user-interface and maybe ease-of-use, is that GeoXray pulls in both external public content (from Twitter, Facebook, Blogs, News, PDFs, etc.) and internal sources such as private databases, documents etc. The platform allows users to search content by keyword, location and time. GeoXray also works off the Google Earth Engine, which enables visual-ization from different angles. The tool can also pull in content from Wikimapia and allows users to tag mapped content according to perceived veracity. One of the strengths of the platform appears to be the tool’s automated geo-location feature. For more on GeoXray:

Original Post with Many Screen Shots

20120728 Open Source Everything Highlights

Highlights
Click on Image to Enlarge

Open Source Everything

TWITTER HASH: #openall

ARCHIVE OF DAILY HIGHLIGHTS: http://tinyurl.com/OSE-ALL

ROOT POST: http://tinyurl.com/OSE-ROOT

THE BOOK: http://tinyurl.com/OSE-Steele

THE PERSON: http://tinyurl.com/Steele2012

TODAY’S HIGHLIGHTS:  All Opens Below Line  Includes Autonomous Internet, Crowd-Funding/Sensing/Sourcing, DIY, and Transparency, Truth, Trust, & True Cost

Continue reading “20120728 Open Source Everything Highlights”

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