Can't help but be drawn to it and they're pretty much available over the web. Same with books.
Repetition. Redundancy.
It could work. The more I read, the greater the chances I just might be able to do it.
Learning. Osmosis.
Kaizen. Improvement. Who wouldn't want this.
Simple or minimalist. You can't get wrong but better if you know the difference.
World's Best Presentations. Hail the new visual storytellers! Can't say enough how inspiring these works can be.
Get found or if you just want to find your place anywhere you'd want and work on that unique contribution. Doesn't have to be web only.
Show-off or genuine need? Who doesn't crave gadgets but here's nice flowchart before you take the plunge.
Google Data Liberation. Can't help but be amazed on them Google tools. The more they say you can go in and out as you please, the more we come back and become willing tenants. Your data is yours, Google just offers free parking lot - as they control what happens in the fringes. Just thought of that. Sounds cynical but really, I love Google.
Thursday, October 29, 2009
Friday, October 16, 2009
Blog Action Day: Unknowingly in Manila, the War Against the Effects of Climate Change Began a Century Ago
In 1892, with mounting pressures of a two year deadline and , urban planner Daniel Burnham successfully led the World's Fair in Chicago to completion - the biggest and most ambitious in the world at that time. Sadly, his plans that would have saved the people from a growing threat of natural calamity in Manila, a century later, could have been the real feather on his already remarkable resume.
In 1904 the United States government sent Daniel Burnham, a prominent Chicago architect and city planner, to the Philippine Islands to modernize the capital city and a second smaller city to be used as the summer capital. Plans were drawn for Manila and Baguio and building began. And though shifting political and economic interests in the U.S. eventually disrupted the projects, ...
Except for a shore road, which became Dewey boulevard, now known as Roxas boulevard, the plan for Manila was not fulfilled.
105 Years Later
Typhoon Ketsana (Ondoy) dropped 455 mm (17.9 in) of rain on Metro Manila in a span of 24 hours on Saturday - the most in 42 years. A month's worth of rainfall in a single day washed away homes and flooded large areas, stranding thousands on rooftops in the city and elsewhere.
Man-made
In 1977, a World Bank-funded study identified Marikina Valley, the western shores of Laguna de Bay, and the Manila Bay coastal area as among development areas that should prepare for flooding, earthquakes and possible changes in topography.
In Erik Larsen's Devil in the White City, juxtaposed against the World's Fair in Chicago, where electricity literally flowed for the first time and a huge wheel by a guy named George Ferris wowed the crowd, something sinister, not unlike the works of The Ripper, was also happening that led to the gruesome deaths of possibly 200 people.
In Manila, more than a century later, climate change has began to define what a serial killer really looks like.
Coincidence?
On exhibit at Chicago until December 31, 2009 is 'Daniel Burnham's Enduring Vison for the Philippines'
References and related materials:
Daniel Burnham - Wikipedia
World's Columbian Exposition (Chicago World's Fair)
United Nations donates 44M for Ondoy Victims
Blueprint for a City's Soul
Quezon and the Aborted Burnham Plans
Blog Action Day 2009
Friday, October 9, 2009
Catalyst 09: Malcolm Gladwell | Brad Ruggles
via bradruggles.com
Malcolm Gladwell spoke about the perils of overconfidence among leaders at Catalyst 2009. [http://www.bradruggles.com/2009/10/08/catalyst-09-malcolm-gladwell/]
Friday, October 2, 2009
Kunio Kato
Amazing artist. Watch this video - Tsumiki no ie and change the way you look at 'flooding' again. Oh, and he received an Oscar for it - Best Animated Short. First for an Asian.
Thursday, October 1, 2009
Pop!Tech - Conferences
via poptech.org
PopTech coming this October! Innovation, design, trends. Social Impact.
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