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Recommended Reads:

What Scientists Think

Jeremy Stangroom, co-editor of The Philosopher's Magazine, sits down with twelve of today's leading scientists and chats with them about what they've been doing and what it might mean. Stangroom's tone is engaging and accessible so the lively discussions investigating issues in neuroscience, climate change, cancer research and evolution would be enough, on their own, to warrant a recommendation. (Readers will find cogent scientific opinions that cut through current media hype on topics like GM food, animal experimentation, Intelligent Design and stem cell research.) .

Lightness: The Inevitable Renaissance of Minimum Energy Structures

This is an extraordinary look at the effect that the lightness of material has on construction, and how super-light materials can, will and must reinvent the way objects and structures are created. The natural world, and the ancient human world, are filled with elegant examples of engineering with lightweight materials - solutions that we are only now rediscovering.

Written by Adriaan Beukkers of Delft Unveristy's Laboratory of Structures and Materials of the Faculty of Aerospace Technology, Lightness is full of terrific design inspirations, from Zen archers to Kazakh yurts.

Rapture: How Biotech Became The New Religion

Biotech has certainly generated considerable interest from venture capitalists, bioethicists and the medical establishment, but it's also generated several near-cult-like movements.

Collectively known as the transhumanists, these acolytes of pharacogenomics, cryonics, bionics, medical nanotech, artificial intelligence and the like look to the technology not only to improve, but transform and transcend human life as we know it. (Some of their more famous gurus, like Ray Kurzweil, are actively planning for a date in the next decade or two when such technology will enable them to live forever.) In this important and entertaining guide to the transhumanists, Wired contributor Brian Alexander explores the movement and its structural similarities to other systems of faith. Highly recommended!

The Culture of Defeat:On National Trauma, Mourning, and Recovery

The Culture of Defeat is the most timely and relevant book I've read in the last year. Wolfgang Schivelbusch's extraordinary treatise on societies' psychological responses to being defeated in war is brilliant, and has done more to add to my understanding of the current situation in post-Saddam Iraq than any other work. This is a must-read.

Futuro: Tomorrow´s House from Yesterday

The Futuro house designed by Finnish architect Matti Suuronen was first introduced in 1968.
Its flying-saucer-like, ultra-mod elliptical shape still retains its appeal even today, reflecting the space-age optimism of the sixties and a utopian vision of "a new stance for tomorrow". This book edited by Marko Home and Mika Taanila is a detailed history of the Futuro as well as a journey into our recent futuristic past. More on the charmingly retro Futuro house can be seen here. (This book is only available directly from the publisher in Finland.)

The Penguin State of the World Atlas (7th Ed.)

Dan Smith, who has been the director of the International Peace Research Institute, Oslo (PRIO), and chairman of the board for the Institute for War & Peace Reporting, in London, assembles this terrific visual guide to the current state of the world.

In beautifully designed spreads that bring abstract statistics to life, the Atlas covers such subjects as The Rise of Globalization, Control of the Seas, Control of Space, Population Growth, Urbanization, Traffic, Energy Use, Global Warming, Biodiversity, Stock Markets, Human Rights, Children's Rights, The Internet and Digital Media, Global Investment and Health and Disease.

The Mystery of Capital: Why Capitalism Triumphs in the West and Fails Everywhere Else

Peruvian economist Hernando DeSoto, who leads the Institute for Liberty and Democracy, (the 'second-most important think-tank in the world', according to The Economist) has crafted an extremely compelling account of why capitalism fails in places like the former Soviet Union and broad swathes of the developing world, but succeeds in the developed West.

In DeSoto's view, these unerperforming societies don't lack for either motivation or for raw resources. Rather, they lack the complex system that allows tangible assets - like homes - to be turned into abstract forms of working capital. Without a system of deeds, mortgages, etc. the impoverished citizen of Manila or Sao Paolo can't unlock the value of their otherwise 'dead' capital.

The process by which the West installs free market reforms in these courntries doesn't really address this glaring hole. As a result, Capitalism's deeper promise doesn't penetrate to the extent that it could, instead remaining concentrated at the very top of these countries' socioeconomic pyramid.

DeSoto's book is a must-read for anyone who wants to understand the modern dynamics of global capitalism.

The Substance of Style: How the Rise of Aesthetic Value is Remaking Commerce, Culture and Consciousness

Over the course of the last ten years, design has undergone an profound economic and cultural renaissance. After years of producing ugly, 'merely' functional products, modern industry has begun to awaken to the power of aesthetics - witness the iPod, the Cooper Mini, and Michael Graves housewares in the aisles of your local Target. Powered by new technologies and a recognition that design is a powerful business differentiator, we've experienced a tremendous flowering of aesthetic forms and choices.

Lots of critics suggest that this great multiplication of forms is wasteful, decadent, or superficial, but author Virginia Postrel provides a very compelling defense of the aesthetic economy, with lots of engaging prose and examples. She untangles the complex forces that have underwritten design's rebirth. And she suggests that we can find not only pleasure in style, but deep meaning as well.

This is as cogent and compelling an exploration of design as I have ever read. Everyone, (and especially designers) who want to understand the rise of the Age of Aesthetics should have a copy of this book on their shelf.

The New Everyday

Emile Aarts and Stefano Marzano of Philips Design have put together the most cogent and deep exploration of ambient intelligence (the embedding of computing and communications capability into everyday objects) yet written. This book is a MUST HAVE for interactions designers who want to prepare for the coming world of ubiquitous computing.

 

A New Deal for New York

In the wake of the September 11th attacks, New York historian Wallace argues that we not just rebuild and memorialize the World Trade Center site, but rethink and plan more broadly for the entire city’s future. Wallace will be well-known to anyone who saw Ric Burn's masterful documentary New York on PBS, in which he featured prominently.

He tells the fascinating and largely-unknown history of the financial center, exploding myths about the city’s success in recent years. He summarizes a wide variety of ambitious but viable projects to improve all of New York by launching what he calls “the new New Deal”—a multipronged plan that, mindful of both the successes and disappointments of the original New Deal of the 1930s, would feature such longed-for improvements as a revitalized port, improved mass transit, and more affordable housing. In short, he argues, September 11th has provided us an “opening, as a city, to make our own course corrections on the river of history—if we have the desire, if we can summon the will. Happily, there are substantial grounds for believing that, under the press of hard blows and hard times, our audacious metropolis will again lead the nation in recalling our history, reimagining our future, and seizing hold of our collective destiny.”

 

Small Worlds:The Dynamics of Networks Between Order and Randomness

In the last few years, social network theory has emerged from the soup of complexity science, chaos theory, chaordic systems analysis and computational sociology. One of the hallmarks of this area is the so-called "small world" phenomenon (better known to us as the "six degrees of separation") that link just about everybody somehow.

This book is dense, and heavy with mathematical modelling, but it does a terrific job exploring the implications of the small world phenomenon.

 

Soon: The Brands of Tomorrow

This terrific book, (available only from Amazon UK) imagines the brands of the future, and how we might interact with them. After researching demographic, cultural, technological,and consumer trends, designers created new visions of how we might buy.

 

Linked: The New Science of Networks

Consider this The Tipping Point for networks - an accessible guide to the complex science of networks and the way they impact virtually every part of our lives. This is a terrific, often quite funny book that is a good "on ramp" to understanding the basics of network theory- and will help make more advanced volumes more understandable.

 


Twenty Ads That Shook the World

James Twichell is perhaps one of American culture's most underrated critics. This very readable history of the development of advertising is also a profound social commentary. By looking at the story-behind-the-story of everything from P.T. Barnum to the Volkswagen Beetle, Twitchell provides a real look into the forces that shaped American society over a century.

 

Economic Alternatives to Globalization:

Written by a premier group of thinkers from around the world, Alternatives to Economic Globalization is a watershed in the antiglobalization movement. While I disagree with many of the conclusions, this is extremely though-provoking and a must-read for anyone who wants to understand globalization and its discontents.


Our Molecular Future: How Nanotechnology, Robotics, Genetics, and Artificial Intelligence Will Transform Our World

Douglas Mulhall provides an accessible guide to importnat emerging technologies for the 21st century. This is an excellent guide for anyone interested in understanding the future directions of the current state of the art.

 

Skin: Surface, Substance, and Design

Skin is the catalog book for a marvelous museum exhibition of the same name, edited by curatorial genius Ellen Lupton. The book presents products, furniture, fashion, architecture, and media that are expanding the limits of what we understand as surface. Reflecting the convergence of natural and artificial life, this provocative and stimulating book shows how enhanced and simulated skins appear everywhere in our contemporary world.

 

Panarchy: Understanding Transformation in Human and Natural Systems

Gunderson and Holling's work combines economic, environmental and systems theory to help us understand complex change.

 

Cradle to Cradle

McDonough and Braungart's revolutionary treatise on sustainability transcends 'environmentalism' as usually described. A hopeful, illuminating and inspiring book.

 

Tomorrow Now

Bruce Sterling is one of the world's best science fiction writers. Tomorrow Now is his take on envisioning the next fify years. Sterling can be a bit of a downer - he needs to be read in the right mood - but he's wickedly smart and always entertaining.

The End of Globalization: Lessons from the Great Depression

Some scholars see globalization as inevitable and irreversible, whereas others point out that even open and highly integrated international communities have dissolved in the past. Princeton history professor Harold James investigates the last great age of globalism, which was destroyed by the Great Depression and political upheaval in the 1930s, to put the debate in historical perspective. He comes to some startling, and compelling conclusions about the present and future of globalization.

 

 

Welcome to the Z+Blog!

Pointers and commentary on emerging futures issues collected by Z + Partners

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Some Gifts That Keep On Giving

Last year, our offices were inundated with gift baskets. And while we definitely enjoyed the treats, it got us thinking-- there is a lot of costs associated with sending these item -- money that could be more meaningfully spent.


So we came up with a website for the holiday season that offers up some gift alternatives to the traditional gift basket. It's called NoBasketsPlease.com. The items featured on the site were chosen because they promote sustainability and social responsibility.

But we are super excited about a very special holiday song that you can download for free on the website. Its a song for the season, specially written by our friend and bandleader Ethan Lipton, aptly titled "Gift Basket".


We encourage you to share the website with your colleagues, friends and family and give a gift that may or may not fit under the Christmas tree, but will definitley last well into the New Year and beyond
posted by June on 12/08/2006 [permalink]

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Google To The People!



Huzzah! The Populace will own Google! And in a mere 202,345,125 years. At least that is the estimate that the folks behind Google Will Eat Itself have calculated for the Imperial Search Engine to be completely bought out.

GWEI is a web project created by the collective Ubermorgen featuring Alessandro Ludovico and Paolo Cirio. Here is how the project works in the artists' own words:
We generate money by serving Google text advertisements on a network of hidden Websites. With this money we automatically buy Google shares. We buy Google via their own advertisement! Google eats itself - but in the end "we" own it!

All shares are held under the name GTTP, Ltd. [Google To The People] and redistributed to the public. GWEI is a critique of the Google's growing information monopoly as well poking a whole, miniscule though it may be, into the economic bubble that Google Adsense has created for itself.

In a similar "War of the Web" vein, Epic 2014 is a flash movie that was created in 2004 by Robin Sloan and Matt Thompson about a hypothesized future where the prevalence of public information from sources like Google and NewsBot come head to head with traditional news media like The New York Times.


But, GWEI points out that the downfall of these giant corporations is not equally giant corporations but rather "...the parasite. If enough parasites suck small amounts of money in this self-referentialism embodiment, they will empty this artificial mountain of data and its inner risk of digital totalitarianism." (-GWEI Press Release, 2005)
posted by June on 11/01/2006 [permalink]

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Iceland Chooses Darkness

This is profound and poetic:

The lights are going out in Iceland this week so people can gaze at the night sky.

Authorities in the capital Reykjavik will turn off street lights on Thursday evening and people are also being encouraged to sit in their houses in the dark, writer Andri Snaer Magnason said on Wednesday. While the lights are out, an astronomer will describe the night sky over national radio.

The event is part of a film festival taking place on the small north Atlantic island, which gets most of its electricity from abundant thermal energy. The lights are due to go off at 10 p.m. (2200 GMT), about two hours after nightfall, for half an hour.

Magnason said the capital's population of around 250,000 might be able to see the Northern Lights, a flickering curtain of light often seen in northern climes which is caused by solar particles being caught in the Earth's magnetic field. Two other Icelandic towns will also turn off their lights.

I wonder what it would take to get Americans to do the same thing?

posted by Andrew on 9/28/2006 [permalink]

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Carbon Positive, Carbon Negative, or Carbon Responsible?

To some the glass is half empty, to others half full. It appears this question of perspective is also afflicting those looking at going beyond carbon neutral. Two terms are being used interchangeably despite being opposites: carbon positive & carbon negative.

In both cases people are referring to offsetting or sequestering more carbon dioxide than is emitted. To date, neither Wikipedia nor Google definitions has weighed in on this matter.

As the point is to leave less CO2 in the atmosphere than you put in, we at Z+ think it makes sense to call it carbon negative.

We are however willing to concede that offsetting beyond neutrality is a positive thing to do!

posted by Cordelia Lindgren on 8/28/2006 [permalink]

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Carpet Invaders


Polish artist Janek Simon blends the narrative and aesthetic form of two media, one ancient, one merely nostalgic: Caucasian carpets and late-70's videogames. This line, from project's accompanying text is particularly illuminating, even in mixed English:

The collector carpet furnishing the ethnic-design, world-cuisine magazine becomes a new shopping item for the homecoming marines and the kid back home. It is the Oriental rug for your portable arcade mosque. Follow the voice of the Joystick prophet.
posted by Andrew on 7/05/2006 [permalink]

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Brainstorm's Best Quotes

At the 2006 Fortune Brainstorm conference in Aspen, CO, corporate approaches to climate change, ecological sustainability and carbon neutrality are all at the forefront of the conversation. Here are the two best quotes from the meeting:

"Socialism failed because it couldn't tell the economic truth; capitalism may fail because it couldn't tell the ecological truth."

- Legendary environmental thinker Lester Brown, of the Earth Policy Institute and the WorldWatch Institute

And in response to a question from GBN's Peter Schwartz on why some green thinkers neglect to mention nuclear energy as a viable renewable energy source:

"Don't get me wrong: I love nuclear energy! It's just that I prefer fusion to fission. And it just so happens that there's an enormous fusion reactor safely banked a few million miles from us. It delivers more than we could ever use in just about 8 minutes. And it's wireless!"

- Leading ecological thinker, architect and Cradle-to-Cradle author William McDonough
posted by Andrew on 6/29/2006 [permalink]

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A Gamer's Guild Self-Trademarks

Game designer Ralph Koster provides the latest indication that the metaverse and meatspace are being ground into indisinguishable pulp. A group of gamers (collectively known as a guild) who are currently playing World of Warcraft and Ultima Online, have decided to trademark their guild The Syndicate "with regards to all things online gaming related". If you and your friends want to call play by that name, you could presumably find yourself forking over more than gold pieces.
Of course, this really only works on a metaphorical level only -- The Syndicate isn't an incorporated commercial venture, it's membership is fluid, and its unclear whether or not playing a game is intrinsically a commercial activity on behalf of the gamer -- but it's another indication of the widening chasm beween existing law and contemporary practice in gamespace. As Koster points out, this is certainly a harbinger of things to come: as more gamer/user-generated activity and "Virtual IP" is monetized, we'll see all kinds of novel (and occasionally half-baked) uses of the legal system by gamers to self-legitimize.

(I wonder what the equivalent of "business process patents" will look like: "Nobody can press UP UP LEFT ABUTTON DOWN RIGHT" without paying The Mighty Minions Guild a royalty!")
posted by Andrew on 6/20/2006 [permalink]

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Biodiversity on Ice


We've written previously about efforts to catalogue the world's genetic biodiveristy. Now Reuters is reporting on a remarkble effort to create a frozen "Noah's Ark" seed vault to safeguard a vital part of that biodiversity -- the the world's crop seeds -- from cataclyms, climate change, bioengineering and unchecked human expansion. Construction of the Global Seed Vault, which will built beneath a mountain on the remote, frozen island of Svalbard 1,000 km (600 miles) from the North Pole, will start this June and could be completed by September 2007. Whne complete, it will hold three million varieties of seeds from around the world. Collection is being organized by the Global Crop Diversity Trust (pdf).


You might ask: is such a vault really necessary? Rice, wheat, corn and soy -- never mind barley and hopps -- are so widely used, and their genomes are so heavily influenced by artificial selection pressures already, that it seems unlikely that even a grand cataclysm could make such a repository needed. In fact, it's just this kind of monoculture, (along with relentless agricultural expansion, environmentally-destructive practices such as slash-and-burn agriculture, environmental degradation and large-scale conversion of habitats) that compose the greatest threats to biodiversity, and make such seed vaults necessary. The Svalbard installation is intended as a kind of global "backup" for many seed banks around the world, particularly those in developing regions prone to power outages, interruptions due to civil strife, etc.
posted by Andrew on 6/04/2006 [permalink]

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Psychedelic Pong Played in Plasma


Here's a fabulously trippy and free update to the classic 1970's Ur-game Pong created by George Mason University's Steve Taylor. PlasmaPong introduces several new concepts into the game, including the ability inject plasma into the field of play (and dramatically change the course of the ball or puck), the ability to create a vacuum from your paddle (and thus suck your ball towards it), and the ability to send a blast of shockwaves onto the field. Sounds all very academic (and it is, nerd-liciously so) but the stunning, hallucenogenic visuals will have you playing and tripping for hours. It's a must-download.
posted by Andrew on 5/28/2006 [permalink]

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I (heart) my CO2!



Want to hear the latest in Orwellian newspeak? At first hearing, these delightfully craven, "pro-CO2" advertisements, put out by the Competitive Enterprise Institute, seem to be the kind of laughable parodies you'd expect to see on Saturday Night Live or The Colbert Report.

(Here's a little background on the CEI; as neutrally as possible: they are a pro-business non-profit public policy organization which has aggressively challenged the science behind global warming, and which has received significant financial backing from a number of large corporations with vital interests in emissions-intensive businesses. Read the wikipedia entry and make up your mind from there.)

The tagline of the commercials about CO2 emissions is, bizarro-world-style, "They call it pollution; we call it life." One of the ads, which claims that climate change is most certainly not causing glaciers to melt, cites the work of Curt Davis, director of the Center for Geospatial Intelligence at the University of Missouri-Columbia. Davis has since gone on the record demanding CEI stop misrepresenting his research:


Davis said that three points in his study unequivocally demonstrate the misleading aspect of the CEI ads:

- His study only reported growth for the East Antarctic ice sheet, not the entire Antarctic ice sheet.
- Growth of the ice sheet was only noted on the interior of the ice sheet and did not include coastal areas. Coastal areas are known to be losing mass, and these losses could offset or even outweigh the gains in the interior areas.
- The fact that the interior ice sheet is growing is a predicted consequence of global climate warming.


You'd think CEI would have had the common sense to check with the folks they were citing before doing so.
posted by Andrew on 5/22/2006 [permalink]

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Anti-Japanese Print Advertisements in China





The amazing blog EastSouthWestNorth has been featuring examples of growing Anti-Japanese sentiments appearing in Chinese ads. I spoke with Jonathan Spence, one of the foremost scholars of Chinese civilization from the 16th century to the present and Sterling Professor of History at Yale University, about the historical context behind these most recent eruptions of anti-Japanese fervor:

I think Japan is a genuine wound. I see it in terms of humiliation just as much as the amount of deaths and suffering involved. Japan humiliated China in an almost unique way from the 1880s to the 1940s. Few people have ever gone through that kind of experience. With a wound like that, one can re-encourage or re-open types of historical memory. They can be suppressed or stimulated. Competitions in sports or economics can often lead into a re-evaluation of that past.

A very complicated area is how the China-Japan relationship plays off into a kind of Holocaust memory and how that, itself, feeds into either anti-Israeli or anti-Palestinian sentiments. The War of 1894-95 was fought mainly in Korea and the North China Sea, but Japan unleashed the equivalent of a modern military naval force against China and it took Taiwan as the fruit of that war. Hence Taiwan’s complex and complicated history; it was a result of Japanese colonialism and history.


Throughout the nineteen-teens and nineteen-twenties, they placed more and more political and economic demands on China that were not merely practical. They were uniquely humiliating and they eventually led to the outbreak of the big war in 1937. There was a consistent on-going attempt to bring China into a Japanese cultural orbit.

Of course other countries have experienced this but it was the prolonged nature and the concentration of it that made it all the worse. And then, added on top of all that was the previous grandeur of China’s imperial history and that made it all that much worse. The suffering was terrible and the behavior of troops was hideous. It was a savage and protracted war.

So there is plenty of reason for reawakening this wound. People can just shrug and say, “C’mon it was sixty years ago. Let’s let it go.” Or they can say, “Let’s rise again!” I
f you have a tooth pain, you can ignore it or, even more extreme, you can get a tranquilizer. On the other hand, you can stick your fingers along your gum and feel the pain a bit more. I think that’s what they’re doing. They’re making it worse to make themselves aware of it. I think they’re fascinated and horrified by some of the shame and suffering of what happened with Japan. It’s a rallying cry.

One theory, of course, is that the Chinese government is reawakening all of this so that Japan doesn’t get a permanent seat on the Security Council. To do that, they want to reawaken the world’s view of Japan’s atrocities and insure that they’re not lost alongside Nazi Germany’s atrocities.

And then there was also a flicker of the same kind of anti-Americanism over the Belgrade bombing. But I don’t see the same sort of seething rage towards the United States.

posted by Ann Marie Healy on 5/19/2006 [permalink]

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Cabaret Scientifique

There's nothing like a little booze and bright lights for creating fruitful cross-pollination. That's the theory behind the fantastic Cabaret Scientifique, an evening of songs, dance and comedy acts commissioned by Ensemble Studio Theatre and their scientific partners in crime, the Sloan Foundation. The two organizations are celebrating the culmination of their FirstLight Festival with an evening of quirky, hilarious and endearing tributes to the merging of art and science.

Commissioned companies include: Les Freres Corbusier, Alec Duffy, Silent Voice, The Organ Donors & The Percodettes, and more.

Monday night, May 15 at Ensemble Studio Theatre in Manhattan.
posted by Ann Marie Healy on 5/12/2006 [permalink]

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Las Vegas/ Olivo Barbieri



Jennifer Fiore, one of our Z+ photographers (and fantastic artist to boot!), just tipped us off to the work of Olivo Barbieri. Photographing from a helicopter 300-500 feet above the ground with a large-format camera and a tilt-focus lens, Barbieri captures the artifice of cities while also rendering their emotional legacy in our minds and our culture. These shots of Las Vegas look and feel like tiny toy models. How appropriate given a city constructed solely to fulfill the American ambition to play hard.

Barbieri's work will be on exhibit here in New York at the Yancey Richardson Gallery until May 13th.

Thanks Jen!
posted by Ann Marie Healy on 4/21/2006 [permalink]

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In the Continuum



Art has a way of articulating something that the libraries full of statistics can never seem to manage. That's probably why the new play In The Continuum, dramatizing the devastating problem of HIV/AIDS among African and African-American women, is such a profound experience. The play, written by playwright-actors Danai Gurira and Nikkole Salter (pictured above), follows the stories of a married Zimbabwean woman and a 19-year-old girl from South Central Los Angeles over the course of 48 hours. It opened at Primary Stages in New York this past fall and now, after numerous extensions, the critically acclaimed show is going on the road. The next stops will be Harare, Zimbabwe at the Harare International Festival of the Arts, Cape Town and Johannesburg, South Africa and then back to the States for runs in Washington, Cincinnati, New Haven, Philadelphia and Chicago.
posted by Ann Marie Healy on 4/13/2006 [permalink]

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Two Amazing Statistics

It's a rarity and a delight to hear CEOs say something that is truly memorable. Yesterday, I heard two.

I'm in Rome attending IBM's Business Leadership Forum, a private conference of 500 CEOs and senior government leaders from around the world. The theme of the event is innovation, and in his opening remarks, Sam Palmisano, the CEO of IBM came up with this chestnut:


"Last year, human beings produced more transistors (and at lower cost) than they did grains of rice.


It turns out that statistic is from an LA Times article dated April 17, 2005, entitled "A Law of Continuing Returns" (which unfortunately is no longer available online). The full quote is even more impressive:


Last year more transistors were produced, and at a lower cost, than grains of rice, according to the Semiconductor Industry Assn. Moore estimates that the number of transistors shipped in 2003 was 10 quintillion, or 10 to the 18th power -- about 100 times the number of ants estimated to be stalking the planet.


The second quote came from Lord Browne, Chairman of BP Shell. In a wide-ranging talk that covered everything from climate change and true-cost-economics to the limitations of traditional measures of both shareholder return and corporate social responsibility, Browne said:


The science of climate change is provisional, but then, all science is provisional. The scientific consensus is real. The time for action is now.


He also said:


In some parts of Uganda, electricity costs many times more per a kilowatt hour than it does in the most developed nations, despite the poverty of the citizens. The reason is that the electricity must be stored in batteries. This is a problem we must solve if we are to address poverty and development.


More good quotes to follow.
posted by Andrew on 4/06/2006 [permalink]

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