Contents contributed and discussions participated by Steve Bosserman
A Counterintuitive Route to Happiness - 0 views
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Layous and her colleagues conclude that their “time-scarcity instructions led participants to become more motivated to plan, do, and enjoy activities.” This increased their sense that the aforementioned psychological needs were being met, and led to higher levels of well-being.
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putting themselves in a scarcity frame of mind led to positive changes in both attitude and behavior.
Chatting robots and music: Fun gadgets on display - The Columbus Dispatch, 2017-02-28 - 0 views
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JUST ADD WATERGrowing your own veggies may become possible even for urbanites with tiny studio apartments.Israeli startup Living Box offers a modular, unfoldable, solar-powered little greenhouse that you can use to harvest anything from tomatoes to tea and herbs.“We have a slow release water system for irrigation, with a novel liquid nutrient solution and bacteria to avoid the use of pesticides, as well as an app prototype updating weather conditions and other relevant data right to your smartphone, so you don’t have to monitor it,” explained Nitzan Solan, CEO of the company.The idea was to create a sustainable, affordable and simple mobile farming system that could be operated by anyone around the globe.As of now, Living Box is testing in 50 sites around Israel, the U.S. and Nigeria, and aims to try locations in Spain and Fiji. It is expected to carry a market price of $300.
"The Fab City - it's more than just a city full of fab labs " - 0 views
The Future of Not Working - The New York Times - 0 views
AI and automation are about to implode blue collar jobs - 0 views
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Lots of high-minded technological thinkers, particularly Elon Musk, have proposed a universal basic income, a form of wealth distribution that ensures every citizen receives a baseline income whether or not they are employed, as a likely solution to the problem of workforce automation. But the White House report takes a more somber approach, describing a basic income as “giving up on the possibility of workers’ remaining employed.” Instead, the report suggests a number of policy proposals (like Obama’s national free community college initiative, and expanded unemployment benefits) as ways of actively facilitating the transition into a more AI driven economy.
The Post-Human World - 0 views
The Observer view on Mark Zuckerberg | Observer editorial - 0 views
'An engineering feat' - The Columbus Dispatch, 2017-02-19 - 0 views
Better cheese through science - The Columbus Dispatch, 2017-02-18 - 0 views
In the age of robots, our schools are teaching children to be redundant | George Monbiot - 0 views
The Revenge of Dial-Up Internet | Fast Forward | OZY - 0 views
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But what about Internet users who want to slow down, but their jobs won’t let them? People whose profession revolves around deadlines and time-sensitive material — journalists, bankers and many others — would be up in arms if the Internet slowed down even a split second, admits Carl Honoré, author of In Praise of Slow. “We’re up against the Web industrial complex,” he says, in which even the most well-intentioned businesses are driven by more content, more clicks, more swipes and ultimately getting more people addicted to their product. The Slow Web movement stands at odds with these realities. “That’s the big challenge,” Honoré says, “a kind of detoxification, a relearning of how to use the Web.”
The Elites Won't Save Us: Chris Hedges - 0 views
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