Page 262«..1020..261262263264

Category Archives: Futurist

Healthcare Futurist and Keynote Speaker Jack Uldrich Joins Jim Collins & Commander Mark Kelly at the American Health …

Posted: October 10, 2012 at 3:10 am

Acclaimed healthcare futurist, best-selling author and popular business speaker, Jack Uldrich has been selected to deliver the closing keynote address at the American Health Care Association and the National Center for Assisted Living's (AHCA/NCAL) annual convention. Uldrich will focus on future trends in healthcare and assisted living as well as discuss the need for "unlearning."

Washington, DC (PRWEB) October 09, 2012

The presentation, based on Uldrichs two new books: "Foresight 20/20: A Futurist Explores the Trends Transforming Tomorrow" and "Higher Unlearning: 39 Post Requisite Lessons for Achieving a Successful Future" as well as his popular article, "Top Ten Trends in Healthcare," will begin by discussing how continued advances in information technologies, biotechnology, nanotechnology, robotics, radio frequency identification (RFID) technology, genomics, regenerative medicine and social networking will radically transform healthcare in the decade ahead. (A video of Mr. Uldrich discussing future trends can be viewed here.)

Uldrich will then focus on why these trends will demand unlearning and discuss why participants must embrace the concept of unlearning in order to achieve future success. Uldrich, who has been hailed as Americas Chief Unlearning Officer, will conclude his remarks by reviewing specific habits, customs, beliefs and ideas that healthcare and assisted living professionals canand mustunlearn. Throughout his talk, he will use vivid analogies and memorable stories, drawn from a wide spectrum of industries, to ensure his message of unlearning sticks with his audiences. (A sample video of Mr. Uldrich discussing unlearning can be viewed here.)

In the past year, Uldrich has addressed dozens of healthcare associations and hospitals, including the Alcetel-Lucent/Verizon Forum on Wireless Healthcare, United Healthcare, Allina Hospitals, The Healthcare Trustees of New York, IASIS Healthcare, The Iowa Healthcare Collaborative, Care Providers of Minnesota, St. Jude Medical, Fairview Hospitals, University Hospitals & Health System of Ohio, and healthcare associations in Colorado, Kansas, Maine, Maryland, Minnesota, Mississippi, Tennessee, Utah and Wisconsin. He has also addressed a number of major, non-health-care-related corporations on the topic of unlearning including PepsiCo, Cisco, IBM, WiPro, Southern Company 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 the event or interviewing Jack Uldrich can contact him directly at 612-267-1212 or jack(at)schoolofunlearning(dot)com.

Uldrich is a renowned global healthcare futurist, best-selling author; editor of the monthly newsletter, The Exponential Executive, and host of the award-winning websites, http://www.jumpthecurve.net and http://www.schoolofunlearning.com. He is currently represented by a number of professional speakers bureaus, including Leading Authorities, Executive Speakers Bureau and Convention Connection.

Jack Uldrich Jump the Curve 612-267-1212 Email Information

Read this article:
Healthcare Futurist and Keynote Speaker Jack Uldrich Joins Jim Collins & Commander Mark Kelly at the American Health ...

Posted in Futurist | Comments Off on Healthcare Futurist and Keynote Speaker Jack Uldrich Joins Jim Collins & Commander Mark Kelly at the American Health …

A Quick Primer On Futurist-Level Foresight

Posted: October 8, 2012 at 1:20 pm

Anyone raising a child with the benefits of the digital world doesn't have to look past those tiny fingertips tapping their own apps to realize how quickly we're transitioning.

Theoretical physicist and futurist Dr. Michio Kaku argues that humankind is at a turning point in history. He claims that in this century, we are going to make a shift from the "Age of Discovery" to the "Age of Mastery," a period in which we will move from being passive observers of life and nature to its active choreographers. According to Kaku, robots with human-level intelligence may finally become a reality, and in the ultimate stage of mastery, we'll even be able to merge our minds with machine intelligence. It's how we harness this mastery that will matter.

The science fiction is becoming fact. During a recent visit to Google headquarters, California Gov. Jerry Brown signed legislation to allow autonomous vehicles to operate on the state's roads. Brown touted the signing of the bill as turning today's science fiction into tomorrow's reality. California is the third U.S. state to legalize self-driving cars, following Nevada and Florida, where similar laws earlier were passed this year.

This is just the beginning. We need to be ready for the next set of intelligent innovation, in any field. Hospitals are embracing robotic surgery, and patients are choosing it more and more for many procedures. Robotic-assisted laparoscopic radical prostatectomy, is minimally-invasive, laparoscopic surgery, and has become the standard of care for prostate cancer patients. It offers lower morbidity, less pain, less blood loss and increased precision.

Education too needs to evolve to prepare people for an integrated world, where science converges with every area of practice and development. People training in or committed to a single discipline in a traditional manner won't succeed in tomorrow's marketplace. For more than 30 years, the Fisher Program in Management and Technology has combined two of Penn's greatest assets into one educational experience: Penn Engineering and The Wharton School. Schools that fail to offer true cross-disciplinary study are going to fall behind to create future leaders of a converged world. And leaders who fail to create cross-functional, cross-industry workforce will lose to their competition.

It is the leader's responsibility to prepare his or her organization for what lies ahead--and that will mean changes in what we are doing now to break down the silos and create multi-disciplinary teams--in order to prepare for the unknown.

The underlying, critical element of achieving and maintaining convergence in the modern organization is nothing less than individual leadership. It takes leaders with perseverance and courage to build and implement the cross-functional management culture with the tenets of converged disciplines.

It is a continual evolution and revolution of concepts and opportunities that reflect contemporary and future business operations and objectives.

An essential part of this transition requires both left-brained (analytical) and right-brained (creative) talent and culture. Leaders of the future will approach this collaboration challenge by defining cross-functional teams as personas'. These are roles that one assumes or displays in society or the workplace. Their skills and behaviors influence their interactions with other people. Some personas are analytical, some are creative, and others are a combination. A few personas are as follows:

However, to sustain product and business innovation, leaders must build a flexible culture that can attract and empower a wide variety of talent. It is all too easy for organizations to fall into the analysis trap and focus on left-brain skills like process, measurement, and execution.

Link:
A Quick Primer On Futurist-Level Foresight

Posted in Futurist | Comments Off on A Quick Primer On Futurist-Level Foresight

Miguel parties with panache in 'The Thrill' video

Posted: October 5, 2012 at 2:23 am

The singer Miguel. (Kai Reagan)

October 4, 2012, 1:41 p.m.

We've had our eye on the young, L.A.-based R&B futurist Miguel for a while now. But it appears that he's finally having his moment in the critical spotlight, with a best new music badge from Pitchfork for his ravishing new album, "Kaleidoscope Dreams."

In the video for his latest single, "The Thrill," Miguel hits all the high points of the rising-star life: pool parties, packed clubs and general bonhomie. (Watch the video below.)

But it's all filmed in a sleek, detached black and white that makes the revelry seem a little distant. In fact, that's a pretty good visual metaphor for Miguel's newer music from "Dreams" and his three-part series of EPs, "Art Dealer Chic." "The Thrill" pairs bone-dry electric guitars reminiscent of Fleetwood Mac with a jittery kick drum sample and a whole lot of reverb -- a spacious showcase for Miguel's pristine pipes.

His sound has all the minimal spookiness of "PBR&B" peers such as the Weeknd and AlunaGeorge, but he's toured with Usher and has major-label muscle angling to get him on big stages. Here's hoping he gets there and stays there.

ALSO:

Live review: Usher at Staples Center

Newcomer Miguel ready for the spotlight

Monkees tour boycott -- or is Michael Nesmith just monkeying around?

View post:
Miguel parties with panache in 'The Thrill' video

Posted in Futurist | Comments Off on Miguel parties with panache in 'The Thrill' video

DESIGN East: Futurist tells engineers to embrace change

Posted: September 30, 2012 at 6:11 pm

[Get a 10% discount on ARM TechCon 2012 conference passes by using promo code EDIT. Click here to learn about the show and register.]

He threw out four of them, aiming at engineers who attended his keynote at DESIGN East here. The grenades took the form of questions, the equivalent of Zen master koans for the embedded community. Here are a few to ponder:

For instance, all but 11 percent of people aged 15-24 will be in developing markets in Asia and Africa in the next decade. This will have impact on where people buy your products, he told several hundred engineers here.

Google is harnessing the smartphone generation, hiring known video game experts. They figured out someone who is a guild leader in World of Warcraft has similar characteristics of a good software group leader managing a global team, Walsh said.

Chinas white goods maker Haier is an example of the new, smart OEM, said Walsh. Responding to support calls from remote villages who used its washing machines to clean potatoes, it created new modes for its productslike butter churning.

Walsh also held up shanzai, Chinas cottage industry of no-name cellphone cloners for their growing innovation and competence. Some now make $100 smartphones that include TV tuners and can take two SIM cards.

Their aggressive approach will be a juggernaut that any traditional R&D company will find it difficult to keep up with, he said.

Walsh challenged the conventional notion products are made in developing countries and sold in developed ones. For example, he noted Turkey is the fifth largest market for Facebook and tends to be a consumer of the most expensive smartphones.

At the same time, 3-D printing holds the potential to disrupt supply chains, calling it an industrial re-revolution or additive manufacturing. 3-D printing will change the way we think about manufacturing--the means of production are now in the hands of everyday people, he said.

Related stories:

More:
DESIGN East: Futurist tells engineers to embrace change

Posted in Futurist | Comments Off on DESIGN East: Futurist tells engineers to embrace change

Ford futurist:

Posted: at 6:11 pm

Henry Ford once said: If I asked consumers what they wanted, they would have said faster horses.

Sheryl Connelly drew a connection to Ford and how the car company that bears his name approaches doing business in the future, using the quote to reflect on the creativity and imagination to create automobiles, yet defying what the public thinks it wants.

It's incumbent to try and imagine a future that is unimaginable, Connelly said.

Connelly reflected on the worldwide trends she sees as a futurist for Ford Motor Co. at a luncheon Monday with the Livonia Public Schools Foundation at St. Mary's Cultural and Banquet Center.

The event was a benefit for the LPS Foundation, a nonprofit organization that provides financial support to Livonia Public Schools for innovative programs and services.

Connelly said officials at businesses can study market sales time and time again, yet the difficulty in predicting world events presents unimaginable challenges to firms. For innovations, people need to look for wild cards, expect the unexpected, and learn to build products that are practical and follow trends. Prepare for all scenarios, she said. You have to write a story with great optimism, but if you do that, you also have to write one of great collapse, Connelly said.

Global trends are crucial, including environmental, economic and political ones, Connelly said. Population and demographic shifts are trends that need to be examined and studied, Connelly said.

Connelly showed a map reflecting population growth. The borders of countries and continents experiencing larger growth were expanded, while others with small growth shrunk.

U.S., Canada populations shrinking

The map showed a smaller United States and an even smaller Canada, while Asia and the Middle East appeared much larger. The growth appears in nations that are least able to handle it, Connelly said.

See the rest here:
Ford futurist:

Posted in Futurist | Comments Off on Ford futurist:

Futurist Stewart Brand Wants to Revive Extinct Species

Posted: at 6:11 pm

This summer it was announced that the WELL, a revolutionary online community founded nearly 30 years ago, had been put up for sale by its current owner, web magazine Salon. If no buyer emerges, this historic online watering hole will likely have to close up shop. It would mark the end of an erabut no matter what happens, the WELLs legacy will continue to live on all around us, in the rollicking conversations we enjoy every day on social networks and comment threads.

In that regard, the WELL is just one of many world-bending triumphs in the long, strange career of its cofounder, Stewart Brand. A Merry Prankster in the early 1960s, Brand went on to found the Whole Earth Catalog, a bible for both the back-to-the-land movement and the first computer hackers. Indeed, the community that sprang up around the catalog was what formed the seed of the WELL (an acronym of Whole Earth Lectronic Link), an early BBS that became an Internet service provider at the dawn of the web.

In addition to his many entrepreneurial ventures, Brand has also been a vocal visionary on technology and its future, famously coining the phrase Information wants to be free (though it also wants to be expensive, he immediately added in a far less-quoted caveat). Hes written extensively and perceptively about alternative energy, the environment, and bioengineering. Today Brand heads the Long Now Foundation, a group devoted to thinking about what humanity and Earth will look like in 10,000 years.

As part of our 20th-anniversary Icons series, we sent Kevin Kellya longtime writer and editor for Wired as well as an early member of the WELL and a former contributor to the Whole Earth Catalogto chat with Brand about the legacy of his online community and the challenges of trying to peer into the future.

Kevin Kelly: There was an event in San Francisco in 1968 that has come to be called the mother of all demoswhen Stanfords Doug Engelbart showed off a computer with a mouse and graphical interface. You were there. What significance did that event have for you?

Stewart Brand: It made me perpetually impatient. I saw a bunch of things demonstrated that clearly worked, and I wanted some right now, please! That demo gave a really accurate look at what was coming and made it seem so easy. But decades would go by, and it just kept not coming.

Kelly: Does that give you pause that maybe all kinds of things that look to be around the corner todaydrones, magic glasses, self-driving carsare just premature promises?

Brand: The lesson was that this is exponential technology. I dont mean that just in terms of power or capacitydriven by Moores lawbut also in that it starts out slow as consumers find ways to put it to use.

Kelly: Another harbinger of the digital age is on the ropes right now. In June, Salon announced it was selling the WELL, which you cofounded. How would you describe the WELL?

See more here:
Futurist Stewart Brand Wants to Revive Extinct Species

Posted in Futurist | Comments Off on Futurist Stewart Brand Wants to Revive Extinct Species

Ford futurist: ‘Imagine a future that is unimaginable'

Posted: at 6:11 pm

Henry Ford once said: If I asked consumers what they wanted, they would have said faster horses.

Sheryl Connelly drew a connection to Ford and how the car company that bears his name approaches doing business in the future, using the quote to reflect on the creativity and imagination to create automobiles, yet defying what the public thinks it wants.

It's incumbent to try and imagine a future that is unimaginable, Connelly said.

Connelly reflected on the worldwide trends she sees as a futurist for Ford Motor Co. at a luncheon Monday with the Livonia Public Schools Foundation at St. Mary's Cultural and Banquet Center.

The event was a benefit for the LPS Foundation, a nonprofit organization that provides financial support to Livonia Public Schools for innovative programs and services.

Connelly said officials at businesses can study market sales time and time again, yet the difficulty in predicting world events presents unimaginable challenges to firms. For innovations, people need to look for wild cards, expect the unexpected, and learn to build products that are practical and follow trends. Prepare for all scenarios, she said. You have to write a story with great optimism, but if you do that, you also have to write one of great collapse, Connelly said.

Global trends are crucial, including environmental, economic and political ones, Connelly said. Population and demographic shifts are trends that need to be examined and studied, Connelly said.

Connelly showed a map reflecting population growth. The borders of countries and continents experiencing larger growth were expanded, while others with small growth shrunk.

U.S., Canada populations shrinking

The map showed a smaller United States and an even smaller Canada, while Asia and the Middle East appeared much larger. The growth appears in nations that are least able to handle it, Connelly said.

Link:
Ford futurist: ‘Imagine a future that is unimaginable'

Posted in Futurist | Comments Off on Ford futurist: ‘Imagine a future that is unimaginable'

Impatient Futurist: Rise of the (Friendly) Drones | DISCOVER Magazine

Posted: at 6:11 pm

Illustration by David Plunkert

The Predator unmanned aerial vehicle, or UAV, has proven a formidable weapon for the U.S. military, quietly lurking in the sky and then zipping in to loose a missile on enemy targets. Its effectiveness raises an important question: When will I have a robotic plane of my own buzzing about that I might summon down to teach a lesson to some of the many deeply annoying people who cross my path? A mild Taser zap or even just a spitball would be fine.

Im very likely out of luck on this score, due to the bizarre fact that neither Taser zaps nor spitballs share the constitutional protection afforded bullets. So Ill just have to find other ways to make use of the tiny airborne drone that will almost certainly be at my beck and call in the not-too-distant future.

In fact, Im tempted to head over to a Brookstone right now and pick up a Parrot AR.Drone Quadricoptera $300, four-rotored, self-stabilizing microaircraft with two video cameras that I can send 150 feet up and down my street to hover outside homes and put my neighbors on notice that their transgressions will no longer go unrecorded. That could keep me occupied until I can afford the more sophisticated $10,000 swinglet cam by senseFly, which can fly 10 miles, or the $20,000 Draganflyer X4-P, which can carry a 1.5-pound payloadusually a high-end camerafor about 15 minutes.

advertisement | article continues below

With a winged camera to beam images to me, Id also be able to effortlessly inspect my gutters, track my occasionally escaped dog, gauge the lines at the drive-through window, or scope out a dark parking lot before making my way to my car.

But Ill probably hold out on buying a microdrone, because even the Draganflyer is a mere toy compared with what dozens of engineering teams at universities and companies around the world are hard at work on: miniature, autonomous, inexpensive aircraft that you or I could send flying miles to perform any of a wide range of tasks.

Here Come the Flying Tacos

I, for one, cant see what could possibly be wrong with providing personal air-force capabilities to the masses. But if were going to get truly interesting things done with our drones, well need them to fly farther, higher, and longer, as well as to carry more, and do it with much more sophisticated control. All thats in the works, according to Mary Missy Cummings, a former F/A-18 fighter pilot who is an MIT aeronautics professor focusing on human interfaces for UAVs. This is the best thing to happen to aviation since the space race, she says. Were talking about a technology with a low cost of entry that anyone with a cell phone can use.

The new field is engaging students around the world, Cummings adds, and is engendering some creative ideas. At the top of her wish list: a personal drone to shadow her 3-year-old daughter when shes old enough to walk to school. A hobbyist has reportedly used a drone to track cattle (apparently taking up the slack left by the EPA, which contrary to widespread reports, is not sending drones to spy on farms throughout the Midwest). And one group of students, Cummings says, is drawing up plans for a drone-based taco delivery service.

Visit link:
Impatient Futurist: Rise of the (Friendly) Drones | DISCOVER Magazine

Posted in Futurist | Comments Off on Impatient Futurist: Rise of the (Friendly) Drones | DISCOVER Magazine

These 9 startups belong in a futurist’s guide to health technology (infographic)

Posted: September 18, 2012 at 9:10 pm

A futurist map of disruptive healthcare technology of the future offers a stunning projection of what will be possible. Whats interesting is that much of it is already beginning to take shape in some form or another.

Developed by trend forecasting studio Envision Technologys futurist Michell Zappa with Patrick Schlafer and Colin Popell of Prokalkeo, and featured in FastCompany, the themes focus on developments in telemedicine, augmentation, diagnostics, regeneration and biogerontology over the next 30 years.

Here are nine startups that embody some of the disruptive healthcare technology included in Zappas awesome innovation orb. Wed also like to get your thoughts on other startup companies you think belong in this guide. Post them in the comment space below and tell us what theyre doing to disrupt healthcare.

Diagnostics

UE Lifesciences is a breast cancer diagnostics startup that uses fingertip sensors to detect tumors. Its Intelligent Breast Exam can distinguish between normal breast tissue and a tumor. Breast cancers are stiffer and less mobile than the surrounding tissue, according to a paper documenting the device. It provides a non-invasive, radiation-free alternative to mammograms.

Regeneration

What could be more futuristic than growing skin from plants? Invasion of the Body Snatchers, anyone? Not quite. Eqalix is working with three Philadelphia institutions to grow synthetic skin from soybean protein. CEO Joseph P. Connell sees applications for diabetic foot ulcers, bed sores, trauma and burns. Connell said the synthetic skin addresses the biggest problem in wound healing closing a large wound surface. Also, by using synthetic grafts, there wont be a need to track down and harvest donor arteries in the patients body or from another person. The technologies were developed by researchers and clinicians from Drexel University, the University of Pennsylvania and The Childrens Hospital of Philadelphia.

Augmentation

Ekso Bionics makes exoskeletons for people who have been paralyzed from spinal cord injuries. Heres how it works: electrical motors move the frames joints, mimicking the actions of muscles. The technology has been licensed to Lockheed Martin for soldiers returning from Iraq and Afghanistan.

Telemedicine

View post:
These 9 startups belong in a futurist’s guide to health technology (infographic)

Posted in Futurist | Comments Off on These 9 startups belong in a futurist’s guide to health technology (infographic)

Is it a bird, is it a phone, no it’s… Smarterman

Posted: September 9, 2012 at 5:14 am

BRITS are using smartphones more and more research shows they are replacing watches, address books, MP3 players and even TVs. And thats not the limit of their potential.

Here futurist BEN HAMMERSLEY, author of 64 Things You Need To Know Now For Then and editor-at-large of technology magazine Wired, tells us what we can expect in the future.

Futurist ... Ben Hammersley

YOU are a superhuman. Or if youre not, you at least know someone who is.

Dont believe me?

Can you summon vast swathes of knowledge in just a few seconds? Can you tell how your friends are feeling, even if theyre miles away?

If you get lost, can you locate yourself to within three feet, in just seconds?

Can you remember whole novels, albums, calendars and to-do lists flawlessly?

Anyone with a smartphone can do all of these things.

The technology has made superheroes of us all.

See the article here:

Is it a bird, is it a phone, no it’s... Smarterman

Posted in Futurist | Comments Off on Is it a bird, is it a phone, no it’s… Smarterman

Page 262«..1020..261262263264