Daily Archives: August 8, 2017

AI on the high seas: Royal Caribbean sets a course for ‘frictionless and immersive’ vacations – ZDNet

Posted: August 8, 2017 at 4:29 am

Royal Caribbean, the world's second largest cruise line, operates in 47 different countries with over 50 ships, each of which is a floating city transporting and entertaining between 2,500 to 7,000 guests at a time. Running a cruise line at this scale presents massive logistical challenges.

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I caught up with Royal Caribbean's Chief Information Officer Mike Giresi at the Digital Workforce Summit, held in New York City by software company IPsoft. The event's theme was using AI and cognitive learning to automate and improve customer service -- thus the idea of digital workforce.

This video is part of the CXOTalk series of conversations with the world's top innovators. You can watch it embedded above and see the complete transcript on the CXOTalk video page.

Royal Caribbean is undertaking a large digital transformation initiative to rethink the guest experience. According to CIO Giresi, Royal Caribbean's goal is providing guests with a personalized experience that is also easy to understand. In his words, to create a "frictionless and immersive vacation experience for our guests:"

Customer value comes first. Digital transformation starts with the question, "What do our customers want?" In the case of Royal Caribbean, there are two crucial points.

First, the company wants to help customers visualize and understand, at a visceral, emotional level, the positive life experience of being on a Royal Caribbean cruise. Because customers have different goals, communicating this message meaningfully is hard. For example, one cruise shopper may want a peaceful getaway on the sea while another desires hot nightlife: Two buyers, each seeking their own unique experience.

Second, Royal Caribbean believes its primary job is making the cruise experience fast, easy, and fun. Mike spoke about creating "frictionless and immersive vacations." To do this, the company uses technology to make life simple and engaging for guests.

The term frictionless also implies operational efficiency. Consider the practical challenges associated with boarding and un-boarding thousands of passengers quickly and without incident from a cruise liner. Or, the difficulty in offering computing and data services while in the middle of an ocean, thousands of miles from land. Customer experience demands that Royal Caribbean solve these issues every single day.

The foundation issue is rethinking the entire cruise experience by answering the question, "What do customers care about most?"

Technology enables customer experience. Having set priorities based on what matters to customers, the business can use technology to enable outcomes that customers desire.

Giresi explains:

Technology provides the entire guest experience. We're modernizing our technology to enable the guest to have much more control and direct selection of what they want to do with the product itself; moving from reservation being the center of our universe, to the guest being the center of our universe, and then building capability services integration points.

[We are] enabling technology to move with the guests versus the guests having to traverse different monolithic and antiquated systems and ultimately feel like nothing is purposely put together.

With customer experience as the reference point, determining priorities for making technology investment decisions becomes easier. Defining customer priorities as the reference also aligns IT activities with business strategy, which obviously is of huge value to the company.

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Here is an edited transcript of our conversation.

The more we can do with the product, enabling both guest and customer experiences, if you will, but doing so in a way that broadens the ship. Like, how do we expand the vacation experience beyond the ship, so that you're not constrained by the physical limitations of the ship? That's the design around the technology strategy.

We want people to feel like coming to a cruise is not an overwhelming or intimidating experience. We want people to feel confident that as soon as they get on the ship, their vacation begins. In fact, we'd love their vacation to begin before they arrive. Once you enter the port to walk onto the ship, we want it to be as seamless as humanly possible. We want you to enjoy it, feel relaxed, be excited; you have your itinerary, you have your agenda if you will; you know all the things you're going to do. If you learn of new things, how easy is it to change that, and can swiftly and agilely adapt to whatever is available to you, to maximize that experience.

So, using augmented reality, or virtual reality, to bring experiences onto the ship that you would not be able to see; where you would not be able to experience because the ship has physical limitations, so people can understand what's happening with the ship, doing interesting things with social. Enabling people to self-select opportunities to go on excursions that may not have been available to them in personalizing that information, so they can get to the things that are of most interest to them.

We believe we are in the business of making tremendous memories. The better we can provide that information to you, the more successful we're going to be in providing the product.

We're in early days. We've gone through a lot of the heavy lifting from a foundational capability perspective.

When you think about a ship, you have a bunch of people, obviously guests on the ship, but there's a lot of crew on the ship, and there are a lot of supply chain processes. What it takes to run one of these floating cities is no different than what it takes to run a city. You're just running it at sea.

Each time that ship comes into a port, each time it does something, there's an opportunity to change and/or impact the experience. So, how do we make sure we maximize our processes and people in support of this program so that people feel like it's something of value?

We are looking at two aspects of AI. One is our actual workforce. How we can offer better information, and help them ensure that they are making every guest interaction -- whether in our call center or our crew interacting with our guests -- that those interactions are high quality and driving a great experience.

We believe there's an opportunity to provide guests with more personalized information, with more options that are relevant to their interests, and the more authentic it feels to someone, people will be friendlier to it and feel less intimidated by the overall process.

AI enables us to quickly move those issues to the point of solution much faster and proactively resolve issues before they become issues.

When we turn a ship, it's much like a plane. It's just a lot more complicate. Our ability to disembark people off that ship, invite the new guests onto the ship, and do that in a successful and high-quality manner, is critical to the success of the journey.

Where we're looking at AI, it is around the consumer experience. When you come to a cruise site, the amount of data that's available to you is voluminous, I mean, there's so much information.

If we know a little bit about you, and we understand what you're interested in, we can deliver that information in a much more personalized manner, to call center, crew.

How do we get better information to people so they can service the guests and help guests maximize their interaction with the business?

Obviously, we think we can help convert and acquire people more effectively by understanding behavioral trends and historical activities.

And, for our crew, it's about giving them the right information when they most need it to provide the right level of service to our guests.

CXOTalk brings you the world's most innovative business leaders, authors, and analysts for in-depth discussion unavailable anywhere else. Thank you to IPsoft for being a CXOTalk underwriter.

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AI on the high seas: Royal Caribbean sets a course for 'frictionless and immersive' vacations - ZDNet

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Older Adults’ Participation Stands to Strengthen Cities’ Innovation Districts – Sustainable Brands

Posted: at 4:28 am

While millennials have largely been the focus of city leaders efforts to attract new talent and residential growth, a new Brookings study finds that innovation districts areas which are highly walkable and transit-oriented, rich with amenities and employment opportunities would also benefit from attracting and serving adults 50 years of age and up, who can fill gaps in the innovation ecosystem, including age diversity, professional expertise and investment capital.

The portion of the population over 50 is one of the most rapidly growing demographics in the United States, totaling nearly 110 million in 2015 just under 34 percent of the total population. By 2050, that number is expected to expand to 150 million, or 29 percent of Americans. Additionally, this segment of the population contributes approximately $5.6 trillion of the countrys $10.4 trillion in consumer spending a number that will continue to increase as the demographic expands. Individuals 55 and older also accounted for nearly 45 percent of all individual federal income tax paid in 2014, contributing $1.8 trillion in federal, state and local taxes. Yet despite this staggering figures, the 50 and older group is often overlooked by planners, developers, employers and other stakeholders.

Using Chattanooga, Philadelphia and Seattle as case studies, Beyond Millennials: Valuing Older Adults Participation in Innovation Districts explores the mutual benefits that can accrue from older adults living, working and supporting entrepreneurship in cities innovation districts in particular.

As walkable, amenity-rich communities, these neighborhoods offer attractive and accessible environments boasting close access to essential services for aging in ones community. At the same time, as a key demographic for wealth and consumer spending, those 50 and older stand to contribute considerably to local economies by patronizing local businesses, strengthening area tax bases and supporting local housing markets.

Businesses also stand to gain significant benefits from a more age diverse community. As people continue to delay retirement, the creation of more flexible jobs in innovation districts could provide opportunities for older adults to share their skills and expertise and collaborate with younger colleagues.

The presence of older adults also provides an opportunity for emerging enterprises, who can derive benefits from this demographics expertise, guidance and resources. Innovation districts could offer fulfilment and financial rewards to older adults interested in sharing their skills and experience, mutually benefitting both parties.

Despite these mutual benefits, city and district leaders will need to be intentional about cultivating intergenerational communities, with special attention being giving to issues of housing affordability, accessibility and age discrimination in the workplace. To overcome these challenges and maximize the benefits older adults bring to the table, the paper recommends innovation districts public, private and civic stakeholders:

City and innovation district leaders who look beyond strategies focused on millennials have an

opportunity to leverage the assets of those 50 and older to strengthen communities and bolster the character of these neighborhoods. Through intentional effort and thoughtful engagement, innovation districts can become places that benefit and benefit from the participation of older adults.

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Civil rights community, DOJ clash over race-based college admissions – Louisiana Weekly

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Cambodia: Quash Conviction of Rights Land Activist – Human Rights Watch

Posted: at 4:28 am

People gather outside the Appeals Court in Phnom Penh, Cambodia on August 8, 2017, holding signs of support for land rights activist, Tep Vanny.

On August 8, 2017, an Appeals Court in Phnom Penhrejected Tep Vanny's appeal of her conviction on February 23 for"intentional violence with aggravated circumstances." She was sentenced to 30 months in prison following a summary trialin which the prosecution failed to present any witnesses preventing any possible cross examination by the defense. The Cambodian government routinely misuses the courts, which lack independence, to target members of the political opposition and civil society activists, Human Rights Watch said.

Deputy Asia Director

"The case against Tep Vanny is a blatant misuse of prosecutorial power to punish her for her peaceful activism,"saidPhil Robertson, deputy Asia director at Human Rights Watch. "Thisprosecution is intended to silence Tep Vanny and intimidate other Cambodian activists."

The charges against Tep Vanny relate to her participation in a peaceful protest in front of Prime Minister Hun Sens house in 2013, during which she and other activists called for the release of a detained fellow community member. She was found guilty under article 218 of the Cambodian Criminal Code for assaulting Hun Sens security guards. No credible evidencewas presented during the trial to substantiate these charges. The court refused to heartestimonyfrom witnesses supporting Tep Vannys account that she and other protesters did not commit any violence during the protest.

During the trial, para-police kicked, shoved, and dragged activists who had gathered outside the court, resulting in injuries to twoactivistsand a pregnant woman.Video footageof the incident shows para-police chasing demonstrators into a neighboring mall, and guards cornering one protester and repeatedly punching and kicking him.

Tep Vanny is also being held on spurious charges of public insult and death threats brought against her and five other members of the Boeung Kak Lake community dating back to the Black Monday protests on behalf of detained activists in 2012.

Since August 15, 2016,she has been held at CC2 PreySarfacility prison on the outskirts of Phnom Penhandhasnowserved a total of 358 days in detention.

TepVanny is oneof Cambodias leading land rights activists. She has worked to combat unlawful evictions and corruption by mobilizing affected communities in theBoeungKakLake area of Phnom Penh, where more than4,000 families have had to vacatetheir homesfor a private development project. In 2013, she received aVital Voices Global Leadership Awardfor her work on land rights.

Tep Vanny has been an important voice on behalf of fellow activists, and has been active in urging an independent investigation into the July 10, 2016 shooting death ofKemLey, a popular social commentator and frequent government critic.

Cambodian authorities should dropallpolitically motivated charges againstTepVanny, quashher Februaryconviction, and immediately release her, Human Rights Watch said. The government should also cease persecution of human rights defenders and others exercising their fundamental rights to freedom of expression, association, and peaceful assembly.

Cambodias international donorsshould be outraged by the governments harassment of peaceful activists through the courts, Robertson said. Together,they should publicly call for an end to thepolitically motivated and unsubstantiated charges against Tep Vannyand otherdetained activists in Cambodia.

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Cloughjordan Ecovillage Another World is Possible for Belfast – Slugger O’Toole

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Lessons for Belfast Urban Regeneration at File an Phobail 2017

By Peadar Kirby & Peter Doran

President Michael D Higgins at Cloughjordan Ecovillage on Earth Day 2017

While Ireland was living through the most severe economic collapse of its history since independence, a group of pioneering people were sowing the seeds of a new society through founding the ecovillage of Cloughjordan in County Tipperary. Seeking to model sustainable living for the 21st century, the ecovillagers conceived their project during the boom years of Irelands Celtic Tiger in the late 1990s and early 2000s, but by the time the infrastructure was being laid in 2008 and the first houses built in 2009, the Irish banking and construction sectors were in freefall and the ecovillage became the countrys biggest building site.

Now with 55 houses built and a population of around 100 adults and 35 children, Cloughjordan has been recognised as one of Europes most successful anticipatory experiences showing the way to a low-carbon society. As an educational charity, it draws thousands of people a year to learn the lessons of this pioneering community. Central to those lessons are the combination of some modern technologies that help lower emissions, embedded in a resilient community that seeks to foster a rich sense of interdependency, not without its tensions. Nevertheless, the deep co-operative principles that underly the experiment also suggest new forms of life that question the logic of our dominant economic system and, perhaps, offer lessons for sustainable urban regeneration in our own Urban Village experiments across the North. At least one co-housing experiment is already planned for the Belfast area.

On Earth Day, in April, President Michael D Higgins, lauded the founders of the Cloughjordan Ecovillage who came together some 20 years ago in the Central Hotel in Dublin to share their dreams of what might be a more ethical and sustainable life, lived in a community which isnt easy and can have difficulties. He was dedicating a new amphitheatre named after one of Cloughjordans most famous sons,Thomas MacDonagh, the teacher, revolutionary and poet who was one of the signatories of the 1916 Proclamation. Higgins quoted MacDonagh observing that the educator hadunderstood that you must be able to have a kind of integrity of imagination such as will allow . . . all of the passions of the heart

Its the first anniversary of the Paris Agreement, and one of the things that strikes one, and particularly at my stage of life, is that very often you can look back at whole reams of words that really are quite distracting unless they are turned into realityBut here in the ecovillage so much is being turned into practical achievements, added the President.

The lessons of Cloughjordan will be shared with an audience at the File an Phobails Discussion and Debate programme in St Marys University College on the Falls Road on Thursday evening 10 August (17.00) when a panel made up of founding member of Cloughjordan, Davie Philip, the founder of the Global Ecovillage Network, Albert Bates, and former Cloughjordan resident Lynn Finnegan will share their experience with Peter Doran.

Another World is Possible and its up and running in Tipperary

Among ecovillages, Cloughjordan is unusual in that its founders decided to integrate it into an existing urban settlement. They chose the small village of Cloughjordan (around 500 people) in county Tipperary. A site of 67 acres (27 hectares) was available on the south side of its main street, on a train line, and some leading people in the local community recognised it as an opportunity for regenerating a village that was in decline. Before buying the land, members of the ecovillage project worked with children in the local schools and with the residents of Cloughjordan to win support for developing the project.

Cloughjordan ecovillage therefore models not just ecological sustainability but also rural regeneration, drawing visitors to the existing village and fostering a new social, economic, and cultural dynamism. Readers of The Irish Times voted Cloughjordan one of the 10 best places to live in Ireland. The ecovillage embodies the important message that low-carbon living does not mean reverting to the privations of the past, but can be the catalyst for drawing together a diverse group of people who, through their wide range of talents, make it a lively and interesting place to live.

Integrating with the Natural Environment

The greenfield site that was bought behind Cloughjordan village was developed in a way unique for an Irish urban settlement. The villages planners confined the residential area to about one-third of the site closest to the main street, while devoting a further area beyond that to support services and amenities including a district heating system, an eco-enterprise centre, allotments for growing food, and a community farm. Ecovillagers have planted native varieties of apple trees in this area; throughout the village, various varieties of herbs and fruit bushes create an edible landscape. An area of 12 acres (5 hectares) devoted to farming in a biodynamic way constitutes one of Irelands few Community Support Agriculture (CSA) projects.

On the final third of the site, devoted to woodland, villagers planted 17,000 trees in 2011mainly native species such as oak, ash, Scots pine, birch, rowan, cherry, hazel, and alder. This is regarded as an amenity area for visitors and a contribution to promoting biodiversity. A labrynth, built according to an ancient Celtic layout, provides a quiet space for reflection amid the woodland. According to the ecovillage website (www.thevillage.ie), the communitys land use plan is based on the principles of environmental and ecological diversity, productive landscape and permaculture. The design of common and private areas includes corridors for the movement of wildlife, and the composting of organic matter to regenerate the soil and avoiding toxic or other harmful substances is strongly recommended to all members. Since all are responsible for the upkeep of the common areas, the community organizes regular periods of communal work on the land (the Gaelic word meitheal is used for these, recalling the traditional practice of communal work among Irish farmers).

Central to the success of the project is the combination of low-energy technologies and robust community living. The Village Ecological Charter, drawn up by members, contains the guidelines for the development of the built and natural environments so as to reduce the impact of the project on the natural environment and so promoting sustainable development. This includes detailed and specific targets for energy supply and use, plans for land management, water and solid waste, construction (including materials, light and air, and ventilation), and community issues such as transport, social and communal facilities, and noise and light pollution.

Towards Low-Carbon Living

Combining both cutting-edge technologies and some traditional technologies gives a rich and unique mix to the ecovillage. One of its most innovative features is its district heating system, the only one in Ireland powered by renewable sources of energy. This supplies all the heating and hot water for every house in the ecovillage, using no fossil fuels as primary energy sources and emitting no greenhouse gas emissions. (Electricity supply to drive the pumps and for other purposes is taken from the public mains at present, but there are plans for on-site generation in due course.) It saves an estimated 113.5 tonnes annually of carbon that would be emitted by conventional heating systems for the number of houses served. Though the ecovillage has the largest bank of solar panels in Ireland, these havent yet been commissioned due to faults in their installation; the district heating system relies on waste wood from a sawmill about an hour away.

Members buy sites from the cooperative which owns the estate (of which all site owners must be members), building their own houses to their own designs, in keeping with the principles and specifications of the Ecological Charter.

Community Resilience

Beyond the technologies, both ancient and new, what is essential to the character of the ecovillage is that it is an intentional community. The dense web of interconnectedness that characterises relationships is strengthened and at times tested through a myriad of different kinds of activities, from the often tense discussions attempting to reach a community consensus on key issues to the enjoyment of community meals and parties where rich encounters take place. A special Process group exists to facilitate community interactions, and the monthly community meeting establishes a period in which any member can voice any issue that is troubling them, including issues of grievance and pain caused within the community. Successful community, then, depends not on avoiding or minimising pain and tensions but rather on facilitating their expression in an atmosphere of mutual respect. A diverse membership, which includes professional facilitators, counsellors, and psychotherapists, helps this process.

Finding a governance structure that reflects its values is a particular challenge for any intentional community, particularly one as complex and multifaceted as an ecovillage. By 2007, the existing organisational structure of Cloughjordan ecovillage based on multiple committees was under strain, unable to deal effectively with the many tasks and challenges facing the project. This led members to turn for support to consultants Angela Espinosa and Jon Walker, who promote the use of the Viable Systems Model (VSM) in cooperatives and large communities looking for alternatives to traditional hierarchies. This resulted in the restructuring of the ecovillage governance structures according to the principles of VSM, identifying the primary activities (PA) of the project and establishing groups to promote them. Two PAs exist in early 2016, one on education and the other on land use. A Development PA, looking after the development of the built environment, has recently been disbanded as it wasnt working well, and a replacement is being put in place. Each PA has a number of task groups within them responsible for different aspects of the primary activity.

The PAs are known as System One groups in VSM. Supporting these are what are called the meta-systemic management functions, Systems Two to Five, each of which fulfills essential functions in the organisation. These include a Process group to oversee the smooth functioning of the whole structure and to resolve problems as they arise, and a coordination team drawing together the activities of all the various groups and providing a monthly reporting mechanism to members. System Four involves keeping a close eye on what is happening in the wider society so as to strategically relate to developments. This led to the establishment of a Navigation group. Finally, System Five involves oversight and direction of the whole project, and includes the Board of Directors and the monthly members meeting supplemented by an Identity group which deals with issues of membership and purpose. VSM allows a horizontal rather than a hierarchical management of the project, which ensures that bottom-up initiatives flourish while at the same time the coherence of the project as a whole holds together.

International Recognition

Cloughjordan ecovillage faces many challenges. It is still only in its early phase of growth with more than 70 sites yet to sell, which will draw in new members and more than double its population. Yet already it is winning national and international recognition. Cloughjordan won the National Green Award for Irelands greenest community three years in a row from 2012 to 2014 and won a gold medal award at the 2013 International Awards for Liveable Communities (LivCom), also known as the Green Oscars, hosted by Xiamen in the Peoples Republic of China and supported by the UN Environmental Programme (UNEP). The Milesecure consortium of 15 research centres throughout Europe was funded by the European Commission to learn the lessons for European policy of how to transition to a low-carbon future. As part of its research, it examined 1,500 projects all around Europe to identify the most successful anticipatory experiences to help guide EU policy. Among the 23 finally selected was Cloughjordan ecovillage and it was the only project to be highlighted in the manifesto for human-based governance of secure and low-carbon energy transitions that the consortium wrote as one outcome of its three-year project (see http://www.milesecure2050.eu). In these ways, the project is helping establish itself as a beacon for the challenging future that confronts humanity.

The File panel

Davie Philip was a founding member of both FEASTA: the Foundation for the Economics of Sustainability andSustainable Projects Ireland Ltd the company behind the ecovillage project in Cloughjordan where he now lives. Albert Bates graduated from Syracuse University and New York Law School.As anenvironmental litigator he represented victims of atomic tests, nuclear power andweapons workers, military veterans exposed to human experiments, and NativeAmericans.In 1995 he retired from law to teach permaculture and found the GlobalEcovillage Network. Lynn Finnegan is the founder of Freckle, an independently published magazine that features what is often hidden but most essential about people and landscapes in Northern Ireland, written and photographed with passion and eloquence. She also works regularly at international negotiations on environment and development. The Panel will be chaired by Peter Doran of the QUB School of Law.

Peadar Kirby is Professor Emeritus of International Politics and Public Policy at the University of Limerick. He is the author of many books on models of development in Ireland and Latin America. His recent books include Adapting to Climate Change: Governance Challenges, co-edited with Deiric Broin (Glasnevin, 2015) and Transitioning to a Low-Carbon Society: Degrowth, austerity and wellbeing, co-edited with Ernest Garcia and Mercedes Martinez-Iglesias (Palgrave Macmillan, forthcoming in 2016). He is writing a book on pathways to a low-carbon society to be published by Palgrave Macmillan in 2017. He was one of the first residents of Cloughjordan ecovillage in 2009 and is currently chair of the Board of Directors of the ecovillage.

Peter Doran is lecturer in sustainable development and environmental law at the Queens University Belfast School of Law and a long-time advocate of equitable and sustainable development. He has just published A Political Economy of Attention, Mindfulness and Consumerism: Reclaiming the Mindful Commons (Routledge 2017) and has been actively involved with Zero Waste North West in taking forward a circular economy strategy for Derry and Strabane District Council.

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These 5 Countries Are Killing It in the Battle Against Climate Change – Singularity Hub

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When it comes to climate change, government leaders and politicians must begin to think beyond their term limits and lifetimes. They must ask themselves not how they can serve their voters, but rather how they can contribute to our species progress. They must think beyond the short term economic benefits of fossil fuels, and consider the long term costs to our planet.

Climate change is considered one of the greatest threats to our species. If current trends continue, we can expect an increase in frequency of extreme weather events like floods, droughts and heat waves. All of these pose a threat to crops, biodiversity, freshwater supplies and above all, human life.

The core of the problem is that we still rely on carbon-based fuels for 85 percent of all the energy we consume every year. But as Al Gore points out in his latest TED talk, there is a case for optimism.

Were going to win this. We are going to prevail, he says. We have seen a revolutionary breakthrough in the emergence of these exponential curves. We are seeing an exponential decrease in the costs of renewable energy, increase in energy storage capacity and increase in investments in renewables.

In an attempt to reverse the negative effects of climate change, we must reduce carbon emissions and increase reliance on renewable energy. Even more, we need to prepare for the already-emerging negative consequences of changing climates.

Winning the battle against climate change is not a venture that a few nations can accomplish alone. It will take global initiative and collaboration. Here are examples of a few countries leading the way.

Considered the most climate-friendly country in the world, Denmark is on the path to be completely independent of fossil fuels by 2050. With the most effective policies for reducing carbon emissions and using renewable energy, it is also a top choice for international students when it comes to environmental education. The nation has also developed an extensive strategy for coping with the effects of extreme weather.

Note that while Denmark is placed fourth by many rankings, including the The Climate Change Performance Index 2016, it is actually the highest-ranking in the world. Sadly, there was no actual first, second or third place in the rankings since no country was considered worthy of the positions.

China is far from being the most environmentally friendly country. Yet the nations recent investments in renewable energy are noteworthy. Home to the worlds biggest solar farm, China is the worlds biggest investor in domestic solar energy and is also expanding its investments in renewable energies overseas.

According to the International Energy Agency (IEA), the country installed more than 34 gigawatts of solar capacity in 2016, more than double the figure for the US and nearly half of the total added capacity worldwide that year.

Home to the international Paris Agreement and the global effort against climate change, France has for long been a global leader in climate change policy. The nation seeks to reduce its emissions by 75 percent in 2050. Thanks to the production of nuclear energy, representing 80 percent of nationwide energy production, France has already reduced its greenhouse gas emissions.

President Emmanuel Macron recently announced that the French government is inviting climate change researchers to live and work in France, with all their expenses paid. The government will be providing four-year grants to researchers, graduate students and professors who are working hard on tackling climate change.

The worlds emerging economies have some of the greatest energy demands. Indias current leadership recognizes this and has launched several federal-level renewable energy-related policies. Consequently, the nation is on the path to becoming the third-largest solar market in the world.

As solar power has become cheaper than coal in India, the nation is leading a significant energy and economic transformation. It will be the host of the International Solar Alliance, with the objective of providing some of the poorest countries around the world with solar energy infrastructure.

Sweden has passed a law that obliges the government to cut all greenhouse emissions by 2045. The climate minister has called for the rest of the world to step up and fulfill the Paris Agreement.

With more than half of its energy coming from renewable sources and a very successful recycling program, the country leads many initiatives on climate change. According to the OECD Environmental Performance Review 2014, it is one of the most innovative countries when it comes to environment-related technology.

Legendary astronomer Carl Sagan said it best when he pointed out that The Earth is a very small stage in a vast cosmic arena.

On February 14 1990, as the spacecraft Voyager 1 was leaving our planetary neighborhood, Sagan suggested NASA engineers turn it around for one last look at Earth from 6.4 billion kilometers away. The picture that was taken depicts Earth as a tiny point of lighta pale blue dot, as it was calledonly 0.12 pixels in size.

In Sagans own words, The Earth is the only world known so far to harbor life. There is nowhere else, at least in the near future, to which our species could migrate. Visit, yes. Settle, not yet. Like it or not, for the moment the Earth is where we make our stand.

When we see our planet from a cosmic perspective and consider the fragility of our planet in the vast cosmic arena, can we justify our actions? Given the potential of climate change to displace millions of people and cause chaos around the planet, we have a moral imperative to protect our only home, the pale blue dot.

Image Credit: Vanessa Bates Ramirez

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The next technological singularity: Will mankind be outsmarted by AI? By Fernando Sanchez – Irish Tech News

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Interesting Guest post byFernando Sanchez,see his blog hereLife Mirror.

The Facebook Chatbot Variant: AIs Secret Language

A few days ago, Facebook carried out a AI research project involving two chatbots. The experiments primary objective was to get the chatbots to communicate with each other in English.

The interaction began in a conventional manner. The bots established a link and began communicating.

Things soon took at turn for the unexpected, however. The robotic entities commenced to exchange what appeared to be nonsensical messages. But researchers notice a peculiar pattern hidden within the bots communication, and promptly terminated the experiment.

When decyphering the chat logs, the stark truth became evident. The apparent nonsense was in fact a carefully crafted secret language pattern that only the machines could understand.

In a panic, they try to pull the plug -T-800, Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991)

Sarah Connor sure got a raw deal. She faced multiple cybernetic perils to give birth to mankinds savior, her son John Connor.

Terminator lore tells us that the US militarys global AI project, Skynet, became self-aware at 2:14am EDT, August 29th, 1997. In a moment of crucial exposition, the T-800 (played by Arnold Schwarzenegger with the usual glacial aplomb) says that In a panic, they try to pull the plug (on Skynet). As we know, it was way too late by then. Skynet had become sentient, and quickly decided that mankind were a threat to its original directive of keeping the world safe. To uphold this directive and eliminate the threat, Skynet initiates an ICBM strike against Russia, fully aware that retaliatory attacks will wipe out most of its perceived enemies. To mop up the remnants, Skynet creates infiltration units (Terminators) to inflict robotic genocide on whats left of humanity.

The rest is cinematic history rising out of the nuclear fire.

AI: The Way Forward or man-made Trojan horse?

The Terminator series is purely fictional, of course. Or is it? Are we perhaps a little closer to the extermination of the human race by our own hand than wed like to believe? Recently, we reported about Russian-made robots being taught to shoot with dual guns, and hitting targets dead-on, for example. The Facebook chat bots incident happened a short few days ago. Are we on a path of inevitability?

The warnings have been plenty, and they dont come from tabloids or fantasists. British scientist Stephen Hawking for instance said during a 2014 BBC interview that The development of full artificial intelligence could spell the end of the human race. He added that Humans, who are limited by slow biological evolution, couldnt compete and would be superseded.

More recently, rocket entrepeneur Elon Musk voiced similar fears, saying that I have exposure to the most cutting edge AI, and I think people should be really concerned by it. Mr. Musk went as far as saying that AI poses a fundamental existential risk for human life on Earth.

So are we becoming the architects of our own demise then? Are we to be enslaved by uncontrolled scientific hubris, slowly crafting the mother of all Trojan Horses, one line of code at a time?

Enter the AI Singularity

It is inherent to every piece of technology to advance, to evolve. Each time the wheel of technological evolution completes a full turn, change happens, and whatever came before, becomes obsolete.

Humans evolve too, of course, but at a much slower pace than technology does. Our own evolution is bound by biological limitations. A machine can learn and evolve in a matter of hours.

Mankind has gone through a lot of pretty dramatic technological advances. Some of these shifts literally changed the way people live. The humble light bulb, for instance, meant that we were able to banish darkness at the flick of a switch. Or when the Wright brothers pioneered powered flight through a fixed-wing contraption. Suddenly, the barrier of distance was overcome. The harnessing of nuclear power, the introduction of anesthesia. So many ways the world has changed, sometimes for the better, others for the worse. But the point is the technological shift, known by many as a singularity.

The next such event is upon us, according to some. Its been postulated that by the year of our Lord of 2045, mankind will have engendered a super-intelligent AI that will be able to think in ways no human mind ever could, devising super-advanced tools and ideas of incredible sophistication.

But theres a catch.

A prime directive of this state-of-the-art AI will likely be to improve itself, to learn, perform, and exist better. And its at this point that things get dicey for us Earth folks. The AI may decide that the lowly human race poses an unacceptable risk to its own existence, and resort to pre-emptive measures, a la Skynet.

The quandary exists, it is as real as it can be. Take the Facebook chatbots. What if the human controllers had left the bots to their own devices? What if curiosity had got the better of the scientists, and the experiment had not been terminated?

Edited and prepared by Oscar Michel, Masters in Journalism, DCU

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The next technological singularity: Will mankind be outsmarted by AI? By Fernando Sanchez - Irish Tech News

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BWW Interview: Alex Flanigan’s SINGULARITY in Samuel French Short Play Festival – Broadway World

Posted: at 4:26 am

The "Samuel French Off Off Broadway Short Play Festival" has been around for 42 years, and during that time over 500 theatre companies and schools have participated. Applicants have included companies from across the country as well as abroad from Canada, Singapore, and the United Kingdom. "Singularity" by playwright Alex Flanigan will be performing on the festival's first day, August 8th at 6:30 pm.

Flanigan's "Singularity" is about "an android named Charlie, designed to attain self-awareness, engages in a battle of wits with the programmer--and the system--that designed them to do so. But when Charlie displays an unexpected degree of success, it becomes clear that they have very different ideas of their own roles in the rapidly shifting balance of power."

This powerful, moving, and poignant piece makes it to New York after being produced previously at Shenandoah Conservatory, having been featured in "The Playwright's Performance" student group 2015/2016 season in May of 2016.

Christopher Castanho: Tell us a little bit about yourself, where you're from and where you went to school.

Alex Flanigan: I'm originally from Morgantown, WV; that's where I was born and raised, in the same house for about 18 years. Morgantown is kind of a strange town if you've never been: it's at once both uncannily diverse and unexpectedly progressive while also being steeped in these ideas of generational tradition and quiet small-town culture. I won't say it's a perfect place, but it's a colorful one and it had a profound influence on me. I'm really thankful I was shaped by it in my most formative years before going off to college. I went to Shenandoah Conservatory in Winchester, VA, originally to study jazz saxophone performance but eventually found myself taking classes in just about anything I could get my hands on. I graduated with an Interdisciplinary Degree, which means a lot of people had enough faith in me to trust me with designing my own education, and I'm very thankful for that!

CC: From having taken class with you, you seem to be talented at whatever you decide to tackle! Have you always been a writer? Who were some of your theatrical inspirations?

AF: I've always been a writer, and I've always done theatre, but I wasn't always a theatrical writer--in fact, not until SINGULARITY. I devoured every book I could get my hands on as a child and wrote my own books pretty much consistently, though I notoriously rarely finished any of them. Mostly, I found I was a good essayist, and that's where my focus and passion were for a long time. But I've always enjoyed writing, even just writing handcrafted snail mail to friends. My theatrical inspirations are pretty diverse, but I am an absolute devotee of Stephen Sondheim's lyricism and Samuel Beckett's evocative but minimalistic imagery. One of my main writing influences has actually been old sci fi programming--Star Trek, Twilight Zone, those speculative shows that lean really heavily on the implicit metaphors of discovery. I like to think I take inspiration from everything I see, though, and that includes my colleagues and fellow students while I was at the conservatory. I remember the first student play I ever saw was a brilliant sort of dystopian piece by my friend Seth Walker. It blew me away and made me realize there was no reason to wait to start writing stage plays. In a way, I felt like seeing my peers relentlessly creating these bold works gave me permission to try doing it myself. I'm glad it did!

Emma Norville as Charlie

CC: Why did you decide to submit for the Samuel French Off-Off Broadway Short Play Festival?

AF: Honestly, deciding to submit for this festival wasn't my idea. When SINGULARITY had its student premiere at 11PM on a Thursday night, I was really fortunate that a lot of people turned out for it and stuck around after the show to give me some really kind, generous, and thoughtful feedback. One of those people, Meg Stefanowicz, told me--and she's a very intense person, Meg, you remember what she says when she does this--to submit it to Samuel French because, and I quote, "this is exactly the kind of thing they're looking for." I had no idea what she was talking about but I absolutely pretended I did and I absolutely Googled it as soon as I went home! It went on my calendar and the week submissions opened up, I sent it in. There are a lot of people responsible for getting me to this point, but I guess if you had to pinpoint one in particular, it was her!

CC: What do you love most about your piece "Singularity"?

AF: What I love more than anything about SINGULARITY is the flexibility of the piece and the ways in which it allows so much to be said and explored and altered just by nature of the people performing and directing it. It's a very wordy script, very technical in its dialogue, but it's also very minimal--no real stage directions, no strict casting requirements--it exists in this space outside of time or structure or gender, so you can explore all of those things in a very beautiful and unrestricted way inside the piece and it changes its commentary in that regard every time i see it. I think it's a really beautiful testament to the director, Joanna Whicker, and her thoughtful and empathic work on this piece and as an artist in general, that she took SINGULARITY and has twice now surprised me with it. Every time I sit down with her, or with any of the actors that have tackled this piece--Emma Norville or Tyler Clarke or the original "Sir," Knightley Hill, who is another very talented artist--I learn new things about it and I'm very grateful that I am gifted with the opportunity to hear these brilliant artists and activists bring my words to life in a way that captures shades and perspectives of experiences I myself couldn't have brought to the page.

CC: You mentioned collaboration and the joy of seeing your characters come to life, but what's your favorite thing about Theatre as an art form?

AF: I'm really passionate about artists using their platforms to have open and honest conversations with their audiences and their world and to shine a light on the things we all go through that we're all a little scared to talk about, and hopefully to do it in a way that's direct and unflinching while still being empathetic and caring. It's important to me that we realize we all have different stories to tell, but that sometimes our best contribution is just listening.

CC: What do Alex Flanigan fans have to look forward to next?

AF: Oh my gosh, do those exist? I want to meet every single one of them. All 6 or 7 of them. Come to New York, I'll buy them coffee, they can look forward to that! No, really, that's very kind phrasing for you to use. As far as material, I run a podcast with my best friend Addison Peacock that has been very well-received. It's called "The Cryptid Keeper," you can find us on iTunes or Soundcloud or anywhere else really, and we talk about various mysterious creatures from folklore with an educational but also very comedic tongue-in-cheek sense of humor. We both are very passionate about giving people a way to sort of turn the strange and frightening aspects of the world into something bright and laughable, and it's a lot of fun while also being the cornerstone of a really cool community. I've met a lot of really neat people doing it, who in turn inspire my art and let me connect to theirs in a way I couldn't have done before. In terms of playwriting, I actually have another premiere slated for October. Liminality Theatre Company in Winchester, VA will be doing the first run of my one-act play called "Survivor's Guilt, or, The Jumping-Off Point." I don't want to say too much about it because it's really easy to spoil 45 minutes with just a couple of sentences, but it's really just an exploration of, in my opinion, the strength and resilience of my generation and a tribute to the healing power of human connection. I joke that it's my Sad Millennial Bridge Play, but really I consider it a love letter to the brave and inspiring people I've known who didn't consider themselves particularly brave or inspiring. It deals with authenticity and honesty and the mundane struggles of living in a way that I hope is cathartic and optimistic for the audience and the actors involved.

Director Joanna Whicker & Alex Flanigan

Get your tickets to see "Singularity" by Alex Flanigan on August 8th at 6:30 pm at East 13th Street Theater in New York City.

"Singularity" is presented as part of the Samuel French Off-Off Broadway Festival. Written by Alex Flanigan, Directed by Joanna Whicker, Produced by Sami Pyne, Stage Managed by Kaitlyn De Litta, featuring Tyler Clarke and Emma Norville.

Be sure to follow Alex Flanigan on Twitter and her Website.

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Posthuman advertising: does AI spell the end of media and marketing as we know it? – Marketing magazine Australia (registration)

Posted: at 4:26 am

3 August 2017 2 min read

Never mind the automation of mundane tasks; Scott Button says AI is about to disrupt creative roles, advertising and culture.

Artificial intelligence is becoming so embedded in the everyday that we risk not noticing it at all. Self-driving cars, humanoid robots and Go grandmasters may grab the popular imagination, but its the way that AI is seeping into everything from voice recognition to fast food delivery that better illustrates its quiet ubiquity.

Alexa and Siri are getting smarter, day by day, along with most other connected devices.

In the domain of digital advertising, machine learning has already been with us for several years. Well-known techniques from regression analysis to deep learning are being used to combat ad fraud, optimise ad viewability, improve audience composition, and enhance goal conversion. The vast amounts of data generated by ad tech platforms and the fast feedback loops enabled by real time media buying have made digital advertising an especially fertile proving ground for AI.

Whats new and different today is the widespread availability of cloud-based AI platforms, turning machine learning into a utility; one thats cheap, fast, and accessible to anyone that wants to use it.

A great example is IBMs Personality Insights services, which uses the companys Watson platform to analyse data from social feeds in order to predict an individuals personality and key traits.

Its uncontentious that differing psychological traits influence receptivity to advertising. The extravert is more likely to share an ad. The conscientious individual is more likely to respond to an offer. Now machine learning techniques like IBMs service mean that we can analyse tens of thousands or hundreds of thousands of people, very quicklyand very cheaply.

By combining this data with information on peoples purchasing habits all collected through an opt-in survey Unruly quickly found that we could create interesting aggregate personality profiles for different brands and different customer segments.

In essence, we could utilise Watson to help advertisers to learn how and why people think, act and feel a certain way.

In the first instance, weve integrated these machine learning capabilities into our targeting tool, to allow advertisers to improve the accuracy of their online marketing campaigns by engaging the people most likely to increase a brands sales light buyers.

This new iteration of the tool is built on large scale consumer panel studies with more than 10,000 respondents, combined with insights from the social media accounts of participating consumers. We use a mix of linguistic analysis and machine learning to determine the socio-demographic and psychological profile of each panellist, clustering and aggregating the profiles based on buying patterns and purchasing frequency.

Were really excited to be at the forefront of this new world, but this is just the start.

The worlds first AI media agency already exists. Blackwood Seven was set up three years ago. Its slightly intimidating but seems fairly obvious that machines will do a better job of planning and optimising media than lightly trained execs shuffling Excel sheets around.

But what about creative?

While digital has always promised the possibility of customising (and then multivariate testing) thousands of creatives for different audience clusters, this strategy has tended to fall over in practice or be implemented simplistically because its expensive and slow. If AI can make it fast and cheap, itmight just revolutionise mass marketing.

Thinking further into the future, its not crazy to speculate about the creation of the worlds first AI ad agency, perhaps implemented as a generative adversarial network. One neural network churns out thousands of ideas and storyboards with the goal of them being indistinguishable in terms of originality, relatability and emotional impact from award-winning campaigns of the past and present. A second neural network then rates the ideas of the first and attempts to figure out which ones are really award-winning human-authored efforts and which machine-generated, thereby generating further feedback for the first machine.

Whats vertiginous here is not so much the breathless pace of technological change but rather the trajectory were headed on. Inn the not-so-distant future, machines will bebetter than us not just at the mundane tasks that threaten hundreds of millions of jobs in the developed and developing world, but also at the sorts of things that we think of as being elevated and distinctively human, including the creation of advertising and culture.

The claims here ought not to be especially surprising or contentious, though perhaps the evidence is, through being so close to our noses, becoming increasingly invisible to us. In many areas of life weve already handed responsibility to intelligent machines. News and our life stories to social networks. Navigation to mapping apps. Collision prevention to autonomous driving systems. Medical diagnosis to neural networks. Life partners and one night stands to dating platforms. EdgeRank. PageRank. We trust the algorithm to know us better than we know ourselves.

This is the end of the human as we know it. Humanitydisplaces God, Machine displaces Humanity, and, more prosaically, Algorithm displaces Ad.

Scott Burton is founder and CSO at Unruly.

Learn how AI will change how brands serve customers and how marketers do their job, withMarketings AI Marketing Managers Definitive Briefing, featuring industry participation from Google, CSIRO, IBM, Facebook, UNSW and more.

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Two Ascension schools back on campus one year after flood – WBRZ

Posted: at 4:23 am

ST. AMANT - Teachers and students in Ascension Parish got a head start on the school year Monday night.

Even though school doesn't start for a few more days, they got the chance to check out the restored buildings at St. Amant Primary and Middle schools.

The school celebrated the much-anticipated reunion almost a year after the flood forced them out of their classrooms.

While touring the new school, Kevin Mitchell, a third grade parent, was impressed with the progress made over the past year.

"It's good to have it back, it's good to have her back at her home campus for school back with all her friends and everybody else," Mitchell said.

The Ascension Parish School Board officially presented the newly renovated primary and middle school at a ribbon cutting Monday night. Parents and students reflected on the past school year and watched viewed a documentary about the flood.

The principals of both schools shared the obstacles they've had to overcome during the past 12 months.

"Last August our school community and communities abroad stopped at nothing to make sure our students could continue their learning in spite of our circumstances," St. Amant Primary school Principal Paisley Morgan said.

"It was difficult, it was a very difficult year for us, but we're moving forward," St. Amant Middle school Principal Christy Bourgeois said.

St. Amant Middle school cheerleaders like Abigail Clifton say they're excited to be back on their campus for things like practice.

"It's better to have our cafeteria and our gym back because we were struggling with practice and stuff like that," Clifton said.

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Two Ascension schools back on campus one year after flood - WBRZ

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