The Department of Reinvention: Communication, Compassion and Future Visions
It's time to stop pretending the same dead-end solutions will solve problems in the digital age.
It's time to stop pretending the same dead-end solutions will solve problems in the digital age.
The sci-fi movie masterpiece <em>Blade Runner </em>turns 30 this month, and it's still ahead of where we are culturally.
What if the library was scattered all around a city, instead of in one central location and in a handful of branches spread out around neighborhoods?
Too much time in front of a computer screen robs boys from developing the social and physical interaction skills required to relate to people in general, and women in particular.
Right now, both governments and corporations have too much power over how the Internet is regulated and controlled.
Maybe the real issue with learning how to reinvent oneself is the simple fact we really don't know how we formed our identity in the first place.
What Bob Dylan possessed that no other musical artist of his generation had was the innate ability to continually reinvent himself.
When you're going online to accomplish specific goals, it's good to make a list and check off everything as you go along. We've all been sidetracked by hyperlinks, and this is part of the addictive quality of the Internet.
Art, design, business, and culture have merged. Experiences and products are all about what someone feels. People act or react, attend or purchase, like or follow because they are drawn toward something.
The Occupy movement has been in hibernation mode for several months, but with warmer weather on the horizon, odds are it will become a fixture in every major city in America during this election year.