futurepredictions

Archive for December, 2009

Latest Technology Forecast Results December 30, 2009

In Blogroll on December 31, 2009 at 7:39 AM

Access the most recent technology forecasts predicting when key milestones will be reached at:

Techcast.org

Value Proposition:
All organizations need technology forecasts for their strategic planning because technology drives the creative destruction of markets, introduces disruptive products and services, and alters the way the world works. Managers often try to develop their own forecasts, but the time and cost are considerable and the results mediocre. TechCast offers convenient, authoritative technology forecasts on the most strategic technologies in all fields. Clients can simply print or copy selected forecasts, bubble charts, articles, and other items to create a unique report defining the technology future facing their organization. People tell us “There’s nothing else like it.”

Access the mega list of futurologists at futurepredictions.com

In Blogroll, Education, News on December 30, 2009 at 3:11 AM

List of futurologists

Name Birth Death Field Reference
Alvin Toffler 1928 living technological singularity alvin + heidi toffler {futurists}
Archibald Low 1888 1956 space
Arthur C. Clarke 1917 2008 writer The Arthur C. Clarke Foundation
Arthur Harkins living innovation studies Arthur Harkins
Bertrand de Jouvenel 1903 1987 economist Nature 0f Future
< Bill Joy 1954 living technology dangers
Buckminster Fuller 1895 1983 architect, cosmologist Who is Buckminster Fuller?
Clem Bezold living healthcare Institute for Alternative Futures
Danila Medvedev 1980 living transhumanist Danila Medvedev
Gerald Celente living Trend Research Gerald Celente’s Trends Research Institute
Dandridge M. Cole 1921 1965 space colonisation Dandridge M. Cole (my grand-hero-pa)
David H. Holtzman living technology David H. Holtzman
Deane Hutton living communicator Deane Hutton
Dennis Gabor 1900 1979 holography Dennis Gabor – Autobiography
Douglas Engelbart 1925 living hypertext, mouse Douglas Engelbart
Dirk HR Spennemann living space heritage Cultural Heritage Management
Faith Popcorn 1948 living popcorn report Faith Popcorn’s BrainReserve
FM-2030 1930 2000 transhumanist FM2030 Access
Freeman Dyson 1923 living nuclear engineering, disarmament Freeman J. Dyson’s Homepage
Fred Polak 1907 1985 social studies
Gaston Berger 1896 1960
George Dvorsky living transhumanist Sentient Developments
George Gilder 1939 living society Gilder Telecosm Forum
George Orwell 1903 1950 writer George Orwell – Complete works
Gerard K. O’Neill 1927 1992 space colonization Life of Gerard K. O’Neill
Grace Hopper 1906 1992 women in computing We Build a Better World
Hans Moravec 1948 living Hans Moravec home page
Harlan Cleveland 1918 2008 diplomacy The Late Harlan Cleveland on Leadership
Herman Kahn 1922 1983 military strategist Hudson Institute > Herman Kahn
Hugo de Garis 1947 living AI Prof. Dr. Hugo de Garis
Jacque Fresco 1916 living architect, resource economics The Venus Project Future by Design
Jamais Cascio living ethics Open the Future
James Hughes living ethics Dr. J. Hughes
James Lovelock 1919 living environmentalist James LOVELOCK’s web site
Jennifer M. Gidley living psychologist, educator President, World Futures Studies Federation
Jerry Fishenden living Microsoft future Jerry Fishenden
Jean Fourastié 1907 1990 economist Site Jean Fourastie
Jerome C. Glenn living futures wheel
Jim Dator living politics Papers by Jim Dator
Joanne Pransky living World’s First Robotic Psychiatrist
Joël de Rosnay 1937 living molecular biology
John Naisbitt 1929 living megatrends John Naisbitt
John Smart 1960 living acceleration John Smart Bio
Kevin Warwick 1954 living Kevin Warwick – Home Page
Lidewij Edelkoort 1950 living fashion Edelkoort
Magda Cordell McHale 1921 2008 painter, educator
Marsha Rhea living boomers Institute for Alternative Futures
Mahdi ElMandjra 1933 living economist, sociologist Site mahdi elmandjra
Marshall Brain 1961 living MarshallBrain.com
Marshall McLuhan 1911 1980 communications The Official Site of Marshall McLuhan
Matthew Simmons living peak oil Simmons & Company International
Meredith Thring 1915 2006 inventor
1915 1969 social studies
Michael Crichton 1942 2008 Jurassic Park MichaelCrichton.com
Michael E. Arth 1953 living urban design Michael E. Arth
Michio Kaku 1947 living string field theory Explorations in Science
Nicholas Negroponte 1943 living OLPC Nicholas Negroponte
Orrin H. Pilkey living crique of environmentalists Nicholas School Faculty
Patricia Aburdene living conscious capitalism Patricia Aburdene – Mega Trends
Peter Schwartz 1946 living China, Climate Change, Business, Technology Global Business Network
Renzo Provinciali living sustainability
Patrick Dixon 1957 living business Global Change
Peter C. Bishop 1944 living Educator – Strategic Foresight University of Houston
Peter Cochrane 1946 living engineering Peter Cochrane
Peter Newman living sustainability
Peter Russell 1946 living consciousness Spirit of Now
Ray Kurzweil 1948 living AI, transhumanism, technological singularity Kurzweil Technologies KurzweilAI.net
Raymond Spencer Rodgers 1935 2007 telesphere, food-chain
Renzo Provinciali 1895 1981 anarchist
Richard C. Duncan living peak oil Minnesotans For Sustainability
Richard Moran 1950 living social scientist
Richard Neville 1941 living fearmonger
Richard Slaughter living sociologist Foresight International
Robert A. Heinlein 1907 1988 writer Heinlein Society
Robert Anton Wilson 1932 2007 psychonaut Who “is” Robert Anton Wilson?
Robert Jungk 1913 1994 journalist
Sohail Inayatullah 1958 living political scientist Metafuture.org
Stanisław Lem 1921 2006 writer Official site for the author Stanislaw Lem
Stephen Euin Cobb 1955 living transhumanist Stephen Euin Cobb’s
Stewart Brand 1938 living Stewart Brand
Theodore Modis 1943 living business, physics
Vannevar Bush 1890 1974 analog computing Vannevar Bush
W. Warren Wagar 1932 2004 historian Futurist W. Warren Wagar Dies
Walter De Brouwer 1957 living OLPC Walter de Brouwer Biography
Wayne Horkan 1970 living transhumanist Wayne Horkan’s weblog: eclectic
William Gilpin 1813 1894 politician William Gilpin
William Rowley living healthcare Institute for Alternative Futures
Jason Ling 1975 living Social Networking, New Media Technologies and Mobile Technologies
Phil Salin 1949 1991 cyberspace and the Internet Salon.com
Steven Loewenthal 1954 living futurepredictions.com

Accelerating the future – 100 years looking back

In Blogroll on December 30, 2009 at 1:06 AM

Oracle CEO Predicts Prolonged US Economic Recession

In Blogroll on December 29, 2009 at 5:36 PM

History of the valley, Silicon that is, the secrets of the CIA/NSA and the Defense Department who created it

In CIA, NSA, Security, War, future on December 26, 2009 at 8:50 PM

THE UNTOLD STORY OF THE HISTORY OF THE SILICON VALLEY
and the father of the military industrial complex: Frederick Terman
, who pioneered and encouraged professors and students to set up start-ups and leave the university.

Presentation is brought to us by Google Tech Talks

Stanford & the CIA/NSA Built the Valley We Know Today

by Steve Blank
December 18, 2007

How much does an average Googler know about the history of the place he/she works in – Silicon Valley? Come and test your knowledge. I have seen this talk and I assure you – even seasoned Silicon Valley veterans will find this story interesting. Silicon Valley entrepreneur Steve Blank will talk about how World War II set the stage for the creation and explosive growth of Silicon Valley, and the role of Frederick Terman and Stanford in working with government agencies (including the CIA and the National Security Agency) to set up companies in this area that sparked the creation of hundreds of other enterprises.

Steve Blank spent nearly 30 years as founder and executive of high tech companies in Silicon Valley, most recently the enterprise software firm E.piphany. He has been involved in or co-founded eight Silicon Valley startups, ranging from semiconductors to video games, and personal computers to supercomputers. He teaches entrepreneurship at U.C. Berkeley’s Haas School of Business, Columbia University and Stanford’s Graduate School of Engineering.

William Shockley Interview, 1969

Founder of Silicon Valley

In this 1969 video, Jane Morgan interviews William Shockley, co-inventor of the transistor. The interview was part of a series done for the Palo Alto 75th anniversary celebrations. Thanks to the Palo Alto Historical Association.

The Computer History Museum in the Silicon Valley.

An unprecedented combination of computer history and striking images, Core Memory reveals modern technology’s evolution through the world’s most renowned computer collection, the Computer History Museum in the Silicon Valley.

Vivid photos capture these historically important machines including the Eniac, Crays 1 3, Apple I and II while authoritative text profiles each, telling the stories of their innovations and peculiarities. Thirty-five machines are profiled in over 100 extraordinary color photographs.

Mark Richards’s award-winning photography has been featured in numerous publications. John Alderman is the author of Sonic Boom and has written for Wired, Details, and Salon.
This event took place August 28, 2007 at Google Headquarters in Mountain View, CA

Electroencephalography added to gaming world future is exciting with brain computer interface

In Blogroll on December 26, 2009 at 12:48 AM

Real estate investment storm appears in the near future for the cash buyers

In Blogroll on December 19, 2009 at 5:44 AM

“Is Smart Housing the Best Medicine for an Ailing Economy?”
A trending and statistical view of population migration patterns and housing needs.

A very positive view of the boom to come!
by Steve Begenbuckle

Of course, Donald Trump has something to contribute:
Watch his video from CNN Video

LG Expo Projector Phone plays a 10 foot movie hits the market

In Blogroll on December 13, 2009 at 6:35 AM

LG Expo Projector Phone

Digital music machines, the future trend, and the long tail

In Blogroll on December 13, 2009 at 2:07 AM

“Wired” editor and author Chris Anderson explains his theory of “The Long Tail,” using the music and film industries as examples. —– You know.

A future potential economic system by MIT’s Noam Chomsky – Alternatives to Capitalism

In Blogroll on December 12, 2009 at 6:11 PM

An Alternative Model: Economic Democracy

Authors@Google: Peter Barnes

In Capitalism 3.0, Peter Barnes redefines the debate about the costs and benefits of the operating system known as the free market.

La Tour d’Argent opens the 450,000+ bottle wine cellar bringing the past into the future

In Blogroll on December 10, 2009 at 6:21 AM

Futurepredictions.com takes a look into the past at the largest wine collection is reduced at auction

Famous for its pressed duck and a view over Notre Dame, the restaurant kept a wine collection worthy of its guests who included royals such as Louis XIV and Britain’s King Edward VII.

Watch Here

Intel Reader: The future for people with dyslexia, low vision or blindness is looking promising!

In Blogroll on December 10, 2009 at 6:09 AM

The Intel Reader takes pictures of text and read it aloud. It’s designed to provide access to printed text for people with dyslexia, low vision or blindness. Intel’s Digital Health Group researched and designed the mobile Intel Reader, which is built on the Intel Atom processor and run on the Moblin operating system.

SPACE HORSES The future logo of futurepredictions.com

In Blogroll on December 6, 2009 at 11:25 PM

62410v2-max-250x250(TM) Trademark of futurepredictions.com llc designed and painted in 1981 by SKL

Announcing the new logo

The future means the race to free: Get a free college education online

In Blogroll on December 6, 2009 at 1:13 PM

More links on free education from the past….Free access to education gears up to end the monopoly of bricks and morter campuses.

This is taken out of the Technophilia
by Wendy Boswell

Grab some larnin’ from the University of Washington’s free online courses; Greek mythology, American Revolution, Heroic Fantasy are just some of the offerings. If you get tired of that, you can study economics at the University of Nebraska.

Teach yourself sign language from Michigan State University. Browse through the vast treasures at the Library of Congress. View free videos on all sorts of subjects from Annenberg Media, a major supplier to most distance learning universities, or read the core documents of American democracy.

Feel like a little light reading? You can study theology at Covenant Seminary; course offerings are delivered via a combo of free downloadable .pdf files and podcasts, and include subjects ranging from Church History to the Modern Reformation.

Learn mathematics with this extensive list of free online math courses from Whatcom Community College. Visit Carnegie Mellon University and take Biology, Causal Reasoning, Statistics, and more, all for free.

Penn State University offers a free Swedish language course, in addition to a free Hungarian language course. Or, you can take an Italian language and culture course from Brooklyn College. California State also offers a free Conversational Mandarin Chinese course, and you can learn Turkish via the University of Arizona.

The University of Washington School of Medicine offers free CPR classes online, complete with video and instructional guides. You can also take health courses from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health; anything from adolescent health to population science.

Prepare for the US citizenship test from the Missouri Southern State University. Learn linear algebra from the University of Puget Sound. Learn about bioterrorism (really) and other hazards from the University of North Carolina.

Get free online mathematics textbooks, videos, and lecture notes from New York University. Take advantage of Tufts University’s open courses on dentistry, medicine, nutrition, and more. Learn about cognitive science from Hampshire College.

Take eight different courses via the Sofia Project, a collaborative effort between select California community colleges. Brigham Young University offers independent study in subjects such as Family History, Family Life, and Religious Scripture Study. Get access to ten free seminary courses from Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary.

Learn about human resources in 52 (!) different free courses from ERI. Browse a huge variety of materials in the University of Michigan’s courses and seminars on Internet laws.

Ivy League

Take advantage of Stanford University’s free CS education library. Go to college by taking free classes at MIT. Go to Berkeley with your iPod.The University of Pennsylvania has an extensive online library; over 25,000 books are listed here.

Just debuted, you can take free courses from Yale (funded by HP) on such diverse subjects as the Old Testament or Physics. Watch or read free online lectures in archival format from Princeton. Get a free Introduction to Probability text from Dartmouth.

Google tricks

Using the right keywords, find course syllabi (insert your own subject), lectures, tutorials, notes, podcasts, and various sorts of online books using Google.

Letting Go of Your Bananas: The future of change

In Blogroll on December 6, 2009 at 6:01 AM

THE MASTER OF CHANGE
Book Excerpt:

Author: Drubin, Daniel T.
–What You Can Do–

* Make a list of your rotten bananas.
* Decide what or whom you are no longer willing to accept in your life.
* Be willing to get into the pain of changing your destiny.
* Make the tough decisions.
* Embrace the consequences of your decisions.
* Be totally honest with yourself and others.
* If you need help letting go of your bananas, get help.
* Remember, you only grow when you let go!

Book Excerpt:
Letting Go of Your Bananas: How to Become More Successful by Getting Rid of Everything Rotten in Your Life
by Dr. Daniel T. Drubin
ISBN:0446579572
Hardcover
$20.00/U.S.
$27.00/CAN
144 pages
WARNER BOOKS
By it at Amazon



Letting Go of Your Bananas

All barrier busting and personal growth begins the moment you are willing to accept the truth about yourself. And the truth is, most of your bananas, or limitations, whether real or imagined, have been created either by you or by someone important in your life. So much of what we become in our lives has a great deal to do with the people and beliefs we were exposed to as children. Children tend to be wide open to suggestion and to modeling the behaviors of those around them, to the point where they sometimes take on the characteristics of people who influence their lives. Without an effective way to filter out some of the things they are exposed to–some of which may not be in their ultimate best interest–they become pre-programmed to think and act a certain way. The good news is that regardless of what you may have been exposed to early on, or for that matter later in your life, you can change your life by using your free will and power of choice.

You get to decide right now if you want to continue on your present path of life and have those obstacles keep you where you are, or do whatever is necessary to go beyond those barriers. You decide which of the bananas in your bunch are worth keeping and which of the rotten bananas you want to rid yourself of.

I have been told that the way they used to capture monkeys in Africa was by placing bananas in the bottoms of narrow-necked jars. When a monkey came upon the jar, in an effort to remove the banana, it would put its hand into the jar and grab on to the banana. Unwilling to let go of its food, the monkey was now stuck with a jar on its hand, which made it rather easy to catch. What does this have to do with improving the quality of your life? Everything!

When it comes to our lives, the majority of us tend to grab on to something or someone and refuse to let go. We then convince ourselves that we simply cannot survive without that person or thing, and we refuse to let go. In fact, we will even hold on to people, things, or habits that we consciously know are bad for us. It may be a bad relationship or job or a bad belief or physical habit. We cling to what we have–the safe, the secure, and the familiar–even when we know it’s unhealthy and preventing us from living a better life. And while we want to go beyond where we are in life, most of our actions indicate that we are willing to stay exactly where and how we are. We just will not let go of our bananas, our sameness, our habits, our comfort, or our past.

The monkey eventually learns that if it refuses to let go of the banana, the fruit will rot and start to stink, yet the monkey still holds on. The same is true for us. If we refuse to let go of the things or people that hold us back, life starts to rot and then stink. The only way to go beyond where you are in your life is by being willing to let go of the things, people, habits, and beliefs that keep you where you are instead of where you want to be.

Letting go of your bananas begins with the power of one: one bold action, one brave decision, one limitless vision, one great question, one new idea, one burning desire, or one act of kindness. As soon as you are willing to embrace the fact that you can change the quality of your life and act on that belief, your world changes for the better.

One of life’s biggest challenges is the challenge of letting go. While on an intellectual level I am certain you can understand and appreciate what I am referring to, each of us has been created with a built-in mechanism that wants us to maintain the status quo. Despite how much we want a better life, we do tend to stick with what we know to be safe and comfortable. Face it: keeping things the same, even if your life situation is awful, is safe compared with abandoning what you have and facing the unknown. The unknown is where all of your personal and professional potential lies. The known, on the other hand, is the life you are living right now. Your choices are few and simple: Keep things as they are and resent being limited or opt for the discomfort of change as you face the unknown. As long as these choices are just about the only two choices available to you, you get to choose your destiny. Choose sameness and you get more of what you have. Choose change and letting go and a whole new world of possibilities awaits you.

Rickey Henderson, the greatest base stealer in the history of baseball, had a decision to make each time he contemplated stealing a base. He could choose not to steal the base and remain exactly where he was, or he could run the risk of leaving safety and comfort for the possibility of something greater. Ricky understood that if he wanted to get to second base, the first thing that he had to do was take his foot off first base. First base represented Ricky’s banana; beyond first base lay the potential to help his team and set new standards of base-stealing excellence. The same can be said of a trapeze artist. To get from one side of the net to the other, he or she must be prepared to let go. To get to a better place in your life, a place beyond your barriers, a place without rotten bananas, you must be prepared to let go of the known. Letting go of the bananas in your life requires courage and the willingness to live with the consequences of your decisions. Only those of you who are prepared to face the risks associated with letting go of the existing and embarking on the quest for a better future will have the opportunity to bask in the glow of life overflowing with personal opportunity and professional victories.

If you have chosen to remain the same, clinging on to the bananas in your life, you may as well stop reading now and give this book to someone you know who is prepared to change his or her life. On the other hand, if you are the fearless warrior I believe you are, this is the time when you have to decide what and who stays in your life and what and who must go. It’s a tough choice. Most of your choices will involve how much you really want to bust out of your present life into a more rewarding one. The more you want to exchange your present for a more gratifying future, the more risk you will need to take. Letting go of the big bananas in your life will provide you with the opportunity for big change and big barrier busting. Or you can play it safer and let go of the smaller bananas in your life and experience smaller change. Regardless of the choice you make, the most important thing is that you have chosen to no longer settle for your present life circumstances, and you are moving consistently and intently in the direction of your dreams.

Life is a mirror, and what you see in your personal universe is an absolute mirror image of your feelings, thoughts, and actions. If you perceive that you have barriers, you’re right, and the only thing that really matters when you have obstacles or barriers is your level of resourcefulness. Those who want the most out of life can get it if they are highly energized and creatively resourceful. That’s right: everything that exists in your present state of life is a direct reflection of all of your feelings, thoughts, and actions. Change your feelings, thoughts, and actions and you change your life. Change your life and your rotten bananas disappear and your barriers begin to fall. Because your life is a mirror, what you are experiencing in your life right now is also a direct reflection of all the effort and energy you have invested in the quality of your life up to this point in time. If you want to enjoy a better and more gratifying life–a life without bananas–you must begin by altering what you see when you look at and analyze all the aspects of your life.

All personal growth begins the moment you are willing to accept the truth about yourself. And the truth often hurts. We become so bogged down in denial that we often refuse to face or accept the truth and take personal responsibility for our lives. At one point when I was not satisfied with the condition of my life, I asked a person for whom I had tremendous admiration and respect to tell me the truth about what he thought my problem was. After making certain that I really wanted to hear it, he told me he thought I was “the most selfish person he had ever known.” His comment just blew me away, and my feelings were hurt. I didn’t see myself that way at all. Only after putting my ego and feelings aside was I willing to consider his comments. And when I was truly honest with myself, I saw that he was right. That one moment of truth and incredibly painful comment changed my life. You just have to face the truth about yourself if you want to tear down the barriers and let go of the stinking bananas in your life. Once you have faced and accepted the truth about who and what you are, as well as who and what you are not, you can make the decision to totally invest all of your physical and mental energy into ridding your life of all rotten bananas.

The truth for most of us is that over time it becomes increasingly easier to defend the sameness in our lives. We settle for the status quo and believe we are doomed to living the life that others have dealt us rather than taking control of our own destiny. In order to make ourselves okay with our day-to-day existence, we are capable of justifying, explaining, and defending how we managed to wind up where we are. Remember, taking personal responsibility for one’s life is the highest form of personal growth. In fact, I never did meet a person who couldn’t perfectly explain his or her situation in life. Barrier busting and letting go of life’s bad bananas is an ongoing tug of war between where you are and what you aspire to be. It’s the constant battle between clinging to the convenience of remaining exactly where you are versus the confrontation, chaos, and pain of changing the condition of your life. As I have always said, “You are in the pain or in the pain.” Cling to your bananas and not like the feeling, or let go of them and face the unknown. Either way you are going to be uncomfortable. My personal philosophy has always been that as long as you are going to be uncomfortable anyway, you may as well opt for the discomfort of change. Only then will you be able to fully enjoy all that life offers. Once you are willing and able to see the truth about your past you will be able to create a better present and future. Then you get to toss out all of your stale, rotten, and smelly life bananas.

As I had mentioned, getting rid of your stale, rotten, and smelly bananas requires courage and confidence. The reason we need so much courage is that we are literally addicted to our own lifestyles and situations. The best definition I have ever heard for an addiction is: “When you can never have enough of what you really don’t want.” As much as we complain and want a banana-free existence, there is a part of us that just loves our smelly, rotten, and stale lifestyle. Our approach to life is more about settling for the status quo than reaching for the stars.

To advance beyond where you are, you must be prepared to make some very tough decisions and willingly accept the consequences of those decisions. In life, decisions drive behavior, and altered behavior creates altered outcomes. Remember, people who take emotional ownership of their lives win.

Very often, the stale bananas in your life have to do with the quality of your relationships. If your relationship bananas are working for you, that’s great. On the other hand, if you are clinging to some stale, rotten, and smelly relationships, you have some decisions to make. Basically, when it comes to decision-making you have three choices: settle, fix, or flee. You can keep things exactly as they are and settle for the life you have, you can fix the situation and make things better, or you can flee the situation, remaining in a state of total denial. Of those choices, only you can determine what the best course of action is for your life. Just be prepared to live with the result of those choices.

I never could understand why some people opt to remain in destructive or abusive relationships. As a child I remember members of my family who would not speak to other members of the family. Children would not talk to parents or to their siblings. When I asked my father why his brother did not speak to his father, my dad had a list of reasons that made perfect sense, at least to my uncle. While I know this isn’t likely to happen in your family, these are the types of rotten bananas that can get in the way of experiencing a better life. People who choose to cling to their rotten bananas know that things are lousy, yet they just keep coming up with world-class excuses to stay where they are. Very often they are so immersed in their negative life condition that they cannot even see beyond their barriers and instead settle for a life of limitation and pain.

If that sounds like you, go get professional help now. Face it: Some bananas are so big and stinky that you need help. There are people and organizations that will support you in doing what is in your own best interest. Frightening? Of course. If it were easy to let go of all of life’s rotten bananas, we would live in a world that is perfect. Take a look around; life and the world are far from perfect, and that’s okay, because it provides us with a challenge. Your job is to give up looking for perfection and trade it for day-to-day improvement. Remember, letting go of all of your bananas is about the daily direction that each day of your life takes. As long as you are continually moving in the right direction each day, despite how difficult that may be at times, you become closer to living a life free of limitations.

Remember, improving the quality of your life takes work, focus, consistency, and a burning desire to maximize the positive moments of each day of your life. As with so many things in life, there is always a trade-off. You have the ability and power to choose consciously to rid yourself of all of your personal limitations. Take stock of every single thing that holds you back and exchange those limitations for a life of limitless potential, a life that is more personally and professionally rewarding.

KEY #1

Letting Go of Your Bananas

–What You Can Do–

* Make a list of your rotten bananas.
* Decide what or whom you are no longer willing to accept in your life.
* Be willing to get into the pain of changing your destiny.
* Make the tough decisions.
* Embrace the consequences of your decisions.
* Be totally honest with yourself and others.
* If you need help letting go of your bananas, get help.
* Remember, you only grow when you let go!

He who has a strong enough why can bear almost any how.
–FRIEDRICH NIETZSCHE

Copyright © 2006 by Dr. Daniel T. Drubin

Robert F. Kennedy Jr., has joined to support algae fuel production by Valcent

In Blogroll on December 4, 2009 at 2:44 AM

Valcent Vertical Farming Business is Growing

Growing Solutions Picture File Access Here

USA Today’s cover story yesterday was on ” Which of these could fuel a jet?”, the article included algae & Valcent. In the cover story article by Sam Ward (Jan. 27, 2009), he discussed three options to fueling a jet, while cutting costs and carbon footprints. He presents three options: Option A is Chickens, B is Algae and C is Jatropha. The article takes the position that algae, long term could be the alternative fuel source that fuels airline engines. The article outlines how Valcent turns algae into biodiesel by vertically growing the algae in bioreactors in greenhouses. The article also provided a picture chart that reflects that algae produces more oil yield per acre in gallons at 100,000 than palm oil (635), soybean (50) and corn (3).


Cornwall, U.K. (Marketwire – December 2, 2009) Valcent Products Inc. (OTCBB:VCTZF) announces that Robert F. Kennedy Jr., has joined the Company’s advisory board. Over the past two months Valcent has launched a major sales and marketing campaign aimed at developing interest for the concept of urban farming in a number of major US cities in association with EMLINK LLC of Boston Massachusetts.


READ MORE…

All photos sourced from Valcent.net

The future of make up by Mary Kay

In Blogroll on December 1, 2009 at 4:13 AM

Mary Kay Expands Into Your Home

To order click now: Mary Kay

GET YOUR FREE SAMPLES TODAY!

View the full line of products offered by Anne to give you the hottest look in town. Contact Anne if you are interested in becoming a distributor or sales agent.

1,000 trillion operations per second: The future of computing at Los Alamos

In Education, Freedom on December 1, 2009 at 3:39 AM

Roadrunner Supercomputer Breaks the Petaflop Barrier

At 3:30 a.m. on May 26, 2008, Memorial Day, the “Roadrunner” supercomputer exceeded a sustained speed of 1 petaflop/s, or 1 million billion calculations per second. The sustained performance makes Roadrunner more than twice as fast as the current number 1 system on the TOP500 list. The best sustained performance to date is 74.5% efficiency, 1.026 petaflop/s.

“Petaflop/s” is computer jargon—peta signifying the number 1 followed by 15 zeros (sometimes called a quadrillion) and flop/s meaning “double-precision floating point operations per second.” Los Alamos held the fastest supercomputer title in 1993 with the Thinking Machines CM-5, and inaugurated the supercomputer era, assisting in the development of the
Cray-1 in 1976. The Laboratory and IBM go all the way back to the first card-programmable calculators, used at Los Alamos in 1949. Los Alamos also housed serial number 1 of the IBM 704 in 1956.

The Roadrunner supercomputer, developed by IBM in partnership with the Laboratory and the National Nuclear Security Administration, uses commercially available hardware, including aspects of commercial game console and graphics technologies. Because of its off-the-shelf components, the computer costs significantly less than a one-of-a-kind machine. It also uses a Linux operating system.

http://www.lanl.gov/roadrunner

The $400 million dollar film Avatar: opens the door to an exicting video graphics future

In Robot on December 1, 2009 at 3:22 AM

AVATAR

Updated:
Avatar reviewed by the founder of “The Drapkin Institute for Music Entrepreneurship” Michael Drapkin:

Each one of us has our own personal “Avatar” lurking in us… Thank you, Mr. Cameron. You reminded me, in a big way, why I pursue my own dreams, and, in the wake of Avatar, I will redouble my efforts!

… READ MORE

Director: James Cameron
Release: 12/18/2009

In the future, a paraplegic war veteran is brought to the planet Pandora which is inhabited by the Navi. The Navi is a humanoid race with their own language and culture, but the people of Earth find themselves at odds with the Navi.

Game by Ubisoft

Source Website: www.avatarmovie.com