Your robots — such tools as office productivity software, laser printers and thermostat-controlled HVAC systems — don’t need these suggestions, do they?
Tag Archives: business
When it rains on Friday…
Outside the window, raindrops drip from the wet branches of the redbud tree. A twig heavily laden with lichen balances precariously on a redbud limb. Brown and yellow leaves still cling to their connections, pulled loose by falling water occasionally. The green leaves of a wild privet bush stand out from the rust-coloured background of autumn.
For the past few weeks, I have changed from a person devoted to the art of dance to a person devoted to the art/science of the home tinkerer.
In this tinkerer’s mini-adventure, I have encountered new characters in my life, who my mother has noted are temporary online acquaintances which may or may not have my best interests at heart. Sometimes, even I am amazed of the faith I readily give to people that this interactive TV screen connects me to.
I, the tinkerer, am working on a desktop prototype of a yard art sculpture that can be a work of art by itself.
I had formed a small group — Team Tree Trunk — to work on this prototype, enlisting the artistic input of my wife and the mechanical engineering input from a friend who, unfortunately, is dealing with a dying father and I haven’t bothered for her input on this project.
Thus, I have been left to write the computer code and create this desktop prototype primarily on my own, hoping my wife can help finish the decorating of the piece from her creative/logical/computer engineering thought set.
Over the past week or so, I’ve attended virtual hangouts/meetings/panels with other tinkerers, commonly called Makers these days but just as easily called inventors, scientists, and other members of the creative class of citizens. You could call them knowledge workers or data analysts, too.
Is it a special skill or talent that turns one into a Maker?
What level of curiosity belongs to the Maker classification? Is a person who is curious about a favourite actor’s life a Maker? Is a sports fan a Maker? Is a member of the political chattering class a Maker?
Should the word Maker even be capitalised? It certainly takes capital to be a Maker rather than just a Thinker/Dreamer.
As I finish up this Robot Hacks project, I wonder what in this whole Maker Movement will make my dream come true — a permanent colony on Mars (or the Moon) in the next 13,321 days.
Cool as they are already, it’s great that people want to use 3D printers to make game pieces, Valentine’s Day flowers, holiday ornaments, keychains, tablet PC cases and book lights.
After all, we like to surround ourselves with evidence of our individuality.
My goals are not your goals. My goals are not my goals. My goals belong to the universe, coaxing our sets of states of energy, fractal spinoffs from the local star, to branch out into the solar system with more than our electromechanical observation platforms.
We want a whole generation on this planet to subconsciously devote their attention to extraplanetary settlement. It doesn’t happen by force or coercion. It happens through encouraging people to use their imaginations, with subtle hints that exploring the cosmos is a great use of their imaginations.
Kind of like mass marketing direct mail campaigns — we don’t expect 100% replies — if 1-3% respond, and buy the product or buy into the product’s lifestyle, we’ve accomplished our goals.
One to three percent of the global population devoting one to three percent of global resources toward space exploration? That would be awesome!
Now, on to getting people excited about putting their imaginations into action, regardless of age or socioeconomic status. I don’t expect myself to like everything they create but I’m willing to give them the impetus to do so.
Welcome to the American Renaissance
In the global economy, when what one person shares with the local workshop through online tools is shared with the world, how does “insourcing” help the locals compete globally?
Today, an online hangout called “We the Geeks: Don’t Be Bored, Make Something,” inspired by Joey Hudy’s business card that he gave to the U.S. President during a White House science fair, the group talked about an explosion of innovation taking place in the United States, partly through the Maker Movement.
What do you think? Do the citizens of your country consider themselves globally competitive because they feel empowered to be creative and ultimately successful in the local/national/world/galactic economy?
Screenshots from today’s hangout on Google+:
Artifacts while printing artifacts
The past and future, natural and anthropomorphic
In the same week, I gave the same amount to support Red Cross efforts in the Philippines and a 3D printer for a school.
The future is bright, even in the midst of disaster or education funding shortfalls.
Making the “in” move with the InMoov!
Good to see education get a boost from the STEM market
A special nod to those who are providing assistance for the storm-ravaged country of the Philippines. Any support you can provide — financial, logistical, etc. — would go a long way toward binding our global population together in ways that make sense.
13,325 days/sols to go
While bouncing around in my laboratory/playground, I sometimes forget about the larger goal of Moon/Mars settlement, a mere 13,325 days/sols to go.
We are making a lot of progress in that area and, for my colleagues, I thank you — planet Earth — for providing us the resources and means to make intentional space exploration possible.
After all, waiting around for a large comet to hit our celestial sphere and send chunks out of Earth’s gravitational field is beyond virtuous patience.
Let us give praise to those who focus on the longterm, putting aside the daily distractions that wish to make mountains out of political footballs.
We maintain more than one storyline, a few that give hope to the destitute and desperate, a few that produce more wealth for the wealthy, all in the plans to spread life-as-we-know-it as soon as viably possible, rather than as soon as feasibly feeble.
Now, back to the story subplot currently in progress…the development of robots by a small group of hackers thinking inside and outside of Pandora’s Box.




























