The Next Industrial Revolution

Peter Cochrane looks at how the old industries are destroying the planet and we have to move onto the ’Food to Waste to Food Cycles’ made possible at the juncture of Nano, Bio and ITC if we are to sustain life on this planet and find our way forward.

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iPhone Followup – Innovation in a Box

By Braden Kelley | June 28, 2007

My initial iPhone article highlighted why the iPhone will not be a success in its first incarnation. Make no mistake though, the introduction of the iPhone will revolutionize the mobile telephony market. Let’s answer some of the criticisms of the most innovative mobile handset in the history of mobile telephony:

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The Growing Housing Divide

By Braden Kelley | June 21, 2007

I was speaking with a friend of mine recently and he brought up an interesting point. He asserted that there was a widening gap in home prices between where people want to live and where people have to live. How else can you explain the housing price fall in most of the country while places like Seattle continue to have rising prices?

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  1. Dennis Stauffer on December 5, 2011 at 1:57 pm

    Great job of identifying the problem; not good at identifying the solution.

    This is a powerful presentation with many good insights. The need for an economy that recycles rather than expends is a worthy goal. But when Peter Cochran begins talking about “The biggest challenge we face,” I couldn’t disagree more strongly. His argument that we somehow have fundamental cognitive limitations that prevent us from addressing our problems is far too pessimistic and not supported by cognitive research.

    Cochran praises nature as highly functional (and non-linear) and then argues that as society becomes more like her, we will somehow become dysfunctional without IT to save us? Because we’re supposedly limited to linear thinking?

    We are part of nature and nature is inherently non-linear. It is fundamental to our nature—and to our thinking. The linear mindset has been fostered by our culture and institutions, not by any cognitive limitations. Cognitive child development researchers have long since confirmed that we are born as iterative thinkers. We are entirely capable—no, make that predisposed—to think in non-linear ways and doing so is a path to more powerful and reliable intuitions, greater effectiveness, and more profound insights.

    In our research, we have been measuring linear and iterative (non-linear) mindsets and there are many examples (and combinations) of both in all of the populations we’ve measured. https://www.innovatormindset.com/research.htm

    We definitely have a shift to make; we’re faced with some extremely crucial choices. But we are more than capable of making the necessary adjustments if we choose to. It comes down to how skilled we are in our creativity and inventiveness, our ability to adapt and innovate—and we are still far ahead of any of our machines in that capability.

    “Those who say it can’t be done should not interrupt those who are doing it.”

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