22 January, 2014

sneak peek into other people's lives

Photo and video sharing has become a phenomenon following the success of apps such as Instagram and more recently Snapchat, the platform that lets users send 10-second messages that disappear after they’ve been viewed, and which recently declined a buy-out offer from Facebook worth USD 3 billion. Now a new app could join them ; PeekInToo offers a real-time, virtual glimpse into an anonymous person’s life for just 12 seconds.

PeekInToo is offering a completely new way to perceive and virtually witness anything that is happening around the world, almost in real-time and upon request. Now, you are able to request and receive real-time Peeks - 12 seconds videos from anyplace in the world, anonymously. PeekInToo can do all that by just using your favorite mobile device without having to find or follow any friends in the area of interest. Imagine thousands of Peekers around the world willing to share real-time Peeks from your area of interest. Imagine also being able to request such Peeks whenever you want from places you intend to visit soon or that you would like to travel to in the near future or even instantly gather valuable live content from breaking news incidents. If video from a location of interest isn’t currently available, users can also use the PeekShout function in order to request a feed. Viewers can also rate others’ video. The app is free to download from the App Store, and an Android version is on its way. The video below offers more information about the app:



Humans find other people’s lives endlessly fascinating, and PeekInToo is a global social network that lets users be nosy for a short amount of time. However, to get back to Snapchat, look at what happened with that popular application. Snapchat has announced earlier in January, that it will release an updated version of its photo-sharing app, after a cyber attack exposed the usernames and phone numbers of 4.6 million users. The new version of the app will allow Snapchatters to opt out of appearing in 'Find Friends' after they have verified their phone number. Find Friends, which allows users to upload their address book contacts to help find friends who are also using the service, is the feature that was exploited by the hackers.

Noteworthy, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg praised Snapchat for creating a new niche for social media communication, calling it a "super interesting privacy phenomenon." Zuckerberg also offered a historical perspective, noting that instant messaging offered a way to communicate between groups and blogs provided a way to share publicly. However, before Facebook, there was nothing in between. [1]

And of course, there is the mobile service called Vine. The app that has been heralded as the “Instagram for Video,” allows users to create and share short video loops. And as mentionned Instagram. And of course the "share your life, voluntarily" pioneers, Facebook and Twitter. What sets however, PeekInToo apart from video and photo sharing apps such as Snapchat, Confide and Blinklink, is that this exchange is between you and a complete stranger, and therefore involves an element of risk and luck. Founder Yiannis Verginadis believes that "in the following years we are going to experience a burst of anonymous social networks." Which, judging from the appearance of anonymous photo app Rando last year, is a claim with merit. [2]

Some more info :

Rando is an experimental photo exchange platform for people who like photography. A rando is an image that is taken by you and sent anonymously to somebody completely random. A rando must be sent for one to be received. It's gifting rather than sharing. You will never know who received the rando, they will never know who sent it. You will know the location of where it landed, the receiver will know where in the world it was taken.

Taking cues from the self-destructive nature of Snapchat's picture messaging system comes Confide, a text-based messenger app that deletes text messages after they've been read and features an innovative scrolling system that prevents screenshots being taken. Arising from a need to occasionally remove the permanence of e-mails or texts, Confide offers people the chance to communicate via text without worrying that their messages will stick around indefinitely – think of it as a more professionally useful version of Snapchat.


to be seen, after all, is to exist.

02 December, 2013

the Wisdom of Crowds

You must have heard about the “jelly bean experiment”. If one asks a large enough number of people to guess the number of jelly beans in a jar, the averaged answer is likely to be very close to the correct number. True, occasionally someone may guess closer to the true number. But as you repeat the experiment, the same person never is better every time - the crowd is smarter than any individual. [2] “The Wisdom of Crowds: Why the Many Are Smarter Than the Few and How Collective Wisdom Shapes Business, Economies, Societies and Nations”, published in 2004, is a book written by James Surowiecki about the aggregation of information in groups, resulting in decisions that, he argues, are often better than could have been made by any single member of the group. The book presents numerous case studies and anecdotes to illustrate its argument, and touches on several fields, primarily economics and psychology. [3]

Surowiecki breaks down the advantages he sees in disorganized decisions into three main types, which he classifies as :
Cognition - Thinking and information Processing
Market judgment, which he argues can be much faster, more reliable, and less subject to political forces than the deliberations of experts or expert committees. Such problems arise when we can only guess the answer – as e.g. about the contents of the jelly bean jar, or about the future.
Coordination
Coordination of behavior includes optimizing the utilization of a popular bar and not colliding in moving traffic flows. how to we coordinate behaviour with each other – say in traffic – knowing that everyone else is trying to do the same? Common understanding within a culture allows remarkably accurate judgments about specific reactions of other members of the culture.
Cooperation
How groups of people can form networks of trust without a central system controlling their behavior or directly enforcing their compliance. How do we get self-interested, distrustful people to work together, even when narrow self-interest would seem to dictate that no individual should take part – as in politics?

Behavioural economists and sociologists have gone beyond the anecdotic and systematically studied the issues, and have come up with surprising answers. Capturing the ‘collective’ wisdom best solves cognitive problems. Four conditions apply. There must be: (a) true diversity of opinions; (b) independence of opinion (so there is no correlation between them); (c) decentralisation of experience; (d) suitable mechanisms of aggregation. [2]

As it happens, the possibilities of group intelligence, at least when it came to judging questions of fact, were demonstrated by a host of experiments conducted by American sociologists and psychologists between 1920 and the mid-1950s, the heyday of research into group dynamics. Although in general, as we'll see, the bigger the crowd the better, the groups in most of these early experiments—which for some reason remained relatively unknown outside of academia—were relatively small. Yet they nonetheless performed very well. The Columbia sociologist Hazel Knight kicked things off with a series of studies in the early 1920s, the first of which had the virtue of simplicity. In that study Knight asked the students in her class to estimate the room's temperature, and then took a simple average of the estimates. The group guessed 72.4 degrees, while the actual temperature was 72 degrees. This was not, to be sure, the most auspicious beginning, since classroom temperatures are so stable that it's hard to imagine a class's estimate being too far off base. But in the years that followed, far more convincing evidence emerged, as students and soldiers across America were subjected to a barrage of puzzles, intelligence tests, and word games. The sociologist Kate H. Gordon asked two hundred students to rank items by weight, and found that the group's "estimate" was 94 percent accurate, which was better than all but five of the individual guesses. In another experiment students were asked to look at ten piles of buckshot—each a slightly different size than the rest—that had been glued to a piece of white cardboard, and rank them by size. This time, the group's guess was 94.5 percent accurate. A classic demonstration of group intelligence is the jelly-beans-in-the-jar experiment, in which invariably the group's estimate is superior to the vast majority of the individual guesses. When finance professor Jack Treynor ran the experiment in his class with a jar that held 850 beans, the group estimate was 871. Only one of the fifty-six people in the class made a better guess. [1]

There are two lessons to draw from these experiments. First, in most of them the members of the group were not talking to each other or working on a problem together. They were making individual guesses, which were aggregated and then averaged. This is exactly what Galton did, and it is likely to produce excellent results. Second, the group's guess will not be better than that of every single person in the group each time. In many (perhaps most) cases, there will be a few people who do better than the group. This is, in some sense, a good thing, since especially in situations where there is an incentive for doing well (like, say, the stock market) it gives people reason to keep participating. But there is no evidence in these studies that certain people consistently outperform the group. In other words, if you run ten different jelly-bean-counting experiments, it's likely that each time one or two students will outperform the group. But they will not be the same students each time. Over the ten experiments, the group's performance will almost certainly be the best possible. The simplest way to get reliably good answers is just to ask the group each time. [1]

In probability theory, the law of large numbers (LLN) is a theorem that describes the result of performing the same experiment a large number of times. According to the law, the average of the results obtained from a large number of trials should be close to the expected value, and will tend to become closer as more trials are performed. The LLN is important because it "guarantees" stable long-term results for the averages of random events. For example, while a casino may lose money in a single spin of the roulette wheel, its earnings will tend towards a predictable percentage over a large number of spins. Any winning streak by a player will eventually be overcome by the parameters of the game. It is important to remember that the LLN only applies (as the name indicates) when a large number of observations are considered. [4]

In an interesting spin (that came up on a web search) I read that : “While the Bible makes it clear that the wisdom of crowds may not be reliable and can be dangerous (Matt. 7:13-14), there is another way collective wisdom can be helpful. In Proverbs 11:14, we read, “Where there is no counsel, the people fall; but in the multitude of counselors there is safety.” One of the benefits of the body of Christ is that we can assist one another—in part by working together to seek God’s wisdom. When we join together to pursue God’s purposes, we find safety in His provision of each other and receive His wisdom for the challenges of life.” [5]

On the other hand many will argue that Collective Intelligence is the real representation (the real life manifestation) of the inherent wisdom of crowds.

In 1907, Sir Francis Galton asked 787 villagers to guess the weight of an ox. None of them got the right answer, but when Galton averaged their guesses, he arrived at a near perfect estimate. This is a classic demonstration of the “wisdom of the crowds”, where groups of people pool their abilities to show collective intelligence. Galton’s story has been told and re-told, with endless variations on the theme. If you don’t have an ox handy, you can try it yourself with the beans-in-a-jar experiment sited in the beginning. To Iain Couzin from Princeton University, these stories are a little boring. Everyone is trying to solve a problem, and they do it more accurately together than alone. Whoop-de-doo. By contrast, Couzin has found an example of a more exciting type of collective intelligence—where a group solves a problem that none of its members are even aware of. Simply by moving together, the group gains new abilities that its members lack as individuals. [6] That, in his case, is demonstrated with fish, but more natural observations have been analysed and categorized as collective intelligence (or lack thereof) with flocks of birds, or ants.

Collective intelligence or in more general terms Crowd Dynamics have been the subjects of intense socio and economic studies, as well as very practical people in motion dynamics, that could help engineer better environments for us to move in high traffic, or in congested areas.

Imagine that you are French. You are walking along a busy pavement in Paris and another pedestrian is approaching from the opposite direction. A collision will occur unless you each move out of the other's way. Which way do you step? The answer is almost certainly to the right. Replay the same scene in many parts of Asia, however, and you would probably move to the left. It is not obvious why. There is no instruction to head in a specific direction (South Korea, where there is a campaign to get people to walk on the right, is an exception). There is no simple correlation with the side of the road on which people drive: Londoners funnel to the right on pavements, for example. Instead, says Mehdi Moussaid of the Max Planck Institute in Berlin, this is a behaviour brought about by probabilities. If two opposing people guess each other's intentions correctly, each moving to one side and allowing the other past, then they are likely to choose to move the same way the next time they need to avoid a collision. The probability of a successful manoeuvre increases as more and more people adopt a bias in one direction, until the tendency sticks. Whether it's right or left does not matter; what does is that it is the unspoken will of the majority. [7] To give an example : “The biggest test possible of crowd dynamics tools and techniques is the haj, the annual pilgrimage to Mecca in Saudi Arabia that Muslims are expected to carry out at least once in their lives if they can. With as many as 3m pilgrims making the journey each year, the haj has a long history of crowd stampedes and deaths.”

Applications of the wisdom-of-crowds effect exist in three general categories: Prediction markets, Delphi methods, and extensions of the traditional opinion poll.

The prediction market, is essentially a speculative or betting market created to make verifiable predictions. Assets are cash values tied to specific outcomes (e.g., Candidate X will win the election) or parameters (e.g., Next quarter's revenue). The current market prices are interpreted as predictions of the probability of the event or the expected value of the parameter. Betfair is the world's biggest prediction exchange, with around $28 billion traded in 2007. NewsFutures is an international prediction market that generates consensus probabilities for news events. Several companies now offer enterprise class prediction marketplaces to predict project completion dates, sales, or the market potential for new ideas. A number of Web-based quasi-prediction marketplace companies have sprung up to offer predictions primarily on sporting events and stock markets but also on other topics. Those companies include Piqqem, Cake Financial, Covestor, Predictify, and the Motley Fool (with its Fool CAPS product). The principle of the prediction market is also used in project management software such as Yanomo to let team members predict a project's "real" deadline and budget. [3]

The Delphi method is a systematic, interactive forecasting method which relies on a panel of independent experts. The carefully selected experts answer questionnaires in two or more rounds. After each round, a facilitator provides an anonymous summary of the experts’ forecasts from the previous round as well as the reasons they provided for their judgments. Thus, participants are encouraged to revise their earlier answers in light of the replies of other members of the group. It is believed that during this process the range of the answers will decrease and the group will converge towards the "correct" answer. Delphi is based on the principle that forecasts (or decisions) from a structured group of individuals are more accurate than those from unstructured groups. [8]

From a corporate perspective, the wisdom of crowds is systematically misinterpreted, predominately as another way of companies getting the idea of what their (potential) customers want. In arithmetic terms X people want A feature, while Y people desire B featre. If X larger than Y, then let’s go with the A feature. This of course has nothing to do with the arguments, observations and analysis, as those were discussed in all the above paragraphs. To give you an example :

“The internet is harnessing crowds like never before. Nowhere is this more evident than in the recent crowdfunding movement. Sites like Lending Club, Indiegogo and Kickstarter show just how powerful crowds can be in turning ideas and dreams into reality — sometimes paying dividends at the same time. But the wisdom of crowds is manifesting itself in other ways too, namely through initiatives run by larger brands. And in many cases, they’re making bold moves to give people the tools they need to take action en masse for social good. These tools come in all different shapes and sizes. Some are social media campaigns. Other brands help crowds do social good simply by making a purchase. And some brands have opened up APIs to their customers and developer communities that can be harnessed for good. The incredible news here is that crowds are driving all of this positive action. Brands wouldn’t be investing in these sorts of programs, initiatives, challenges and giveaways if their customers weren’t asking for them.” [9]

“A problem shared is a problem halved”, goes the old saying. But what happens if you share a problem with millions of people? Are you left with a millionth of a problem? Or just lots of rubbish suggestions? [10]

James Surowiecki is a staff writer at The New Yorker, where he writes the popular business column, "The Financial Page." His work has appeared in a wide range of publications, including The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Artforum, Wired, and Slate. He lives in Brooklyn, New York. Follow him on TedX here.

[1] J. Surowiecki, The wisdom of crowds, 2004, Anchor

17 September, 2013

the Global Village Construction Set of Marcin Jakubowski

A modern, comfortable lifestyle relies on a variety of efficient Industrial Machines. If you eat bread, you rely on an Agricultural Combine. If you live in a wood house, you rely on a Sawmill. Each of these machines relies on other machines in order for it to exist. If you distill this complex web of interdependent machines into a reproduceable, simple, closed-loop system, you get 50 base industrial machines. For a concise presentation go here. The Global Village Construction Set (GVCS) is an open technological platform that allows for the easy fabrication of the 50 different Industrial Machines that it takes to build a small civilization with modern comforts.

Open Source Ecology is a network of farmers, engineers, and supporters building the GVCS, this modular, DIY, low-cost, open source, high-performance platform that allows for the easy fabrication of those 50 different industrial machines that it takes to build a small, sustainable civilization with modern comforts. The aim of the GVCS is to lower the barriers to entry into farming, building, and manufacturing. Its a life-size lego set that can create entire economies, whether in rural Missouri, where the project was founded, or in the developing world. The video that follows is from a TED Talk on the Global Village Construction Set (GVCS), presented by TED Fellow, Marcin Jakubowski, in Long Beach, California, on February 28, 2011, where he discusses the potential of open source, distributive economics - as embodied in the GVCS civilization starter kit.



Declaring that, "We can lead self-sustaining lives without sacrificing our standard of living," Marcin Jakubowski believes that only by opening the means of production can we achieve abundance for all. Though he has a Ph.D. in fusion physics, he became dissatisfied with its remoteness, and turned back to the earth as a farmer and social innovator. He is the founder of Open Source Ecology, which is creating the GVCS the blueprints for simple fabrication of everything needed to start a self-sustaining village. At Factor e Farm in rural Missouri, he's been successfully putting those ideas to the test.

03 September, 2013

Untraslatable words

Sometimes it's easier to say it in another language. There is a website out there dedicated to posting each day a different word, that cannot be translated in English (or has no direct equivalent). Springing from that, it is very interesting to point out that : "the relationship between words and their meaning is a fascinating one, and linguists have spent countless years deconstructing it, taking it apart letter by letter, and trying to figure out why there are so many feelings and ideas that we cannot even put words to, and that our languages cannot identify." [1] Some words can't be translated into other languages without a lot of explanation. Ella Frances Sanders illustrated 11 such terms that won't render in English as one-word equivalents.

Komorebi : This is the word the Japanese have for when sunlight filters through the trees - the interplay between the light and the leaves.

Sobremesa : Spaniards tend to be a sociable bunch, and this word describes the period of time after a meal when you have food-induced conversations with the people you have shared the meal with.

MĂĄngata : In swedish, the word for the glimmering, roadlike reflection that the moon creates on water.

The following are a instances where other languages have found the right word and English simply falls speechless. [2]

Toska (Russian) : Vladmir Nabokov describes it best: “No single word in English renders all the shades of toska. At its deepest and most painful, it is a sensation of great spiritual anguish, often without any specific cause. At less morbid levels it is a dull ache of the soul, a longing with nothing to long for, a sick pining, a vague restlessness, mental throes, yearning. In particular cases it may be the desire for somebody or something specific, nostalgia, love-sickness. At the lowest level it grades into ennui, boredom.”

CafunĂ© (Brazilian Portuguese) : The act of tenderly running one’s fingers through someone’s hair.

Saudade (Portuguese) : One of the most beautiful of all words, translatable or not, this word “refers to the feeling of longing for something or someone that you love and which is lost.” Fado music, a type of mournful singing, relates to saudade.

18 July, 2013

Estonia's e-volution

Estonia is one of Europe's largest centers of web technology innovation. The small republic has free public Wi-Fi and internet access is virtually guaranteed. Many things other Europeans have to leave home to do, Estonians can do on the internet. Since 2007, they've been able to connect their personal IDs to a computer via a USB card reader, so they can fill prescriptions, pay fines, file their tax returns and even register a company online. Since the mid-1990s, the government has been investing one percent of the national budget annually in IT development. Every citizen is issued with an electronic ID card which doubles as an access key to all e-services.

In Estonia setting up an internet company takes 20min, while doing your taxes may take 30. 90% of Estonians votes on the web. According to the Global Information Technology Report Estonia ranks: #3 Laws related to IT, #3 Presence if IT in government agencies, #2 Internet access in schools, #2 Mobile phone subscriptions, and #5 Accessibility of digital content, out of 138 countries.


Estonia possesses far greater experience in the computerization of private and public services, which even in Western Europe is at a fairly primitive level, compared to where Estonia is. Keep in mind that, 99% percent of all Estonian tax returns are filed electronically. All of their public documents are available on the Internet. The European Union would do well to move away from paper and go digital because it's all much more transparent that way. That familiarity with computers does come natural with age (the younger you are, the easier to adopt a techno-lifestyle), but it has also to be induced or taught , because when overlooked, people will simply not follow, because again most people are not naturally adept to computers and mobile technology.

the Finnish maternity package

In Finland, when you are expecting a baby, you can choose between a maternity package and a tax-free lump sum of 140 EUR as a maternity grant (for the year 2013). Those are available to expectant mothers and adoptive parents who live in Finland or are covered by the Finnish social security system. The maternity package contains children's clothes and other necessary items, such as bedding, cloth nappies, gauze towels and child-care products. The maternity package is not a commercial product and therefor it cannot be sold to interested parties. It is available solely as a benefit offered under the Finnish social security system.

The items it contains are sourced through a competitive bidding process complying with EU law, but have a distinct Finnish appeal and origin. After all, when 40k maternity packages are issued each year it a great boost to the relevant sector. For several years now, the fabrics included in the maternity package have been in neutral colours, making them suitable for both girls and boys and more easily matched with other colours. Before the mid-1970s, the principal colour was typically white. Bodysuits, coveralls and a sleeping bag that can also be used as a quilt have traditionally been among the most popular items included in the package.  The maternity package changes every year while staying true to its roots. Over the years, it has become increasingly environment friendly. As an example of this, reusable nappies have been included since 2000.

For 75 years, Finland's expectant mothers have been given a box by the state. It's like a starter kit of clothes, sheets and toys that can even be used as a bed. And some say it helped Finland achieve one of the world's lowest infant mortality rates. It's a tradition that dates back to the 1930s and it's designed to give all children in Finland, no matter what background they're from, an equal start in life. With the mattress in the bottom, the box becomes a baby's first bed. Many children, from all social backgrounds, have their first naps within the safety of the box's four cardboard walls. So the box provided mothers with what they needed to look after their baby, but it also helped steer pregnant women into the arms of the doctors and nurses of Finland's nascent welfare state. [1]

Other perks in the box include a rattle and a colorful, illustrated book - a boost of encouragement for parents to teach their children to read. [2] Check out the maternity package contents for year 2012-13 here. Read a historical account on the evoltion and forms of the Finnish maternity grants and package here.

07 April, 2013

Earth 2 Hub

If you are a scientist, designer, filmmaker, or any kind of environmentally-conscious creative person who is tired of zipped-up and dull sustainability science, then Earth 2 Hub might be the solution you’ve been looking for. A groundbreaking digital media platform conceived by some of the brightest, most forward-thinking people on the planet, Earth 2 Hub encourages the discussion and implementation of cutting-edge scientific and technological innovation by engaging with the global community through social media, cloud technologies, and smart technology. [1]

Taken from their mission statement : "Conceived in the Atlantic Forest in Brazil in 2009 and incorporated in London in October 2011, Earth 2 Hub gives new science and technology an immersive media platform that supports the interchange of ideas through engagement, participation and interaction. Presenting new scientific facts and futures as they emerge to a global community, Earth 2 Hub aims to be experiential and enabling, promoting innovative and far-sighted possibilities, supporting the community to break the boundaries of conventional thought, and to promote the adoption of new developments". No idea is too far-reaching as long as it is grounded in the highest standards. The time to envision bold solutions to our environmental woes is now, and Earth 2 Hub is leading the way with thousands of fans around the world. The following is the Earth 2.0 Initialization video to help you get a better sense of what they are working to achieve.



Earth 2 Initialization series of short films presents a few of the innovative and far-sighted developments in science and technology that Earth 2 is championing. More Earth 2 films are available or in the works, each of which will explore ideas, innovations and inventions that will have the capacity to help re-establish a harmonious relationship between humanity and nature. To view more go here. Earth 2 approach is to bring together communities that historically don’t tend to meet and engage – to bring science fiction pros together with science fact pros – artists together with scientists, filmmakers together with business executies and so on. Earth 2.0 is curating a conversation that spans silos to enable a broader perspective on the challenges humanity faces. [2]

15 March, 2013

The wealth inequality video

Wealth inequality in the United States, also known as the "wealth gap", refers to the unequal distribution of financial assets among residents of the United States. Wealth includes the values of homes, automobiles, businesses, savings, and investments. Those who acquire a great deal of financial wealth do so primarily through the appreciation of fiscal portfolios. For this reason, financial wealth involves only stocks and mutual funds, and other investments. Hence, there is greater financial inequality than simple net worth disparities. Various sociological statistics suggest the severity of wealth inequality "with the top 10% possessing 80% of all financial assets and the bottom 90% holding only 20% of all financial wealth." Although different from income inequality, the two are often interrelated. [1]

The video has sparked considerable criticism as well, since it does seem elaborately designed to arouse commotion (excellent, simple fluid graphics, deep reassuring voice for the narrative, etc.). Read some articles in Forbes here and here. Since the time the video has gone viral, the accumulated views, range in the millions, but it is still not clear who produced it, and it is clear that no solution is being proposed to the “problem” of wealth inequality identified in the video. The video does seem posed to influence you with emotional arguments, hence bordering the area of “marketing material”. Read some more counter-arguments here and here.

The Wealth Inequality in America infographic video was posted on YouTube back in November 2012. The video is a good example of what the best infographic designs accomplish. The data sources are clearly listed at the end of the video, though it’s not clear who created and is publishing the video. The account seems to have been created for just uploading this video. Well, if you wish to know more, then here you will find background info on the viral infographics presentation video



But what a wonderful coincidence it is, that at the same time a documentary titled “Inequality for All” was an unexpected hit at the recent Sundance film festival, arguing that US capitalism has fatally abandoned the middle classes while making the super-rich richer. Inequality for All looks at the topic of widening income inequality through the eyes of noted economic policy expert Robert Reich. At the heart of the film is a simple proposition: what is a good society, and what role does the widening income gap play in the deterioration of our nation's economic health ? The creators aim for the documentary-film to be a paradigm-shifting, eye-opening experience for the American public (and not only, I guess) ; to accurately show through a non-partisan perspective why extreme income inequality is such an important topic for US citizens today and for the future of America. Visit the documentary’s info website here. Read more on the film’s impact here.

Furthermore, some points I would like to put forth :

Wealth or income should not be the only indices denoting inequality. Let’s consider for a minute housing or education, or access to public amenities, infrastructure or services. There are numerous factors determining the equality of a populace, and a number of them when measured can be used as indicators. So we should not limit ourselves to monitoring wealth distribution (although housing or education, for example, can be included in the equation as realised expenditure) in order to determine equality, and in even populace happiness or satisfaction.

Of course one should not neglect to analyse what comes after, i.e. as a result from the observed wealth inequality. Just to raise a single point, you should not take for granted the course that people take in order to get in public office. It is definitely not a coincidence that people with more wealth, have a “louder”, or “more frequently heard” voice.

It is apparent that what is presented here, with US collated data, is applicable to the rest of the world, in either similar or grossly exaggerated fashion ; but the truth remains that it is applicable. And of course, in turn the big fish subjects to the same model the smaller fish, and it will go on and on indefinitely unless people are willing to change it. But that again seems to be unattainable. Unfortunately in that case, we do not select what we are born into. And please don’t tell me that it’s all a matter of your choices or effort, because if you were born into a ravished central African family, the chances of you being the future president of a conglomerate are rather “slim”.

Hence a popular argument, that states that “It always has been that way, it so is, and so shall it continue to be in the future”. Well, I do dislike to disappoint you, but that is not the truth. There have been notable periods for the now so called Western World, that wealth inequality (or inequality in general) was not the case. The same is even more true for the rest of the world.

NOTES [2] :
Generally speaking, wealth is the value of everything a person or family owns, minus any debts. However, for purposes of studying the wealth distribution, economists define wealth in terms of marketable assets, such as real estate, stocks, and bonds, leaving aside consumer durables like cars and household items because they are not as readily converted into cash and are more valuable to their owners for use purposes than they are for resale. Once the value of all marketable assets is determined, then all debts, such as home mortgages and credit card debts, are subtracted, which yields a person's net worth.
Economists use the concept of financial wealth which is defined as net worth minus net equity in owner-occupied housing. Financial wealth is a more 'liquid' concept than marketable wealth, since one's home is difficult to convert into cash in the short term. It thus reflects the resources that may be immediately available for consumption or various forms of investments.
There is a difference between wealth and income. Income is what people earn from work, but also from dividends, interest, and any rents or royalties that are paid to them on properties they own. In theory, those who own a great deal of wealth may or may not have high incomes, depending on the returns they receive from their wealth, but in reality those at the very top of the wealth distribution usually have the most income. It is important to note that for the rich, most of that income does not come from "working" as we the rest perceive it.

[2] G. William Domhoff, “Wealth, Income, and Power”, http://www2.ucsc.edu/whorulesamerica/power/wealth.html

10 March, 2013

Get your priorities (values) straight

When people are in a depression they do not want to hear of their bad selections or erroneous state of thinking, or to that effect that they need to change this and that in their mentalitĂ© or mode of acting. In fact, what they only want you to tell them, is when their “bad streak” is going to end, and when they will get back to being and acting as they once were accustomed to. Then, maybe, they will consider making themselves better ; and I say maybe, because in most cases they wouldn’t give a damn about what you would say to them, once they are “flyin’ high”.

One of the more bizarre takes on Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez's death comes from Associated Press business reporter Pamela Sampson, were in her article “Little Reaction In Oil Market To Chavez Death”, states that :

“Chavez invested Venezuela's oil wealth into social programs including state-run food markets, cash benefits for poor families, free health clinics and education programs. But those gains were meagre compared with the spectacular construction projects that oil riches spurred in glittering Middle Eastern cities, including the world's tallest building in Dubai and plans for branches of the Louvre and Guggenheim museums in Abu Dhabi.” [1]

 “That's right.”, notes Jim Naureckas at Fairness & Accuracy in Reporting (FAIR),

“Chavez squandered his nation's oil money on healthcare, education and nutrition when he could have been building the world's tallest building or his own branch of the Louvre. What kind of monster has priorities like that ?” [2]

The reporter’s aim of course, was not into criticizing Chavez’s policy prioritizing. It serves though, as a striking reminder that people do not see things under the same perspective, even when those “things” could be expressions of what should be universally recognized values. 

Those said, was to prepare the ground of what follows, and that will not going to be soothing or nice, or kind.

At some point – whether all made-up and settled, or temporarily aggravated and miserable, imagining and creating or have reached a dead-end, either poor or rich, booming with health, or stricken by problems – you have to realise that the society has definitely taken a wrong turn, down a path that at the best, will lead to more misery for the majority. At some point you must realise that what separates you from the majority, is actually a very thin line. It has nothing to do with your belongings, your money in the bank, or your society status in your microcosm. It is only determined by the moment when the fish that is bigger than you, will decide that it has fed up with all the others, and it is time to eat you. And of course, the examples are numerous.

And because the examples list is so long, I am not feeling like I am treading on unknown territory now. You see, It is NOT my fault, that you have turned sort-sighted and deaf, illiterate at worst or incapable of having a thought-provoking discussion. Most of you, do not listen anymore or talk anymore to people that DO have something to say, and shout or write it. I do not care whether you are poor or rich, tired, or angry, or sad, or plainly fed-up with what goes on around you, but the fact is that YOU have chosen to shut the voices of logic, reason, truth and solidarity out. It has been YOUR fault, and when you realise it (if ever), you’d better hope that it is not too late to do anything ; because if it will, then your children shall pay a very dear price.

Those taken into account, at some point you will painfully realise that what you though was “the other peoples’ problem”, you actually helped create with your stance, attitude and deeds (voting included), and what is worse, it has now turned big and ugly and it’s coming to bite you, along with everyone else.

Wake up ! There is MORE to economic progress than growth. There is MORE to societal health than a construction boom. Those, start with you, but they also reflect back to you. There is MORE in life than career and wealth. There is MORE in distributing evenly, than phenomenal, though temporary, gains. After all, we are all (indiscriminately) going to be here for one meagre lifetime. Make it worth it ; and I am not speaking in currency terms. Live it in meaning, to you and others around you, happy and fulfilling.

To bring it in context with the articles mentioned above, one of the most inspiring lines I’ve ever heard uttered on the “big screen”, was the following : “Brothers, what we do in life, echoes in eternity”. By endorsing policies that cater for your populace (and I am not speaking about Chavez now), you will be remembered of for a couple of generations. Maybe historians will judge you fairly and recount your deeds, to inspire a few generations more to come.

On the other hand, the truth is that a well-constructed building, does have a longer lifespan, when compared to the former. But then again, that only applies until some delluded maniac, decides to ram it with a fully laden airplane.

06 March, 2013

Pechakucha nights

PechaKucha 20x20 is a simple presentation format where you show 20 images, each for 20 seconds. The images advance automatically and you talk along to the images. And that’s pretty much it … in terms of rules. Because with regards to the rest, PechaKucha Nights are informal and fun gatherings where creative people get together and share their ideas, works, thoughts, holiday snaps - just about anything, really - in the PechaKucha 20x20 format.

The presentation format was devised by Astrid Klein and Mark Dytham of Klein Dytham architecture. The first PechaKucha Night was held in Tokyo in February 2003, as an event for young designers to meet, network, and showcase their work. Since then they are now happening in over 500 cities around the world. PechaKucha Nights are mostly held in fun spaces with a bar, which is a space for “thinking and drinking.” To date, PechaKucha Nights have been held in bars, restaurants, clubs, beer gardens, homes, studios, universities, churches, prisons (disused), beaches, swimming pools, even a quarry! Anyone can present and this is the beauty of PechaKucha Nights. Astrid's daughter presented when she was 5 (about her artwork) and Mark's mother presented when she was 69 (about her elaborate wedding cake creations).

The key to a great presentation is to present something you love. Most people use PechaKucha Night to present their latest creative projects or work. Some people share their passion and show their prized collection of Nana Mouskouri records, while others share photos of their latest visit to a construction site or their recent holiday snaps. We always recommend people go and see a PechaKucha Night before they ask to present to get a good feel for what it's all about. PechaKucha can also be the perfect platform to show and share your work, especially If you have just graduated and finished your first project in the real world, and would like public acknowledgement.

22 February, 2013

Socializing with TipTap. Something new ?

TipTap, based in Cambridge, Massachusetts, operates a community where members gather personalized information on products and services. It enables users to create profiles; answer questions regarding interests and purchasing habits; and ask questions and be matched to other members with similar tastes and preferences. The company’s community also enables users to earn tips and rewards members for providing information. That of course, is the business perspective. The truth is that you are presented with a social network site, that in its 50% looks and feels a lot like Pinterest. To be honest I am not a fan of Pinterest (in terms of layout and aesthetics), and I sometimes fail to see where exactly is its “networking” side.

According to its founders : “TipTap is the first personality-driven social discovery site, allowing you to discover new things from people who share your personality, tastes and style. Indulge in our quizzes to uncover aspects of yourself and connect with people who are just like you. Then, discover and share the things that you love with your own community of like-minded people”. Read through their “personalities” list here.

There are three types of personality quizzes: Personality, Tastes, and Style. Each quiz takes only a few minutes, and are fun little activities to participate in. By taking a few short personality quizzes, the website will recommend followers with comparable tastes and personalities. For each follower it provides a percentage of compatibility, making it easier to decide whether you want to follow others or not. Once you’ve followed other members, you’ll be able to participate in taps. Taps are how you share images, videos, or music. This functionality is comparable to Pinterest, as it creates a stream of taps. Your tap stream is a combination of shares from yourself and your followers. With any tap you share, you’re able to add comments and tags, and these tags will be searchable in future enhancements.

Perhaps more important is the fact that TipTap can deliver comprehensive, intuitive, and uniquely predictive understanding of users without violating personal privacy, because this predictive power results from novel data that is sufficiently abstract and impersonal, as opposed to tracking user behavior. TipTap's psychological approach - directly tapping users' personalities, styles and tastes - allows for more meaningful discovery of immediately relevant information by extending trust and relevance to a broader group of users with similar tastes and preferences. After using it you’ll grown to really appreciate the personality matches. Recommended for users who love new social networking sites. It’s also a great social tool for bloggers, great for anyone looking for new site traffic.

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