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      <title>WC Archive</title>
      <link>http://www.openthefuture.com/wcarchive/</link>
      <description>The collection of WorldChanging posts by Jamais Cascio.</description>
      <language>en</language>
      <copyright>Copyright 2007</copyright>
      <lastBuildDate>Sun, 22 Apr 2007 09:21:55 -0800</lastBuildDate>
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            <item>
         <title>Earth Day Voices: Jamais Cascio</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<b>Four Futures for the Earth</b>
by Jamais Cascio

Never trust a futurist who only offers one vision of tomorrow.

We don't know what the future <i>will</i> hold, but we can try to tease out what it <i>might</i>. Scenarios, which combine a variety of important and uncertain drivers into a mix of different -- but plausible -- futures, offer a useful methodology for coming up with a diverse set of plausible tomorrows. Scenarios are not predictions, but examples, giving us a wind-tunnel to test out different strategies for managing large, complex problems.

And there really isn't a bigger or more complicated problem right now than the incipient climate disaster. Today, there seems to be two schools of thought regarding the best way to deal with global warming: the "act now" approach, demanding (in essence) that we change our behavior and the ways that our societies are structured, and do it as quickly as possible, or else we're boned; and the "techno-fix" approach, which says (in essence) don't worry, the nano/info/bio revolution that's just around the corner will save us. Generally, the Worldchanging approach is to emphasize the first, with a sprinkle of the second for flavor (and as backup).

The thing is, these are not mutually-exclusive propositions, and success or failure in one doesn't determine the chance of success or failure in the other. It's entirely possible that we will change our behavior/society/world (ahem), <i>and</i> also come up with fantastic new technologies; it's also possible that we'll stumble on both paths, neither fixing things in time nor getting our hands on the tools we could use to repair the worst damage.

To a futurist, a pair of distinct, largely independent variables just begs to be turned into a scenario matrix. So let's give in, and take a brief look a the four scenarios the combinations of these two paths create:

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<strong>Dodging a Bullet</strong><br>
<i>2037: It's amazing how fast we went from "is this real?" to "what can we do?" to "let's do it now." There was no silver bullet, no green leap forward, just a billion quiet decisions to act. People made better, smarter choices, and the headlong rush to disaster slowed; encouraged by this, we started to focus our investments and social energy into solving this problem, and eventually (but much faster than we'd dared hope!) the growth of atmospheric carbon stopped. There's still too much CO2 in the air, and we know we're going to be dealing with a warming climate for awhile still, but the human species actually managed to <b>choose</b> to avoid killing itself off.</i>

This is a world in which civil society begins to focus on averting climate disaster as its primary, immediate task, even at the cost of some economic growth and general technological acceleration. Most governments and institutions curtail research and development without direct climate benefits, leading to a world of 2037 that's nowhere near as advanced as futurists and technology enthusiasts had expected. A succession of environmental disasters linked (in the public mind, at the very least) to global warming -- killing hundreds of thousands, and leaving tens of millions as refugees -- gave added impetus to a world-wide effort; by 2017, a clear majority of the world's population was willing to do anything necessary to avoid the environmental collapse that many scientists saw as nearly inevitable. One popular slogan for the climate campaign was "we could be the best, or we could be the last."

<strong>Teaching the World to Sing</strong><br>
<i>02037: I stumbled across a memory archive from twenty years ago, before the emergence of the Chorus, and was shocked to see the Earth as it was. Oceans near death, climate system lurching towards collapse, overall energy flux just horribly out-of-balance. I can't believe the Earth actually survived that. I had assumed that the Chorus was responsible for repairing the planet, but no -- We told me that, even by 02017, the Earth's human populace was making the kind of substantive changes to how it lived necessary to avoid real disaster, and that 02017 was actually one of the first years of <b>improvement</b>! What the Chorus made possible was the planetary repair, although We says that this project still has many years left, in part because We had to fix some of We's own mistakes from the first few repair attempts. The Chorus actually seemed <b>embarrassed</b> when We told me that!</i>

This is a world in which immediate efforts to make the social and behavioral changes necessary to avoid climate disaster make possible longer-term projects to apply powerful, transformative technologies (such as molecular manufacturing and cognitive augmentation) to the problem of stabilizing and, eventually, repairing the broken environment. It's not quite a Singularity, but is perhaps something nearly as strange: a world that has come to see few differences between human systems and natural/geophysical systems. "We are Gaia, too," the aging (but quite healthy) James Lovelock reminded us in 2023. And Gaia is us: billions of molecular-scale eco-sensors and intelligent simulations give the Earth itself an important voice in the global Chorus.

<strong>Geoengineering 101: Pass/Fail</strong><br>
<i>2037: The Hephaestus 2 mission reported last week that it had managed to stabilize the wobble on the Mirror, but JustinNN.tv blurbed me a minute ago that New Tyndall Center is still showing temperature instabilities. According to Tyndall, that clinches it: we have <b>another</b> rogue at work. NATO ended the last one with extreme prejudice (as dramatized in last Summer's blockbuster, "Shutdown" -- I loved that Bruce Willis came out of retirement to play Gates), but this one's more subtle. My eyecrawl has some bluster from the SecGen now, saying that "this will not stand," blah blah blah. I just wish that these boy geniuses (and they're all guys, you ever notice that?) would put half as much time and effort into figuring out the Atlantic Seawall problem as they do these crazy-ass plans to fix the sky.</i>

This is a world in which attempts to make the broad social and behavioral changes necessary to avoid climate disaster are generally too late and too limited, and the global environment starts to show early signs of collapse. The 2010s to early 2020s are characterized by millions of dead from extreme weather events, hundreds of millions of refugees, and a thousand or more coastal cities lost all over the globe. The continued trend of general technological acceleration gets diverted by 2020 into haphazard, massive projects to avert disaster. Few of these succeed -- serious climate problems hit too fast for the more responsible advocates of geoengineering to get beyond the "what if..." stage -- and the many that fail often do so in a spectacular (and legally actionable) fashion. Those that do work serve mainly to keep the Earth poised on the brink: bioengineered plants that consume enough extra CO2 and methane to keep the atmosphere stable; a very slow project to reduce the acidity of the oceans; and the Mirror, a thousands of miles in diameter solar shield at the Lagrange point between the Earth and the Sun, reducing incoming sunlight by 2% -- enough to start a gradual cooling trend.

<strong>Say Goodnight</strong><br>
<i>2030-something. Late in the decade, I think. Living day-to-day makes it hard to keep track of the years. The new seasons don't help -- Stormy, Still Stormy, Hellaciously Stormy, and Blast Furnace -- and neither does the constant travel, north to the Nunavut Protectorate, if it's still around. I hear things are even worse in Europe, if you can believe that. I don't hear much about Asia anymore, but I suppose nobody does now. The Greenland icepack went sometime in the last few years, and I hear a rumor that Antarctica is starting to go now. Who knows? I still see occasional aircraft high overhead, but they mostly look like military planes, so don't get your hopes up: they're probably from somebody who thinks it's still worth it to fight over the remaining oil. </i>

This is a world in which we don't adopt the changes we need, and technology-based fixes end up being too hard to implement in sufficient quantity and scale to make a real difference. Competition for the last bit of advantage (in economics, in security, in resources) accelerates the general collapse. Things fall apart; the center does not hold; mere anarchy is loosed upon the world.

Pick your future.

<em><a href="http://www.worldchanging.com/bios/jamais.html">Jamais Cascio</a> co-founded Worldchanging, and wrote over 1,900 articles for the site during his tenure. He now works as a foresight and futures specialist, serving as the Global Futures Strategist for the <a href="http://www.crnano.org">Center for Responsible Nanotechnology</a> and a Research Affiliate for the <a href="http://www.iftf.org">Institute for the Future</a>. His current online home is <a href="http://www.openthefuture.com">Open the Future</a>.</em>]]></description>
         <link>http://www.openthefuture.com/wcarchive/2007/04/earth_day_voices_jamais_cascio.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.openthefuture.com/wcarchive/2007/04/earth_day_voices_jamais_cascio.html</guid>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">Imagining the Future</category>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">New Science</category>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">Planet</category>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">Worldchanging Guests</category>
        
        
         <pubDate>Sun, 22 Apr 2007 09:21:55 -0800</pubDate>
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         <title>What&apos;s Next: Jamais Cascio</title>
         <description><![CDATA[As a species, Homo sapiens isn't particularly good at thinking about the future. It's not really what we evolved to do. Our cognitive tools developed in a world where rapid and just-accurate-enough pattern recognition and situation analysis meant the difference between finding enough tubers & termites to munch on for the evening and ending up as dinner for the friendly neighborhood predator. In a world of constant, imminent existential threats, the ability to recognize subtle, long-term processes and multi-generational changes wasn't a particularly important adaptive advantage.

But what we haven't evolved to do, we can learn to do. And now, more than at any previous point in human history, our survival depends on our capacity to think beyond the immediate future. The existential threats we face today are, in nearly every case, slow, subtle, and seemingly -- but deceptively -- remote. We no longer live in a world of obvious cause and easily-connected effect, and choices based on these sorts of expectations are apt to cause us vastly more harm than benefit.

Unfortunately, thinking in the language of the long term isn't a habit most of us have cultivated. So the development I'd like to see happen in 2007 is something that all of us can do: try to imagine tomorrow. Not in a gauzy, indeterminate "what if..." kind of way, and not in a cyber-chrome & nano-goo science fiction kind of way. I'd like us to start with something concrete and personal.

On January 1st, as we recover from the previous night's celebrations, rather than making out a list of resolutions we know we're unlikely to keep, I'd like us each to imagine, with as much plausibility and detail as we can muster, what our lives will be like in just one year, at the beginning of 2008. What has the last year been like? What has changed? What has surprised us? What are we (the "we" of a year hence) thinking about? Regretting? Looking forward to?

Then, after we've exercised our future-thinking muscles a bit, try this: do the same thing, only for ten years hence. What are our lives like in 2017? If possible, we should try to give this as much detail as we gave 2008. Not because this will make it more accurate -- it won't. But it can make it more real, more anchored in our lives of the present.

We should write down what we've come up with, and save it (or if we're feeling a bit adventurous, blog it).

That's it; just for a little while, let's think about our future.

We create our tomorrows with every choice we make, but too few of us take even a moment to consider the consequences of our decisions. Every now and again, we need to think beyond the present, and recognize that we are as connected to our future as we are to our past. It's a good habit to get into; as our choices become ever more complex, it's the kind of habit that can even be worldchanging.

<i>Jamais Cascio is the co-founder of Worldchanging. He writes about the intersection of emerging technologies and cultural transformation, and specializes in the design and creation of plausible scenarios of the future. His current online presence lives at <a target="new" href="http://www.openthefuture.com">Open the Future</a>.</i>]]></description>
         <link>http://www.openthefuture.com/wcarchive/2006/12/whats_next_jamais_cascio.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.openthefuture.com/wcarchive/2006/12/whats_next_jamais_cascio.html</guid>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">Worldchanging Holiday</category>
        
        
         <pubDate>Sat, 30 Dec 2006 11:23:55 -0800</pubDate>
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         <title>All Good Things...</title>
         <description>This is my last post as a WorldChanging staffer.

Few things in my life have made me happier, or prouder, than my work at WorldChanging. We have created something truly wonderful here -- and by &quot;we,&quot; I mean all of us: Alex Steffen, my partner in creating the site; the team of contributors, many of whom have become lasting friends of mine; the network of weblogs and allies that stimulate and extend our discussions; and, most of all, you folks who take the time to read WorldChanging. It&apos;s not often that one gets to have a hand in the creation of a movement that could change the world. I suspect that helping build this site will remain my calling card for years to come.

I&apos;m not disappearing from the site entirely, mind you. My email here will still work, I&apos;ll still have a spot on the side-bar, and I will occasionally post items of interest. But we&apos;ve done here what we set out to do, and it&apos;s time to see what I can do next.

I can&apos;t say where you&apos;ll see me next, in part because some of the opportunities that have arisen are not yet ready for public discussion. I can say that I&apos;ll be doing more direct consulting on the kinds of issues I&apos;ve covered here, and have a couple of book ideas I intend to pursue. I will carry with me the lessons I&apos;ve learned helping to bring this site into existence: we must make choices that better ourselves, better our communities, and better the world, even though those choices are rarely easy. For me, few decisions have been harder than this one.

It&apos;s the right time to do make this decision, however. The book is done, so Alex and the rest of the team will once again have more time to bring their diverse voices to the WorldChanging page. Sarah Rich has stepped into the role of Managing Editor with great enthusiasm. I feel quite confident that WorldChanging is about to move into an even better stage in its life, with the kind of variety of ideas and expanse of perspectives it needs to help reshape how we think about the world, its future, and our own capacities for change.

Thank you all for making the last two-and-a-half years simply incredible. See you in The Future...</description>
         <link>http://www.openthefuture.com/wcarchive/2006/03/all_good_things.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.openthefuture.com/wcarchive/2006/03/all_good_things.html</guid>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">About Worldchanging</category>
        
        
         <pubDate>Fri, 31 Mar 2006 18:51:01 -0800</pubDate>
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         <title>Design a Mars Flyer</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.worldchanging.com/images/marsuav.jpg" border="0" height="300" hspace="5" vspace="5" width="300" alt="marsuav.jpg" align="right" />Attention, European university students (or their friends and families): how would you like to design an unmanned aerial vehicle for use on Mars?

<a href="http://www.euroavia.net">EUROAVIA</a> (European Association of Aerospace Students) DeWo WG and the European Space Agency have kicked off a <a href="http://www.esa.int/esaCP/SEM6NN59CLE_index_0.html">competition</a>, open to students at European universities specializing in aeronautics and/or space technologies, asking them to come up with a design plan for a UAV best suited for exploring the planet Mars.

<blockquote><I><font size="-1">The authors of the 25 best papers will be invited to participate in the three-week design workshop at ESA's research and technology centre (ESTEC). During the workshop they will create a preliminary design of a UAV for Mars with the assistance of specialists from the industry and other institutions. Selected participants will be hosted at no cost.</font></i></blockquote>

More information can be found at the <a href="http://www.dewo06.net/">Design Workshop 2006</a> site.

Although many of us at WorldChanging are Areophiles, the most appealing aspect of this program is the inclusion of university students in a potentially revolutionary space effort. As with other student competitions, such as the <a href="http://www.worldchanging.com/archives/002087.html">Cradle to Cradle Home Competition</a>, the <a href="http://www.worldchanging.com/archives/003626.html">Solar Decathlon</a>, and the <a href="http://www.worldchanging.com/archives/004058.html">Car of 2030</a> competition, the point isn't to get the best possible design, but to get the most <em>innovative</em> design -- ideas from people who haven't yet learned to listen when told that something is impossible.]]></description>
         <link>http://www.openthefuture.com/wcarchive/2006/03/design_a_mars_flyer.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.openthefuture.com/wcarchive/2006/03/design_a_mars_flyer.html</guid>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">Imagining the Future</category>
        
        
         <pubDate>Thu, 30 Mar 2006 16:05:24 -0800</pubDate>
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         <title>Culture Jamming the Tahoe</title>
         <description><![CDATA[Chevrolet has opened up a site asking visitors to <a href="http://www.chevyapprentice.com/apprentice.php?country=us">create advertisements</a> for its ginormous SUV, the Tahoe, using a collection of clips and soundtracks, as well as your own text.

Thing is, there's no reason you have to make ads <em>in favor</em> of ginormous SUVs...

The good folks at <a href="http://www.network-centricadvocacy.net/2006/03/you_must_try_th.html">Network-Centric Advocacy are collecting links</a> to (and, where possible, recordings of) "Chevy Apprentice" ads talking about global warming and similar subjects. <a href="http://www.chevyapprentice.com/view.php?country=us&amp;uniqueid=6df5d148-10e4-1029-98eb-0013724ff5a7">Here's an example</a>. If you come up with a good one, be sure to post the link there -- and here, of course!

Enjoy!]]></description>
         <link>http://www.openthefuture.com/wcarchive/2006/03/culture_jamming_the_tahoe.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.openthefuture.com/wcarchive/2006/03/culture_jamming_the_tahoe.html</guid>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">QuickChanges</category>
        
        
         <pubDate>Thu, 30 Mar 2006 14:05:11 -0800</pubDate>
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         <title>Can You Copyright the World?</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.worldchanging.com/images/boundbylaw.jpg" border="0" height="298" width="230" alt="boundbylaw.jpg" align="right" />Documentary filmmakers are in a particularly difficult position in terms of intellectual property, as most documentarians focus on lives of real people -- and modern life, especially in the US, Europe and Japan, is inundated with logos, music, background video and myriad other trademark and copyright concerns. <em><a href="http://www.law.duke.edu/cspd/comics/zoomcomic.html">Bound by Law?</a></em>, a discussion of the intersection of fair use, public domain, copyright and documentary film -- done in a comic book format -- illustrates both the complexities that documentarians face and the broader struggle over how we can record modern life in all of its forms for posterity. Created by Keith Aoki, James Boyle and Jennifer Jenkins at the <a href="http://www.law.duke.edu/cspd/index.html">Duke University Center for the Study of the Public Domain</a>, <em>Bound by Law?</em> is well-worth reading by anyone trying to understand how intellectual property rules affect our lives. Although it looks only at American regulations, many of the concepts it covers apply far more broadly.

The ongoing evolution of copyright laws in the industrialized world has served both to protect and to stymie creative artists. On the one hand, stronger and more explicit protection of copyright assures emerging artists that larger corporate entities can't simply take the artists' work; on the other hand, aggressive assertion of rights over material that is part of our common culture has a demonstrable negative impact on the creative abilities of artists. Although much of the debate online focuses on American laws, digital era copyright laws in Europe and Japan have evoked similar arguments, and the role of intellectual property laws in the relationship between industrialized and developing nations <a href="http://www.worldchanging.com/archives/003214.html">remains controversial</a>. The solutions offered by groups like Creative Commons can go a long way to making the situation more reasonable, but they require positive action on the part of artists.]]></description>
         <link>http://www.openthefuture.com/wcarchive/2006/03/can_you_copyright_the_world.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.openthefuture.com/wcarchive/2006/03/can_you_copyright_the_world.html</guid>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">Emerging Technologies</category>
        
        
         <pubDate>Wed, 29 Mar 2006 16:59:55 -0800</pubDate>
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         <title>Demographic Mashup</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<a href="http://www.analygis.com/">AnalyGIS</a> and SRC, both of whom work on various tools for studying markets and communities, have teamed up to build a <a href="http://65.39.85.13/google/default.htm">demographic study tool</a> combining Google Maps (surprise) and 2000 US Census data. Click on a spot in the US, then select either basic census information (ethnic distribution, sex parity, and income averages) or housing information (owners vs. renters, housing value, age of units) within one, three and five miles of your target click. You can also enter an address directly.

They describe this as primarily a proof-of-concept exercise, so there's no telling when it will disappear. Still, for those of us who want a better way to access demographic information quickly and visually, this works pretty well. Since it's based on Google Map's public APIs and open access census data, it should also be relatively simple to rebuild should this one go away.

(<em>Thanks, Joe Willemssen!</em>)]]></description>
         <link>http://www.openthefuture.com/wcarchive/2006/03/demographic_mashup.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.openthefuture.com/wcarchive/2006/03/demographic_mashup.html</guid>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">QuickChanges</category>
        
        
         <pubDate>Wed, 29 Mar 2006 14:24:59 -0800</pubDate>
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         <title>Wired&apos;s Climate Disaster Interviews</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<em>Wired News</em> has posted a series of interviews with the authors of three recent books on global warming and what we can do about it. The three interviews -- with <a href="http://wired.com/news/politics/0,70405-0.html">Tim Flannery</a>, author of <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/redirect?link_code=ur2&tag=worldchangi0b-20&camp=1789&creative=9325&path=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.com%2Fgp%2Fproduct%2F0871139359%2Fref%3Dpd_sim_b_1%3F%255Fencoding%3DUTF8%26v%3Dglance%26n%3D283155">The Weather Makers: How Man is Changing the Climate and What It Means for Life on Earth</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.com/e/ir?t=worldchangi0b-20&amp;l=ur2&amp;o=1" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /></em>, <a href="http://wired.com/news/politics/lifescience/0,70455-0.html">Lester R. Brown</a>, author of <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/redirect?link_code=ur2&tag=worldchangi0b-20&camp=1789&creative=9325&path=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.com%2Fgp%2Fproduct%2F0393325237%2Fsr%3D8-2%2Fqid%3D1143669735%2Fref%3Dpd_bbs_2%3F%255Fencoding%3DUTF8">Plan B 2.0</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.com/e/ir?t=worldchangi0b-20&amp;l=ur2&amp;o=1" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /></em> (described, with links, <a href="http://www.worldchanging.com/archives/004015.html">here</a>), and <a href="http://www.wired.com/news/politics/lifescience/0,70393-0.html?tw=rss.index">Elizabeth Kolbert</a>, author of <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/redirect?link_code=ur2&tag=worldchangi0b-20&camp=1789&creative=9325&path=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.com%2Fgp%2Fproduct%2F1596911255%2Fqid%3D1143669788%2Fsr%3D2-1%2Fref%3Dpd_bbs_b_2_1%3Fs%3Dbooks%26v%3Dglance%26n%3D283155">Field Notes From a Catastrophe: Man, Nature, and Climate Change</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.com/e/ir?t=worldchangi0b-20&amp;l=ur2&amp;o=1" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /></em> (based on her incredible <a href="http://www.worldchanging.com/archives/002823.html">series of articles</a> at the <em>New Yorker</em>) -- are brief but quite compelling. 

These interviews are part of a growing body of literature aimed at what we might call the "eyes now open" audience: people who weren't denialists about climate disaster, but thought it was something for future generations to worry about, was something that had to do with the ozone layer, or wasn't that big of a deal anyway. In the post-Katrina world, these folks, who potentially are a majority of the American public, are waking up to the reality that global warming-induced climate disruption is happening now, and that we have to act fast if we are to head off the worst possible outcomes.]]></description>
         <link>http://www.openthefuture.com/wcarchive/2006/03/wireds_climate_disaster_interv.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.openthefuture.com/wcarchive/2006/03/wireds_climate_disaster_interv.html</guid>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">QuickChanges</category>
        
        
         <pubDate>Wed, 29 Mar 2006 14:06:12 -0800</pubDate>
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         <title>Rice, Climate and &quot;Effects Mitigation&quot;</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<img alt="irri.jpg" src="http://www.worldchanging.com/images/2006/03/irri.jpg" align="right" hspace="5" vspace="5" width="300" height="200" />Even in the best case climate scenarios, the planet is going to face years of rising temperatures and some pretty unpleasant (and often tragic) results across much of the world. Given that many of the worst-hit locations will be in the poorer nations, it's important that we spend some time thinking about ways not just to mitigate the process of climate disruption -- that is, to reverse it -- but also to mitigate its effects. This isn't "adaptation," it's harm reduction; think of it as suppressing the worst symptoms while fighting to cure the disease.

Changes to temperature and rainfall patterns will affect many elements of how we live, but one of the most important will be agriculture. Staple foods that have been grown in various regions for hundreds or thousands of years will be harder and harder to cultivate; it's highly likely that global warming will lead to repeated crop failures and famine. Fortunately, some organizations have begun to consider this scenario, and to work on responses. This month, the <a href="http://www.irri.org/">International Rice Research Institute</a> announced a <a href="http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2006-03/irri-cct032706.php">new plan to do just that</a>:

<blockquote><em>"Clearly, climate change is going to have a major impact on our ability to grow rice," Robert S. Zeigler, IRRI director general, said. "We can't afford to sit back and be complacent about this because rice production feeds almost half the world's population while providing vital employment to millions as well, with most of them being very poor and vulnerable."</em></blockquote>

<blockquote><em>For these reasons, Dr. Zeigler announced at the workshop that IRRI  in an unprecedented move  was ready to put up US$2 million of its own research funds as part of an effort to raise $2025 million for a major five-year project to mitigate the effects of climate change on rice production. "We need to start developing rice varieties that can tolerate higher temperatures and other aspects of climate change right now," he said.</em></blockquote>]]></description>
         <link>http://www.openthefuture.com/wcarchive/2006/03/rice_climate_and_effects_mitig.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.openthefuture.com/wcarchive/2006/03/rice_climate_and_effects_mitig.html</guid>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">Biodiversity and Ecosystems</category>
        
        
         <pubDate>Tue, 28 Mar 2006 14:08:58 -0800</pubDate>
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         <title>The Open Future: Open Source Scenario Planning</title>
         <description><![CDATA[Scenario methodology is a powerful tool for thinking through the implications of strategic choices. Rather than tying the organization to a set "official future," scenarios offer a range of possible outcomes used less as predictions and more as "wind tunnels" for plans. (How would our strategy work in this future? How about if things turn out <em>this</em> way?) We talk about scenarios with some frequency here, and several of us have worked (and continue to work) professionally in the discipline.

With its genealogy reaching back to Cold War think tanks and global oil multinationals, however, scenario planning tends to be primarily a tool for corporate and government planning; few non-profit groups or NGOs, let alone smaller communities, have the resources to assemble useful scenario projects or (more importantly) follow the results of the scenarios through the organization. Scenario planning pioneer Global Business Network has made a real effort to bring the scenario methodology to non-profits (disclosure: I worked at GBN and continue to do occasional projects for them), but we could take the process further: we can create open source scenarios. I don't just mean free or public scenarios; I mean opening up the whole process.

Let's see what this would entail.]]></description>
         <link>http://www.openthefuture.com/wcarchive/2006/03/the_open_future_open_source_sc.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.openthefuture.com/wcarchive/2006/03/the_open_future_open_source_sc.html</guid>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">Worldchanging Essays</category>
        
        
         <pubDate>Mon, 27 Mar 2006 17:22:55 -0800</pubDate>
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         <title>On the Horizon (03/24/06): Nature on the Future of Computing</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.worldchanging.com/images/2020visionNature.jpg" border="0" height="200" width="150" hspace="5" vspace="5" alt="2020visionNature.jpg" align="right" />If <em>Wired</em> or <em>Technology Review</em> were to do a cover story on "computing in 2020," you know what you'd get: computer-generated mock-ups of what the laptop/wearable/ambient Computer of Tomorrow will look like, interviews with people working on bleeding-edge technologies, and lots of discussion of how future computers will work. When <em>Nature</em> does a cover story on "<a href="http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v440/n7083/index.html">computing in 2020</a>," you get something quite different: only one of the eight feature articles talks about how future computers might operate; the rest look more at the evolution of how we <em>use</em> computers, a much more worldchanging topic.

Unsurprisingly, most of the articles look at the science of the particular issue, either in the underlying theory or the actual applications; <em>Nature</em> <strong>is</strong> the world's premiere science journal, after all. But that doesn't mean they're inaccessible for non-scientific readers by any means. You may have to slip over some jargon here and there, but the core ideas -- the interplay of computation and sensor networks, the question of how we deal with massive amounts of incoming data, the parallels between biology and information -- remain relevant across many of the subjects we discuss here. Best of all, as <a href="http://www.worldchanging.com/archives/004234.html">indicated yesterday</a>, all of the articles in the feature section can be read for free (in both HTML and PDF format); Microsoft's <a href="http://research.microsoft.com/towards2020science/background_overview.htm">2020 Science</a> project made this possible, so it's worth noting that none of the articles talk about what Microsoft is doing at all.

<strong>I Sense Something...</strong>: Of all of the articles in the special section, the one that's likely to feel the most familiar is <a href="http://www.nature.com/news/2006/060320/full/440402a.html">Everything, everywhere</a>, written by WorldChanging ally Declan Butler. It's a look at the emergence of "smart dust," "motes" and the various other manifestations of wireless sensor technologies, and the role these systems will play in future scientific computation. The important message is that the growing use of abundant sensing technology will change how scientific research works:]]></description>
         <link>http://www.openthefuture.com/wcarchive/2006/03/on_the_horizon_032406_nature_o.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.openthefuture.com/wcarchive/2006/03/on_the_horizon_032406_nature_o.html</guid>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">About Worldchanging</category>
        
        
         <pubDate>Fri, 24 Mar 2006 17:13:16 -0800</pubDate>
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         <title>Oil Crisis-Ready</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.worldchanging.com/images/lightrail.jpg" border="0" height="221" width="295" alt="lightrail.jpg" hspace="5" vspace="5" align="right" />WorldChanging friends <a href="http://www.sustainlane.com/article/734//Ten+U.S.+Cities+Best+Prepared+for+Oi">SustainLane today announced</a> the initial results of a study of the fifty largest cities in the United States, ranked on the basis of readiness to respond to an extended oil crisis. SustainLane revealed the <a href="http://money.cnn.com/2006/03/24/news/economy/oil_crisis/index.htm">top ten cities</a> today, and will provide the full ranking next month. In June, they will present a longer study of overall sustainability rankings of the same set of cities (we covered their list of <a href="http://www.worldchanging.com/archives/002869.html">most sustainable cities</a> last year).

The top ten cities are: New York; Boston; San Francisco; Chicago; Philadelphia; Portland; Honolulu; Seattle; Baltimore; and Oakland. SustainLane relied on a mix of criteria, including some less-than-obvious elements:

<blockquote><I><font size="-1"><strong>Ranking Criteria</strong></font></i></blockquote>

<blockquote><I><font size="-1"><strong>Greatest Weighting</strong>
<li> City commute-to-work data</font></i></blockquote>]]></description>
         <link>http://www.openthefuture.com/wcarchive/2006/03/oil_crisisready.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.openthefuture.com/wcarchive/2006/03/oil_crisisready.html</guid>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">Sustainable Design</category>
        
        
         <pubDate>Fri, 24 Mar 2006 13:35:51 -0800</pubDate>
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         <title>California Clean-Tech Open</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.worldchanging.com/images/calctopen.jpg" border="0" height="119" width="300" hspace="5" vspace="5" alt="calctopen.jpg" align="right" />The idea of using a big cash prize as a catalyst for invention has become pretty popular, from the <a href="http://www.worldchanging.com/archives/000853.html">X-Prize</a> for private space flight to the recent <a href="http://onmac.net/">competition</a> to get Windows up and running on an Intel Macintosh. Advocates for environmental technologies often suggest a prize as a way to generate interest in green innovations. With the new <a href="http://www.cacleantech.com/index.shtml?page=index&amp;mode=0">California Clean Tech Open</a>, we're about to see if a "Green Prize" will be as successful as the X-Prize at bringing us to a new frontier.

The premise of the <a href="http://go.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=scienceNews&amp;storyID=11604409&amp;src=rss/scienceNews">Clean-Tech Open</a> is simple: each participant comes up with an overview plan for a technology-enabled green business in one of <a href="http://www.cacleantech.com/index.shtml?page=categories&amp;mode=1">five categories</a>; finalists then must produce the full-fledged business plan. Winners in each category (Energy Efficiency, Smart Power, Renewable Energy, Transportation, and Water Management) receive $50,000, along with a variety of professional services and a year's worth of office space; the overall winner receives an additional $50,000. 

The folks running the competition <a href="http://www.cacleantech.com/content/CaCleanTechOverview.pdf">seem to understand</a> (PDF) the Bright Green big picture:]]></description>
         <link>http://www.openthefuture.com/wcarchive/2006/03/california_cleantech_open.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.openthefuture.com/wcarchive/2006/03/california_cleantech_open.html</guid>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">Sustainable Design</category>
        
        
         <pubDate>Thu, 23 Mar 2006 15:00:06 -0800</pubDate>
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         <title>The Future of Computing</title>
         <description><![CDATA[We'll have more about this tomorrow, but this week's <em>Nature</em> has a <a href="http://www.nature.com/nature/focus/futurecomputing/index.html">massive section</a> looking at what the next 15 years could hold for information technology. Articles include <a href="http://www.nature.com/news/2006/060320/full/440411a.html">Vernor Vinge</a> talking about computers and creativity, <a href="http://www.nature.com/news/2006/060320/full/440402a.html">Declan Butler</a> on the future evolution of sensor networks, and <a href="http://www.nature.com/news/2006/060320/full/440416a.html">Roger Brent and Jehoshua Bruck</a> examining the intersection of biological science and computation. 

Best of all, the full set of articles are available for free, supported in part by Microsoft's <em><a href="http://research.microsoft.com/towards2020science/background_overview.htm">Toward 2020 Science</a></em> project.

It's a fascinating collection of stories, well worth taking the time to read.

(<em>Thanks for the tip, <a href="http://declanbutler.info/blog/">Declan</a></em>)]]></description>
         <link>http://www.openthefuture.com/wcarchive/2006/03/the_future_of_computing.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.openthefuture.com/wcarchive/2006/03/the_future_of_computing.html</guid>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">QuickChanges</category>
        
        
         <pubDate>Thu, 23 Mar 2006 13:38:32 -0800</pubDate>
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         <title>Seven Meters</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<img src="http://www.worldchanging.com/images/7MinDC.jpg" border="0" height="251" width="304" hspace="5" vspace="5" alt="7MinDC.jpg" align="right" />For some people, global warming is a hard sell. Temperatures going up by a few degrees doesn't sound all that bad, and even results like drought or increased spread of mosquitos and other pests, while certainly unpleasant, are familiar issues. Mega-problems like whiplash/abrupt climate change, where warming leads to an ice age, can sound more surreal than threatening. But <a href="http://flood.firetree.net/">this website</a> might change their minds. It shows something that is obviously warming-related, is already starting to happen (not just a "might happen 50 years down the road" possibility), and is a clear danger to the industrialized world's economies and societies: a seven meter rise in sea levels.

<a href="http://flood.firetree.net/">Flood Maps</a> mashes up NASA elevation data and Google Maps, and offers a visualization of the effects of a single meter increase all the way to a 14 meter rise. The default increase of seven meters -- about 23 feet for those who avoid the whole metric thing -- is the amount the world's oceans will rise once Greenland's glacial ice pack melts completely. This melting is already underway, and is <a href="http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?chanID=sa003&amp;articleID=0004F545-037C-13F5-837C83414B7F0000">happening with startling speed</a>. 

<blockquote><I><font size="-1">[From February:] ... researchers found that [Greenland's] glaciers were traveling faster than anyone had predicted. They also determined that even more northerly glaciers were on the move and that in just 10 years the amount of fresh water lost by all the glaciers had more than doubled from 90 cubic kilometers of ice loss a year to 224 cubic kilometers. "The amount of water Los Angeles uses over one year is about one cubic kilometer," Rignot points out. "Two hundred cubic kilometers is a lot of fresh water."</font></i></blockquote>]]></description>
         <link>http://www.openthefuture.com/wcarchive/2006/03/seven_meters.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.openthefuture.com/wcarchive/2006/03/seven_meters.html</guid>
                  <category domain="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category">Biodiversity and Ecosystems</category>
        
        
         <pubDate>Wed, 22 Mar 2006 13:02:09 -0800</pubDate>
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