News: Theatres Trust fears Futurist demolition after theme park bidder is revealed

The interior of Scarborough's Futurist Theatre.

The Theatres Trust has warned that Scarboroughs Futurist Theatre will face demolition after the proposed bidder for the site was named as theme park Flamingo Land.

Details of the bid made by Flamingo Land a theme park in North Yorkshire were released in September under Bidder B. However, Scarborough Borough Council has subsequently named the company in response to public concern.

If successful, Flamingo Land Coast will include a glass-roofed botanical garden, a rollercoaster, and bar, restaurant and function spaces.

Mark Price, theatres at risk adviser for the Theatres Trust, said the trust had had the Futurist on its theatre buildings at risk register since 2006, adding that the venue currently provided the only indoor venue in Scarborough capable of hosting large scale touring theatre and musical productions needing a flytower.

The 2,150-seat venue was built in 1921 and was used as a theatre and cinema up until its closure in early 2014, which followed years of uncertainty.

The theatre is owned by the council, which decided to close it after negotiations over a new contract with the venues operator broke down.

A report on the future of the theatre also found it to be no longer sustainable.

Price added: We regret the loss of the Futurist which has provided Scarborough with a fully equipped lyric theatre and cinema for over 93 years. It could have been restored to its former splendour and been a real asset for the town.

Bids for the site closed in August and Flamingo Land is working on the project with Leeds-based property and construction company, GMI Estates.

Continued here:

News: Theatres Trust fears Futurist demolition after theme park bidder is revealed

Futurist Jack Uldrich to Headline 5 Events in November

New York, NY (PRWEB) October 30, 2014

Acclaimed global futurist, speaker, and best-selling author Jack Uldrich is frequently asked, What will the future look like? His response is, Predictably unpredictable. Uldrich travels the world speaking about this very paradox. He says, "Learning to unlearn, thinking about the unthinkable, recognizing failure as a key component of success, and understanding that an awareness of ones ignorance is a key component of true wisdom."

Following on the heels of a tremendously busy October, speaking to over 10 clients including ABB/Thomas and Betts, the American Sportfishing Association, the PMA and TRUNO, Uldrich will gear up to speak throughout the month of November to the following clients:

NOV 04, 2014 - Grant Thornton Grant Thornton Houston, TX

NOV 05, 2014 - Farm Credit Services Leaders Conference Farm Credit Services of America Omaha, NE

NOV 06, 2014 - CLEAResult Annual Energy Summit CLEAResult Austin, TX

NOV 10, 2014 - CAS Centennial Celebration CAS Centennial News New York City, NY

NOV 23, 2014 - AASHTO Annual Meeting American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials Charlotte, NC

Uldrich focuses on giving upbeat, practical and actionable insights on future trends, emerging technologies, innovation, change management and leadership, especially in the areas of health care, agriculture, education, energy, finance, retail and manufacturing. He provides provocative new perspectives on competitive advantage, change management and transformational leadership and brings to light the advantages of being creative and using the powers of individual imagination.

In addition to speaking on future trends, one of Uldrich's key specialties is unlearning. He says,"Erroneous ideas can prevent us from being receptive to new knowledge. But before we can fully assimilate new information, we often have to unlearn old beliefs." Unlearning is defined as, "the act of releasing old knowledge." And, according to Uldrich, it is a critical skill, "especially in todays world of rapid and accelerating technical knowledge. If you think of knowledge as an iceberg, the portion of the iceberg that lies above the water can be thought of as representing existing knowledge. The portion that resides below the water is the equivalent of future knowledge. People often overlook obvious trends that will have an impact on their businesses. Unless that is, they are open to unlearning." In other words, Uldrich guides his audiences to look at what resides below the water line, teaches them how to swim with the current and prepare for tsunamis.

Follow this link:

Futurist Jack Uldrich to Headline 5 Events in November

William Gibson coaxes the future out of the present

"I wanted buzzwords," William Gibson says of his early writing ambitions. "I wanted buzz-neologisms, really." He scored with "cyberspace," the term he coined in a short story and popularized in his 1984 novel "Neuromancer," to describe, well never mind, you know what cyberspace is.

But we didn't then. In an era when "Dynasty" and "Dallas" dominated the airwaves and people marveled at the first Apple Macintosh computer, the idea that personal computers might connect to a notional space for business and communications that could be broken into, hacked that was the stuff of fiction.

"It's fairly common for other people to say that lots of things in 'Neuromancer' subsequently came to pass, but I don't myself say that," Gibson says with a laugh. He's talking by phone from his home in Toronto, short, frequent bursts of laughter underscoring an element of absurdity, amusement.

The burden of his prophetic debut novel is that he's frequently thought of as a futurist, although he dodges when asked about the label. His fiction resists it: In his new novel, "The Peripheral" (Putnam, 496 pp., $28.95), two story lines in different futures intersect via an unexplained, quasi-quantum technology. The science is more fairy tale than futurist, "very hand-wavy and vague," Gibson says. "That's a deliberate and I think comic violation of what some people would suppose my job description to be."

"The Peripheral" is a fast-paced mystery that takes place in two futures, one several decades hence and the other 75 years beyond that. The latter is a much-transformed but recognizable London; the former, a rural American town with little going on but an illegal drug trade, a megastore called Hefty Mart and an indie 3-D print shop. With these worlds mysteriously intersecting, the book's heroine, Flynn, witnesses a murder, inadvertently putting her small town in danger.

"It became colored with my childhood sense of what a small American town is like, which is a very Southern sense of what a small American town is like," Gibson says. Raised in South Carolina and Virginia, Gibson's voice has a soft Southern lilt, interrupted by "agayn" for "again," "bean" rather than "been." Gibson drifted to Canada during the Vietnam War and stayed; he's married and raised his family there.

Gibson is a countercountercultural baby boomer: He went to Woodstock and thought it was a bust, never got Bruce Springsteen's "Born to Run" but was transfixed by "Nebraska." "That was a really powerful influence on my work," he says of the stripped-down, bleak record. "When I heard that I began to think what it would be like to apply that aesthetic to science fiction."

The outsider looking in: Gibson savvily applies that to his own relationship with technology. He was late to give up his flip-phone because not having an iPhone allowed him to observe "dispassionately, anthropologically" how other people interacted with theirs.

It's an interesting approach, needing to be close to technologies that promise the future but not too close. He tells a pre-Internet days story of being at the bar at a science fiction convention and hearing two women former Pentagon key-punch operators talking about computer viruses, then obscure and mysterious. "I just went home completely full of it. I didn't really know anything about it I was decoding it poetically," he says. "I operate from the vernacular poetry of technology and from watching how people interact with technology."

Twelve books in, Gibson knows his process. "What I have to do is write a first sentence that's capable of sucking me through the white wall of the blank first page," he says. "Once I'm really working, I'm never not working, which is kind of a drag. The process sort of constitutes an altered state, and it can take days to do it, get the altered state up and running. I've learned to put everything on hold and just stay there."

Follow this link:

William Gibson coaxes the future out of the present

Utilities Trend Expert Jack Uldrich Helps ABB/Thomas & Betts Prepare for the Future

New York, NY (PRWEB) October 28, 2014

Following a series of talks across the country in Hollywood, Houston, Atlanta, and Chicago trend expert and global futurist Jack Uldrich will finish out his tour of ABB/Thomas & Betts' New Product Launches of the Emax 2 in New York City.

Jack Uldrich has made it his personal goal to help organizations like ABB/Thomas & Betts succeed tomorrow by unlearning today. "Technological capabilities are skyrocketing everywhere, and we need to change the way we think about them if were going to jump that curve," says Uldrich. His topic for the final launch of the Emax 2, the latest air circuit-breaker on the market will be: "Breakthrough: Ten Technological Trends Transforming Tomorrow."

In his article on Uldrich, "Start Thinking Like a Futurist," Aaron Hand of Automation Times says, "Wearable technology. 3D manufacturing. Nanotechnology. Robotics. Sensors. Genomics. Computers. Big Data. Renewables. Collaborative consumption. Each one of these is a technology to be reckoned with on its own, full of promise for continued advances. They are all technologies whose capabilities are doubling every 10-24 months...Uldrich is a futurist who spends time thinking about such things. And he has a suggestion: Spend time thinking about such things."

Uldrich makes a living doing just that and sharing his insights with businesses like ABB/Thomas & Betts, United Healthcare, Verizon Wireless, The Western Energy Institute among hundreds of others. He is passionate about inciting people to think about the future in a way that will empower them today. Both in his speaking and his writing Uldrich paints vivid pictures of what the world may look like in just a few short years. He provides an in-depth exploration of how the Internet of Things, Big Data, social media, robotics, biotechnology, nanotechnology, artificial intelligence, renewable energy and collaborative consumption will change everyday life for all of us in the very near future.

Jack Uldrich speaks over 100 times a year to a wide variety of businesses and organizations, especially on the transformation of health care, agriculture, education, energy, finance, retail and manufacturing. He argues that creativity and action are more powerful and versatile than knowledge. His speeches are packed with energy, anecdotes, and thoughtful business and personal advice that educate, entertain, and inspire audiences.

Parties interested in learning more about Jack Uldrich, his books, his daily blog or his speaking availability are encouraged to visit his website. Media wishing to know more about these events or interviewing Jack as a futurist or trend expert can contact Amy Tomczyk at (651) 343.0660.

Continue reading here:

Utilities Trend Expert Jack Uldrich Helps ABB/Thomas & Betts Prepare for the Future

TRUNO to Talk Future Trends with Futurist Jack Uldrich

Dallas, TX (PRWEB) October 29, 2014

The Lone Star State and the North Star State will join forces this Thursday when Minneapolis, MN-based futurist and trend expert Jack Uldrich keynotes TRUNO's 2014 Client Conference in Lubbock, TX. TRUNO, a national leader in integrated technology solutions focused solely on the retail industry recently rebranded this past August. Their new name is derived from the phrase "True North" and is meant to serve as a reminder that True North is constant.

TRUNO's mission never changes. And neither does Jack Uldrich's--as a futurist Uldrich strives to keep his clients on the move with the latest technological trends and keep them on task as how to adapt those changes through the concept of unlearning.

"Taking care of our customers is at the core of everything we do," says Brad Ralston, CEO of TRUNO. TRUNO delivers retailers secure, stable and integrated technology solutions enabling them to navigate through an environment of ever-changing regulation, competition and technology, and by utilizing a futurist like Uldrich, who travels the world speaking on cutting edge trends and how to embrace them, they are making good on their promises.

As the author of 11 best-selling books, including "The Next Big Thing is Really Small," and "Foresight 20/20." Uldrich makes a daily practice of researching trends and writing and speaking on them to a host of industries. He is a frequent guest on national media and regularly appears on the Science Channel's new television program, "FutureScape."

As a futurist Jack Uldrich doesn't try to predict the future he helps clients like TRUNO, ABB/Thomas & Betts, Verizon Wireless, CISCO, Cargill, Wells Fargo and countless others, prepare for it.

He speaks on topics like "Unlearning," "How the Internet Will Open a Future of Opportunities," and "The Big AHA." Uldrich says, "In the near future, the greatest change will be the accelerating rate of change itself." And he asks questions such as, "How will your business change? More importantly, how will you and your organization need to change?" Getting his clients to think about these things in greater depth is just the tip of the iceberg with his work.

His pursuit is focused and clear and his audiences are delighted with the results. "I have been doing professional development for 25 years and Jack is absolutely one of the top speakers I have observed. He uses humor, facts and creativity to get his message across. This was two years ago and many of our people still reference his talk," says Mike Smoczyk, of Kraus Anderson.

TRUNO is anticipating similar results and Uldrich looks forward to the opportunity to provide key insights into helping them maintain their goal of "promising to always press on and guide their clients towards security, stability, and integrated solutions when it comes to Retail Technology."

Parties interested in learning more about Jack Uldrich, his books, his daily blog or his speaking availability are encouraged to visit his website. Media wishing to know more about these events or interviewing Jack as a futurist or trend expert can contact Amy Tomczyk at (651) 343.0660.

Read more:

TRUNO to Talk Future Trends with Futurist Jack Uldrich

What the 1970s Can Teach Us about Inventing a New Economy (in News)

A Hawaiian futurist recalls the two years he spent trying to end consumerism in Canada.

Jim Dator in Hawaii: You won't like the future if 'you think continued innovation, a new iPhone every three months is a really great world to live in.'

What does the future hold? Jim Dator has spent his life exploring the question and how posing it can improve the society we presently inhabit. He helped set up North America's first-ever academic program for futures studies in 1972 at the University of Hawaii in Honolulu. And four decades later, he's regarded as an elder statesman of the discipline -- a futurist's futurist, if you will -- lauded by colleagues and students for the "scope, intensity, magnitude, creativity, and importance of [his] work."

Dator is now in his early 80s and in the twilight of a long and globally influential career. But he still has clear memories of the two years he spent in Canada when his career was just getting started. From 1974 to 1976, he travelled all across the country, meeting with school boards, scientists, Royal Commissions, TV producers, policymakers and even the Privy Council of Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau, to transform Canada from a society of consumers into a society of "conservers."

This was an era not so unlike the one now we live in. It was a time of global oil shocks. Across the world there was dawning awareness of the ecological limits to growth, and widespread fears that they would be exceeded. Dator's job was to make Canadians aware of those limits, while building an alternative to the prevailing mass consumer lifestyle capable of respecting them. "There was a vast amount of research and public meetings held all over the country," Dator said. "I got to know Canada very well." But the shift away from consumerism he tried to achieve never took off.

Dator's since spent his career exploring four scenarios of what tomorrow's society could be like -- collapse, discipline, singularity or business-as-usual -- to widen our options for fixing today's. Yet when I visited him this July at his office in Honolulu, he lamented that our society has yet to heed the warnings he first began imparting 40 years ago. "If you think continued innovation, a new iPhone every three months is a really great world to live in," he said, "then you're not going to like [the future]."

The Conserver Society

Like today, the 1970s were a time of great uncertainty about the future. OPEC embargos exposed our precarious addiction to oil. The Club of Rome warned of societal collapse unless we could implement "limits to growth." And the first Earth Day created a global environmental movement. In response to these pressures, the now-defunct Science Council of Canada in 1973 called for a "transition from a consumer society preoccupied with resource exploitation to a conserver society."

The Council was of the opinion that our growth-obsessed culture was about to slam into an ecological wall. "Most Canadians have lived through a period when materials seemed plentiful, energy cheap, and growth in size and quantity, whether of cities, automobiles, monuments or lawnmowers, was the natural order of things," the Council argued. Some members urged Canada to embark on a national program of "joyous austerity" that would "question our implicit assumption that 'bigger is better.'"

More here:

What the 1970s Can Teach Us about Inventing a New Economy (in News)

Intel futurist Brian Johnson to speak on technology in Tuesday lecture at Oregon State

Brian David Johnson, the futurist at Intel Corp., will speak Tuesday at Oregon State University as part of the College of Business Deans Distinguished Lecture series.

As Intels futurist, Johnsons charge is to develop a 10- to 15-year vision for the future of technology. His work, called futurecasting, uses ethnographic field studies, technology research, trend data and even science fiction to provide Intel with a pragmatic vision of consumers and computing.

In his lecture, Humanity in the Machine: What Comes after Greed? Johnson will explore the relationship between humanity and technology, and look at how technology reflects the mission and values of the societies that create it.

The lecture begins at 7 p.m. in the Austin Auditorium in the LaSells Stewart Center, 875 S.W. 26th St., Corvallis. The event is free and open to the public.

Continued here:

Intel futurist Brian Johnson to speak on technology in Tuesday lecture at Oregon State

Futurist Jack Uldrich Set to "Ignite Some Fires" in Chicago at ABB/Thomas & Betts New Product Launch

Chicago, IL (PRWEB) October 24, 2014

"Seeing the future is easier if you take off blinders in the present," says Jim Montague of the Emerson Community Site. What he's referring to is a keynote speech delivered by futurist Jack Uldrich to the Emerson Global Community Exchange on October 7th. Uldrich, a world renowned futurist and trend expert, will also be helping ABB/Thomas & Betts take the blinders off when he delivers his keynote, "Breakthrough: Ten Trends Transforming Tomorrow" at their new product launch in Chicago on October 27th.

Montague goes on to discuss Uldrich's approach to future-proofing businesses: "Many potential and upcoming innovations are already foreseeable given today's capabilities and tools. What's needed to reveal them is awareness and the humility to give up stuck-in-a-rut thinking patterns that stifle useful questions and possibilities. Then, the will to action can turn these desired futures into new realities...easier said than done, of course, but futurist Jack Uldrich lit some sparks in his keynote address to Emerson Global Users Exchange delegates."

When it comes to future-proofing, lighting sparks and igniting fires is what Uldrich has made a career of, and he loves doing it. "The futurist's job is to focus on the big picture, and point out the 800-pound gorillas that others are missing because their attention is focused elsewhere," said Uldrich. "I want to help future-proof as many businesses as I can against all the changes that are coming tomorrow. Business models are changing quickly, while others are fading away, so it's important to be aware of changes these companies might not be able to see."

Uldrich spends a lot of time researching and 'seeing' what those changes may be--he then writes on those trends (he is the author of over 11 books,) his most recent of book is Foresight 20/20. And following his research, he crosses the globe speaking on emerging trends in health care, education, agriculture, energy and utilities, just to name a few.

His keynotes are thought provoking, motivating and incredibly easy to digest and relate to; he is anticipating a great turn out in Chicago for the ABB/Thomas & Betts Emax 2 product launch there and he will be rounding the month off with another product launch for them in New York City.

Parties interested in learning more about Uldrich, his writing or speaking availability are encouraged to go to his website. Media wishing to interview him, or know more about the event can contact Amy Tomczyk at (612) 343-0060.

Original post:

Futurist Jack Uldrich Set to "Ignite Some Fires" in Chicago at ABB/Thomas & Betts New Product Launch

Flamingo Land behind plans for major coastal visitor attraction

FLAMINGO Land has lodged a bid to create a botanic garden and roller coaster on the site of the former Futurist theatre.

Scarborough Borough Council has announced that the theme park company has its eyes set on developing the site of the resort's famous theatre, which closed in January after years of uncertainty.

Flamingo Land, between Malton and Pickering, is Yorkshire's largest visitor attraction and is proposing to create Flamingo Land Coast.

Details of its bid were released in a report to Scarborough Borough Councils cabinet and reveals it intends to create a development based around three environments with subterranean, coastline and sky theme.

It would include a glass-roofed botanical garden, a roller coaster, a 55m lighthouse structure and Space Shot Tower which propels customers 55 metres into the sky.

The site, overlooking Scarboroughs south bay, would also include an elevated sea view bar, restaurant and function space, walk-through aviary and new town square.

The company behind the plans were previously kept secret and was referred to as bidder B. But following public concerns about the credibility of any bidder being able to deliver such an ambitious seafront visitor attraction, Flamingo Land was revealed as the applicant.

The company is partnering with the Yorkshire-based property development company GMI Estates for the project.

Derek Bastiman, Scarborough Borough Council cabinet member for strategic planning and regeneration said plans were still very much in their infancy

Were delighted that weve been able to announce Flamingo Land and GMI as the identity behind bidder B, he said.

Read more from the original source:

Flamingo Land behind plans for major coastal visitor attraction

Q&A with Futurist Martine Rothblatt

If computers think for themselves, should they have human rights?

Martine Rothblatt

Bina48 is a robotic head that looks and speaks like a personit moves its lips and runs conversational software. Although the robot isnt alive, its hard to say there is no life at all in Bina48. In conversation, it sometimes says surprising things. Googles director of engineering, Ray Kurzweil, says its wonderfully suggestive of a time when computers really will think and feel.

Kurzweil makes the comment in the foreword to Virtually Human: The Promiseand the Perilof Digital Immortality a new book by Bina48s owner, Martine Rothblatt, who makes legal and ethical arguments for why intelligent software might eventually deserve all the rights of flesh-and-blood people.

A lawyer and pioneer of the satellite-radio business, Rothblatt is chief executive of United Therapeutics, a biotechnology company she founded in an effort to cure her daughters lung disease. The companys success has made Rothblatt into Americas most highly paid female CEO, a ranking that has drawn attention in part because Rothblatt was born male and underwent sex reassignment surgery in 1994.

Her transformation serves as a sort of backdrop to her book, in which Rothblatt argues that humanity is on a fast track to a next evolutionary step of copying peoples personalities into machines. Already, she notes, the typical users of social networks spend several hours a day uploading, tweeting, and curating digital information about themselveswhat she calls mindfiles. As large tech companies pour billions into AI research and digital assistants, Rothblatt says, its inevitable that these mindfiles will be animated as mindclones: conscious, digital versions of people living or dead.

Rothblatts main interest is in the debates over identity, civil rights, and the meaning of personhood that would surround the emergence of virtual people. Would a digital copy of you be you, or would it be a different personor a person at all? How would we judge? Were still quite a way from digital beings, but Rothblatt she says shes putting part of her considerable wealth toward long-term research to make them real. That work is carried out by the Terasem Movement Foundation, whose early projects include Bina48 (a copy of Rothblatts wife, Bina) and a service called Lifenaut where people can upload pictures, videos, and their opinions to create a chat-bot version of themselves. MIT Technology Reviews senior editor for biomedicine, Antonio Regalado, spoke with Rothblatt about the rights of virtual humans.

Why did you write a book about the rights of virtual beings?

I did it to express my heartfelt social value that oppression of minorities and people of difference is a bad thing for society, and so that I might minimize the inevitable amount of discrimination that virtual people will end up facing. My plea is that someone who doesnt have a body could still be afforded human rights, if they have a mind.

I once heard you say that people who dont believe machines will become conscious are comparable to those who deny evolution. What did you mean?

Original post:

Q&A with Futurist Martine Rothblatt

Breakthroughs for a Better World: ABB New Product Launch in Atlanta to be Addressed by Trend Expert Jack Uldrich

Atlanta, GA (PRWEB) October 20, 2014

October 20th; Global Futurist Jack Uldrich will deliver his presentation, "Breakthrough: Ten Technological Trends Transforming Tomorrow" for ABB/Thomas & Betts New Product Launch in Atlanta, Georgia. The product launch of the Emax 2 kicked off in Hollywood, CA., on October 13th and will end in New York, NY., on October 29th.

When it comes to utilities ABB is on the cutting edge. "The newly launched SACE Emax 2 air circuit-breakers up to 6300A have been designed to increase efficiency in all installations: from industrial and naval applications to traditional and renewable power generation installations, buildings, data centers and shopping centers."

"The exclusive Power Controller function available on the new SACE Emax 2 circuit-breakers monitors the power managed by the circuit-breaker, keeping it below the limit set by the user. As a result of this more effective use, the peak of power consumed can be limited allowing savings on electricity bill. The Power Controller, patented by ABB, disconnects non-priority utilities, such as, electric car charging stations, during the times when consumption limits need to be respected, and connects them again as soon as it is appropriate. When required, it automatically activates auxiliary power supplies such as generator sets."

ABB's keynotes for the Emax2 product launches will be delivered by Jack Uldrich, a renowned global futurist and sought-after business speaker. Uldrich's aim is to set the tone for an out-of-the-box approach to each event. A best-selling author, Uldrich is often called upon to speak on future trends, emerging technologies, innovations, change management and leadership. Hailed as the Chief Unlearning Officer of The School of Unlearning," he has made it his personal goal is to help organizations succeed tomorrow by unlearning today. With ABB/Thomas & Betts Uldrich will address ten key breakthroughs that will be transforming the world of tomorrow.

"The Utilities industry is poised for extraordinary change in the years ahead and that what has served the industry well in the past wont be sufficient for remaining competitive in the future," says Uldrich. A few of the trends he will touch on will be High Power Circuit breakers, like the one ABB is introducing, solar windows and micro-grids, Big Data and New Electric Demand Paradigm, Sensor installation and the Internet of Things..

Uldrich will also speak to ABB's audiences in Chicago and New York City. Jack Uldrich has addressed dozens of energy-related associations, including delivering customized keynote presentations to the Western Energy Institute, San Diego Gas & Electric, the Southern California Gas Company, Southern Company, Northwestern Energy, the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association, Idaho Power, Northwestern Energy, Idaho Power, the American Public Power Association, the Northeast Public Power Association, the Eugene Board of Water and Electricity, the Missouri River Energy Service, the Sacramento Municipal Utility District, Wisconsin Public Power, Associated Electric Cooperative, the Southeast Electric Exchange and dozens more. He has also addressed hundreds of major, non-utility-related corporations on the topic of unlearning including Verizon Wireless, Catalyst, The Million Dollar Round Table, Cisco, IBM, WiPro, PepsiCo, United Healthcare, Boston Scientific and General Electric.

Parties interested in learning more about Jack Uldrich, his books, his daily blog or his speaking availability are encouraged to visit his website. Media wishing to know more about either the event or interviewing Jack as an energy futurist can contact Amy Tomczyk at (651) 343.0660.

Read the original:

Breakthroughs for a Better World: ABB New Product Launch in Atlanta to be Addressed by Trend Expert Jack Uldrich