Saturday, April 28, 2012

Shake and Fold

Saving the planet one towel at a time! Great instructional video in 5 minutes.


Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Monday, April 9, 2012

Abundance

In their new book Abundance, technology gurus Peter Diamandis and Steven Kotler offer an alternative view to the current gloom and doom: 

"What does the world really look like? Turns out it's not the nightmare most suspect. Violence is at an all-time low, personal freedom at a historic high. During the past century child mortality decreased by 90% while the average human life span increased by 100%. Food is cheaper and more plentiful than ever (groceries cost 13 times less today than in 1870). Poverty has declined more in the past 50 years than the previous 500. In fact, adjusted for inflation, incomes have tripled in the past 50 years. 

Even Americans living under the poverty line today have access to a telephone, toilet, television, running water, air-conditioning, and a car. Go back 150 years and the richest robber barons could have never dreamed of such wealth. "Nor are these changes restricted to the developed world. In Africa today a Masai warrior on a cellphone has better mobile communications than the President of the United States did 25 years ago; if he's on a smartphone with Google, he has access to more information than the President did just 15 years ago, with a feast of standard features: watch, stereo, camera, video camera, voice recorder, GPS tracker, video teleconferencing equipment, a vast library of books, films, games, music. 

Just 20 years ago these same goods and services would have cost over $1 million... "Right now all information-based technologies are on exponential growth curves: They're doubling in power for the same price every 12 to 24 months. This is why an $8 million supercomputer from two decades ago now sits in your pocket and costs less than $200. This same rate of change is also showing up in networks, sensors, cloud computing, 3-D printing, genetics, artificial intelligence, robotics and dozens more industries." 

Despite relentless media negativity - designed to attract viewers and thus advertisers - most of society's trend lines are overwhelmingly positive.  See the full article at Investment U linked here.