Blueseed Project: A Floating Superhero School & Collaboratory

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A few weeks ago I wrote up a post drawing attention to a trend I’m seeing around the world of ‘superhero schools’ cropping up, giving examples of these physical locations that serve as hubs for innovation and personal development. I framed it as:

superhero school. center for disruptive innovation. continuous learning zone. collective intelligence. live/work startup incubator. community center. hackerspace. makerlab. autonomous zone. permaculture and sustainable food production. cooperatively owned communications infrastructure. resilience. r&d lab. a place for creative troublemakers.

I can imagine that these locations become networked, so information and resources can flow between them, and people then have a range of options around the world to come together around short or longer term innovation projects. Pepper it with some internal currencies for the network, and it becomes quite interesting.

I recently found another word that supplements this idea – collaboratory. Originally coined in 1989 as a ‘center without walls’ for scientific research, the wikipedia page also defines it as follows:

“a collaboratory is more than an elaborate collection of information and communications technologies; it is a new networked organizational form that also includes social processes; collaboration techniques; formal and informal communication; and agreement on norms, principles, values, and rules”

At any rate, now that I’m on the lookout for superhero schools & collaboratories, I’m seeing them pop up everywhere. Just the other day, I saw this article on CNET – Peter Theil floats cash to floating tech incubator, and so discovered the Blueseed Project. Continue reading

Mixtape 2011

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Last year around this time I put together a mixtape and encouraged others to make their own playlists so we could discover new music together.

I just put together this year’s list on grooveshark. For your listening pleasure, click here!

Not quite sure the theme…. some mix of soul touching, revolution inspiring, flow inducing, and calm producing.

Enjoy, and please share your mixes with me 🙂

Here’s the playlist:

Mumford & Sons – Awake My Soul
The Head and the Heart – Lost in My Mind
Yael Naim – New Soul
A Fine Frenzy – What I Wouldn’t Do
The Avett Brothers – I And Love And You
Wintersleep – Weighty Ghost
Spoon – The Underdog
James Vincent McMorrow – If I Had a Boat
Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros – Home
Mumford & Sons – White Blank Page
Feist – 1234
M83 – We Own The Sky
Muse – Uprising
Florence and The Machine – You’ve Got The Love
MGMT – Kids
Foster the People – Pumped Up Kicks
Blackbird Blackbird – Letting Go
Pheonix – 1901
Passion Pit – Sleepyhead
Peter, Bjorn and John – Young Folks
Franz Ferdinand – Take Me Out
Beirut – Elephant Gun
Florence and The Machine – Cosmic Love
Mumford & Sons – Little Lion Man
The Cinematic Orchestra – To Build a Home
Barcelona – Please Don’t Go
Keane – Everybody’s Changing

Fusion: A Mindmeld for Action-Oriented Change Agents

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anvil ranch, sonoma county, california

What a rush!!!!!I just arrived back home after one of the more transformative weeks of my life, kicked off by an incredible personal foresight weekend in Northern California.I want to share with you – Fusion.This was the 10th year already that my good friends John Smart & Iveta Brigis have been hosting this annual gathering that “brings together an intimate group of high-integrity futurists interested in improving their personal and social foresight on a sustainable budget.”

They’ve been inviting me for several years now, and I finally made the commitment to myself to attend. Not just to clarify my own mission and goals in life, but because I want to begin hosting Fusions myself. After organizing Contact, a social technologies conference which went off successfully last month, I have a lot more confidence in bringing people together around meaningful topics and themes. But I want to do something more intimate, and highly focused on action-orientation.

Here’s a bit more about the structure and flow of Fusion:

“Fusion is a great opportunity to connect with a small, unique group of creative, open-minded, and goal-oriented futurists. Modeled after Benjamin Franklin‘s Junto, a mutual improvement club, our annual weekend involves deep sharing and assessment of our strengths, passions, weaknesses, fears, and current challenges among high-integrity peers with similar core values but diverse and complementary skillsets. We seek communications that are both non-judgmental and non-defensive (we don’t take offense at any unintended judgments). A major priority of the weekend is for each of us to leave with clearer personal goals, better and more concrete strategies to reach them, and a broadened perspective from the input of other sharp minds.

Great dialog is a challenge. The physicist David Bohm (see On Dialogue, 1996) stressed the importance of “decoupling reflexive responses” and practicing “non-judgmental learning” about others’ perspectives on reality. John Kao says the effectiveness of any social network is proportional to the diversity, ability, and commitment (intellectual and emotional) of its members. Our invitation process attempts to maximize each of these elements. You’ll meet scientists, technologists, entrepreneurs, writers, artists, and other individuals who are intellectually curious about the future and their role in it. We also seek people who are optimistic, critical, self-honest, and solutions-oriented. Those with spiritual perspectives that are tolerant of secular humanism and atheism are also warmly invited.”

The weekend was capped at 28 participants (to allow for 7 small groups of 4 participants), and invitation only, to curate a peak experience for everyone involved. And that’s definitely what happened for me.

You can check out the site for more info about the profiles we filled out beforehand and the schedule for the weekend.

My takeaway was that a beautiful kind of social alchemy can happen when a group of mindful people are gathered together around specific intentions. In just two days, I had a pretty powerful and intimate conversation with just about every other person there. We had time for small group facilitated conversations, a gorgeous afternoon hike overlooking mountains and vineyards, potluck dinners, and late night jacuzzi time. 🙂

AND, in addition to what looks like just a lot of fun, some amazing breakthroughs and clarity were actually going on under the surface, which bubbled up into clear actions and goals by Sunday morning, when we made commitments about what we intended to accomplish over the upcoming 12 months.Having a community of people in mutual respect and admiration, who are driven by their own passions and care about the success of their peers, is pretty frikkin powerful. I have a zest for life that feels unparalleled at the moment. (and sure, the shine will wear off over time, until the next great experience happens, but this is a great wake up call that it’s not only possible, but can be designed.)So, in addition to several other exciting goals I’ve set for myself, I am committing to doing at least one online Junto a month – using either Buzzumi or Google Hangouts to host them, with a public backchannel for anyone else who wants to attend. (as were my thoughts about hosting Juntos earlier last year, but I didn’t quite have the tools yet.)

Also, I’m committing to holding at least one Fusion event in 2012. 28 people. Invite only. Most likely in the Catskill Mountains of upstate NY. May also do a Northern California event as well, to cover both coasts.

If attending a Fusion event sounds interesting to you, feel free to shoot me an email at emergentbydesign at gmail, and I’ll keep you posted about upcoming developments.

Onward and Upward!

Superhero School: An Epicenter for Disruptive Innovation

I put a short post up a few days ago in an online group I’m in, with the above image and this brief description:

superhero school. center for disruptive innovation. continuous learning zone. collective intelligence. live/work startup incubator. community center. hackerspace. makerlab. autonomous zone. permaculture and sustainable food production. cooperatively owned communications infrastructure. resilience. r&d lab. a place for creative troublemakers. hudson valley. i want this to exist. Continue reading

8 Tools for Self-Analysis: Mapping Your Strengths, Gifts & Roles

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I’ve always been fascinated with the workings of my own mind, and by human nature in general. With a background doing undergraduate work in Psychology, and graduate work in Social and Critical Theory, I’ve spent long hours contemplating individual motivations as well as group dynamics and the potential for (the much sought after, but often elusive) collective intelligence.If we want to determine what it takes to better function as groups, both in physical proximity and across distributed environments, I think it’s important to understand our own internal landscapes and how our strengths are best amplified in the presence of others with complimentary talents.

Below is a list of online assessments that are useful in becoming more aware of one’s strengths, gifts and temperaments. I’ve pasted excerpts of my own results below, to give a sense of how the assessments are formatted. Continue reading

The Failure of the Occupy Movement or the Emergence of a Living Systems Organization?

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I got done chatting with a colleague this morning, who went on a bit of a rant about the failures of the Occupy movement. Their comments were similar to ones I’ve seen in the media – lack of apparent leadership, lack of specific demands.

Of course, I’ve also seen several cogent arguments that this is something ‘different,’ and the people are well aware what they’re angry about, and are figuring out how to level the playing field. (see Wall Street Isn’t Winning – It’s Cheating, by Matt Taibbi; Think Occupy Wall St. is a phase? You don’t get it by Douglas Rushkoff, and his followup Occupy Wall Street beta tests a new way of living; the youtube video of Mark Ruffalo, or for some cold hard stats – Here Are Four Charts That Explain What The Protestors Are Angry About or The Shocking, Graphic Data That Shows Exactly What Motivates the Occupy Movement.)

I personally am rather inspired by many potentialities in the movement. I’ve been thinking a lot over the past few years about emergent organizational structures, systems mapping and analysis of value flows, coordination of human activity across distributed environments, more robust understanding of self and group identity, roles, strengths, and the deeper drives and motivations that guide and influence behavior.

While many of us are having conversations about these topics, we have few functional examples to reference. (well, maybe Nature.) We are still on the cusp of it, but as many are well aware, the components to actualize it are already in the ether, just waiting for their moment to coalesce. Continue reading

Future of Facebook: Politics [video]

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The second installment in the 6 part Future of Facebook video series, a project to explore the impact social networking technologies are having on our lives.

Thanks to interviewees Chris Arkenberg, David Kirkpatrick, Alex Howard, Howard Rheingold, and Valdis Krebs; to all the people who contributed to the kickstarter campaign, and to Innotribe, our corporate patron. Continue reading

What the Contact Conference Was Really About

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photo: grant potter

I am very grateful to have been able to take part in organizing the Contact Conference, an event that pitched itself as a working festival of innovation, a social technologies exhibitor space, and a celebration of the potential of a network culture.

And it was definitely all those things, so mission accomplished there. The energy in the room was great, the recipients of the three $1oK Innovation Awards worthy, and the four projects conceived and launched at the event exciting. (more details on those things below in Douglas Rushkoff’s letter to participants)

But that’s really only a part of the story.

The bigger picture here is that if we start from the premise that “the system is broken” or “we’re at a critical turning point’ or that “we’re in a global transition,” or any such broad sweeping statements about the functionality of our social/economic/political/environmental/technological/scientific systems, and the majority of the world’s population is either deeply dissatisfied or at the least has an itching feeling that there is something that is just not right… then the only sane choice left is to act. Continue reading

Unleashing the Creative Warrior: Day 1

I have been feeling a bit disconnected from my creative inspiration of late, so have decided to intentionally stoke the fire.

I’ve found for myself that the muse reveals herself when I can connect to that more universal and abstract sense of being, experiment with embodying various aspects of self, and momentarily entering the dark corners.

I participated in a very useful retreat in the fall last year called The Creative Entrepreneur (posts about it: day 1, day 2, day 3, day 4, day 5), where we worked through blocks and flows through a process of visual journaling. It’s surprising what comes out when the right brain is given the opportunity to run wild a bit, so I’m reengaging in that now.

As you see above, I put together a collage of images that are symbolic, metaphoric and archetypal in some way. I try not to think too much about it, I just choose images that feel right at the moment. The patterns emerge later.

To create the collages, I’ll be using the new hive – a surprisingly simple and fun tool for creative expression that was exhibited at the Bazaar at the Contact Conference on Thursday.

If you’d like to join me on this series of self-explorations, feel free to post links to your work in the comments.

Occupy Wall Street Catalyzing a Cooperatively Owned Communications Infrastructure?

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What would a cooperatively owned and operated communications infrastructure look like? One that used peer-to-peer technologies to create a global network which is immune to censorship and resistant to breakdown? It appears The Free Network Foundationis building one.I noticed a few people bouncing this idea around on the Next Net google groupearlier in the year, and now they seem to be moving forward quickly, with Occupy Wall Street a convenient catalyzing event to get things shipped.Their vision is to create a global communications infrastructure that is owned and operated by participants in the network, rather than by for-profit network operators.

They currently have a prototype FreedomTower up and running at Occupy Austin, with a second one set up in Liberty Park at Occupy Wall Street in NYC. The towers are providing internet access to the occupiers, and will be used to establish an occupation-to-occupation Virtual Private Network.

For the more technically inclined, the foundation has published a bill of materials and how-to. The total cost of a tower comes in at $1500. The tower consists of an uninterruptible power supply, two wimax modems, a nettop computer, a network switch, three 2.4GHz sector antennas, and three 5GHz sector antennas. The computer runs software for routing and terminating VPN tunnelling.

If you’d like to contribute to this effort, visit freenetworkfoundation.org. There you can find a link to donate, and contact information if you wish to participate. The FNF has put the call out for occupiers everywhere to raise funds, read up, and get to work building resilient communications infrastructure for the movement.

members of the Free Network Foundation will be exhibiting their project this week at the Contact Summit!