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in title, tags, annotations or urlThe Magic of KidsTech: Enchantments and Curses | Institute For The Future - 0 views
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"with instant consumption, ambient assistance, and contextual awareness, the delay between desire and result is shrinking. Instant feedback and constant affirmation of status will be the norm. Patience may be a virtue, but it will be measured in seconds, not days." Look forward to spending time reading the full report. What is the impact on museums? Can we keep up with expectations of gamified information streams?
How Will 3-D Printing Change the Smithsonian? | At the Smithsonian | Smithsonian - 0 views
Seeing Art Through Google Glass | At the Smithsonian | Smithsonian - 0 views
Master Stroke Lecture Series - 0 views
7:00pm|TALK|Master Stroke Lecture Series. Delivered by Rajeev Sethi, art curator and designer Collab: Institute Of Indian Interior Designershttp://www.eventincity.com/event/544/Master-Stroke-Lectur...
Imagine another American Civil War, but this time in every state : NPR - 0 views
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"We already are seeing 'border war' with individual states passing major legislation that differs considerably from that in other places," says Darrell West, director of governance studies at the Brookings Institution, and William Gale, a Brookings senior fellow in economic studies,
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When and if the issue turns to violent confrontations between local citizens and federal officers, or between contentious groups of citizens, the clash might well take place far closer to home
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America has an extraordinary number of guns and private militias," they write. How many? They cite the National Shooting Sports Foundation's estimate of 434 million firearms in civilian possession in the U.S. right now. That would be 1.3 guns per person.
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The great tax escape that is America's nonprofit sector | FT Alphaville - 2 views
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it turns out that the way the wealthy decide how to distribute cash is often even less fair than the way the state decides how to spend it.
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More than half of the highly conspicuous donations of the ultra-rich were injected directly into the endowments of their already rich alma maters. Much of the rest was given to hushed museums in the form of very expensive donated art, or to other places that rich old people tend to congregate, like cultural arts centers and high-end hospitals. In other words, the funds the rich were giving went largely to institutions that tended to the needs and prerogatives of the rich and privileged.
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How Community Design Advocates Can Be a Force for Design Justice - 0 views
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Currently, Colloqate is working with community design advocates on Midland Library in Portland and restorative justice space in Dallas.
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The project in Dallas, which deals with a former jail, allows us to think about restorative justice through the lens of those who have been most harmed by that space. We were able to hire CDAs that were formerly incarcerated and hire others who were part of the broader network of the city and they were working together to ask questions of their own specific communities,
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Design as Protest (DAP) began as a yearlong organizing effort, involving 250 design professionals and design advocates across the United States and Canada. They examined how injustice can be challenged through the built environment. Issues such as ending the prison industrial complex, defunding and reallocating the police, and advocating against architecture projects that are hostile to communities of color.
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