Mein Blog
All human beings are entrepreneurs
> All human beings are entrepreneurs. When we were in the caves, we were all self-employed … finding our food, feeding ourselves. That’s where human history began. As civilization came, we suppressed it. We became “labor” because they stamped us, “You are labor.” We forgot that we are entrepreneurs. –Muhammad Yunus gefunden in [The Start-up…
Wie Zivilisten halfen, den Informationskrieg in Libyen zu gewinnen
> Ashammakhi instinctively reaches for technological analogies to capture the complexity of this conflict. He likens those on the ground in the information war to a coöperative network of sensors giving feedback „continuously, dynamically, and in real time.“ He compares the way self-organizing civilians come together in support of military operations to CPU scavenging, where…
MJ Cole Mix für Wideboys Kiss
Ein Brett von einem Mix, perfekt für den Energieschub am frühen Nachmittag.
Der Internet-Kühlschrank-Faktor
Interessante Präsentation von [Alexandra Deschamps-Sonsino](http://designswarm.com/) bei einer Guardian Master Class zum Themenfeld ‚Internet of Things‘. Sie beschäftigt sich u.a. mit dem „Internet Fridge Factor” (IFF). > This reminded me of the Internet Fridge. […] Food management and the internet. Brilliant idea, crap implementation over and over again. But the hope lives on. Für sie beschreibt…
Usman Haque über Smart Cities
> The „smartness“ of smart cities will not be driven by orders coming from the unseen central government computers of science fiction, dictating the population’s actions from afar. Rather, smart cities will be smart because their citizens have found new ways to craft, interlink and make sense of their own data. Der Begriff „Smart Cities“…
Josh Spear über New York City
Und wo wir schon dabei sind: hier ist [jeffstaple](http://www.johanneskleske.com/blog/the-collected-jeffstaple-insights.html) aus der gleichen [Serie](http://www.iwc.com/en-us/globetrotter/new-york/).
Sherry Turkle’s Digitaler Dualismus
> The digital dualist perspective says no: there is something in the technology that enables/causes antisocial behavior and we must overcome this false consciousness by actively refusing to use our devices. The augmented reality perspective demands that we look at root causes. That might lead us to the same ends: no texting at the dinner…