2009 – a year for Playing ‘Catch-Up’ (Part 1)
This is Part one with Part two (looking at who will probably better off at this time next year) to come shortly. If you are in a position to sharpen your thinking, catch a breath or use some time to improve your understanding of the ways in which we create our societies, then I have a three items to recommend to you for this year – two books and one search engine option. The books offer additional ways to the consider some of the scientific research we hear about (without being too ‘jargon’ laden) and the search engine is arguably one of the best pieces of technology I’ve seen for quite some time.
First up the books which I’d recommend you include in your 2009 reading priorities.
John Grant’s ‘Corrupted Science: Fraud, Ideology and Politics in Science’ was published in 2007 by ‘Facts, Figures and Fun’ and may not have made it into your basket for holiday time. Don’t miss it. If you’d benefit from understanding the way in which science is used to support dubious political and personal positions, with great case studies and blatant ‘lies’ in science, then you ought to read this book. It’ll certainly improve your ‘BS Detector’ when the next piece of psuedo science is thrown at you to support an less than supportable case.
‘The Carbon Age’ by Eric Roston is the next book, published late last year by Walker & Company it is a wonderous look at the atom that is ‘Carbon’, its various forms in combination with other atoms, how we manipulate it and what The Carbon Age really means for us as a species. A bit more science heavy than Corrupted Science, Roston poses the position that Carbon Dioxide greenhouse gases and the like that are top of mind and highly reported at the moment are natural events that circulate carbon in various forms as part of an earthly cycle but that we have added the breakdown of the carbon atom such that we now threaten life as we know it. It is a scary proposition and one that forces a need for action, not complacency in terms of addressing the way we are adding to the speed and size of the cycle. The book falls a bit flat towards the end before picking up again and by then you should have a greatly enhanced understanding of what we are really talking about when we talk the age of Carbon.
Finally I’d like to recommend a Search Engine tool called Searchme.com that could well be the shape of search engines in the future. If you’ve read my writings over the years you’ll know even as a futurist I am a technology sceptic, having seen and read more claims about innovations in technology that I can recall. You’ll also know that I am a pragmatist and am fully supportive of any technology that can really improve the things we do. This search engine presents you with a visual view of the front page of websites that contain the subject you’ve entered into the search bar. You can then simply scroll past each page quickly reading the headlines before skipping on to the one you want or trying again – just like reading a magazine. I’m a huge fan of Google and as the new search engine builds, suspect I’ll be using Google less and www.Searchme.com a lot more and if you have a preference for viewing images rather than reading lots of text (as traditional search engines present things to you), then this new beta format is one of the game changing ideas.
n a recent piece in the New York Times, Thomas L Freidman’s article ‘If I had a hammer’ discussed the new book by Erik Brynjolfsson & Andrew McAfee’s new book ‘The Second Machine Age’ and the development of computing power now making even complex employment positions redundant. Whereas in the first machine age, human muscle…
Read More >I was interviewed for this article earlier last year and now it seems it has more currency than ever, so I’m reposting the link here. As a parent, what steps can you take to ensure your kids are well placed for a fulfilling career? This article offers some thoughts
Read More >For over a decade I worked with organisations in for profit, not for profit and government sectors. I’ve advised organisations in Europe, North America, Asia and beyond. Some organisations have been multi nationals, long standing, privately owned, publicly held, socially aware, profit focused and more. I’ve managed million dollar portfolios and client accounts of just…
Read More >The link to the article below will take you to an overview of how robotic design is developing towards a more ‘natural’ form of human movement. To a larger extent, this is part of the normalisation process so that those of us exposed to robotics can be more accepting of their presence. This is indeed…
Read More >Occasionally I see a post that leads me to slap my forehead with the sheer simplicity of its brilliance. The post in the link below discusses the idea of homework for kids and I flag that I’m on the School Council of my kid’s Primary School, where this discussion runs rampant. The research we…
Read More >I’m part way through a small research piece for an FMCG company that is interested in exploring the future consumer and what kind of environmental factors might influence their purchasing decisions. Interestingly enough toward the end of last year I had three FMCG firms approach me about a similar challenge, so ‘Future Consumers’ must be…
Read More >The Australian Government has announced a ‘Repeal Day’, intended to be used to axe the existence of hundreds of outdated laws. The concept is a good one, though for me, doesn’t quite get the Australian Parliament into a forward looking setting in how it could develop FUTURE legislation. So what could be done instead and…
Read More >Continuing his run of suggesting an annual theme and idea of world focus for the year ahead, Futurist Marcus Barber has declared 2014 to be the International Year of Food Security. ‘The year ahead is going to bring into sharp focus, what has often been seen as an ‘other-world’ problem’ Barber says. ‘For a number…
Read More >Yes I know, committing to an early morning chat on ABC Radio on New Year’s Day may to some seem tinged with the ‘what were you thinking?’ bug, but hey, what better time is there than chatting about the future, than at prime New Year’s Resolution time? You’ll be able to listen to the stream…
Read More >The Australian Strategic Planning Institute website has a new article on why Visions, rather than being useful shining lights, end up being ‘ruts’ for organisations. Counter instinictivley and yet simply put, the never ending nature of some Visions leads to an inaction toward that Vision. Companies and individuals spin their wheels in a quagmire…
Read More >