I'm writing a paper about EVOKE. I was hoping you could leave problems you see with EVOKE in the comments of this blog so I can investigate and analyze them to try and improve the game. Thanks.
Added by Keith Adam Britt on March 25, 2010 at 11:07pm —
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3 books I recommend everybody reading:
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Added by Keith Adam Britt on March 25, 2010 at 9:13pm —
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So, I like to find things in interesting places. I've studied Iran quite a bit and know that they have severe water issues and draw much of their water from desalination plants on the coast. Maybe talking to them about water and how what they're doing could be improved or transferred to other countries could open up some dialog on other issues. Did somebody say nuclear?…
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Added by Keith Adam Britt on March 25, 2010 at 8:51pm —
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I'm in charge of teaching the world the importance of water conservation and water cleanliness in 2020? Well if I'm in charge than nobody gets clean water for the wh*** day. In fact, we're turning off all the water to every faucet and toilet in the developed nation for the entire day. You want water? Go find it. You need to take a s***? See you in the woods.
Nothing like walking a mile in a man's shoes to show you the world needs to change... and by the world I mean…
Added by Keith Adam Britt on March 25, 2010 at 8:34pm —
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To be honest, she's not really a water hero, she's a human waste hero. Her book is so powerful and informative however that I must make a mention of it here as I think reading this book would benefit anybody concerned (or unconcerned) with helping to fix our world society.
Kudos to Rose George and her book The Big Necessity.
Available on Amazon.com in hardback, paperback and Kindle formats:…
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Added by Keith Adam Britt on March 25, 2010 at 8:30pm —
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Gotta love Halloween. So me and the wife are running the kids around the block for Halloween. Cool thing is, they're all dressed as working light bulbs. Even better, they light bulbs really light up. But instead of being powered by batteries, the energy for the light is being produced by my kids kinetic motion. Little power generators are drawing kilowatts from every bend of their hips, knees, elbows, and shoulders. Then, after they've collected all the candy they can carry, I take them back to…
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Added by Keith Adam Britt on March 24, 2010 at 12:29am —
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So, this was a hard one for me, but I found somebody... the entire population of Austin, Texas, USA. The citizens and legislators of Austin were the first US city to begin the implementation of a full-scale smart grid. Despite some bad press, I still see this as the future of power in the United States. Not only is it a great conservation tool it's an even better consolidation tool. Now when the power company switches off of coal burning power sources, so does every citizen.
Added by Keith Adam Britt on March 24, 2010 at 12:22am —
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Continuing with my theme of "I don't think a power shift can be accomplished through a distributed power source model," My act for Mission 3 was to figure out how I could interact with my power grid (i.e., local power company) better. So I went to Wal-mart (which I'm not proud of) and bought some outlet timers. So instead of having my cell phone chargers, my 52" LED TV, and my laptops drawing power all day, every day, now I am all drawing power during the times of the day that I actually use…
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Added by Keith Adam Britt on March 24, 2010 at 12:13am —
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To tell you the truth, I had a hard time figuring out what to do for a food security act. I mean, here in central North Carolina, food security is not really an issue. Homelessness and hunger aren't exactly rampant so finding someone who suffers from food security issues, much less helping them with it is a bit difficult.
Luckily though, my wife and I just checked our mail and there was my act. We got the 2010 U.S. Census! I've never filled out a census before so you'll…
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Added by Keith Adam Britt on March 16, 2010 at 9:30pm —
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In the next ten years I believe food growing and acquiring will revert back to a localization trend. People will grow and produce more and more of the food they consume or a barter system with those in one's local community will be used frequently to acquire the food stuffs one can't produce himself.
So here's the setup for my meal in 2020...
- I should be living in Northeast Tennessee at the time
- I'll be able to grow vegetables year round and…
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Added by Keith Adam Britt on March 13, 2010 at 1:16pm —
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In the United States it isn't a matter of having enough to eat. Our extremely large brains and abundance of natural resources have led us on a food binge over the last 30 years that may bring back Darwinism in a very dramatic and unprecedented way. So, if we've got so much to eat here and most of us are fattening up for the hibernation that will never come, why do we still have people that go hungry here?
The answer is waste. According to Robin Shreeves of SustainABlog, the…
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Added by Keith Adam Britt on March 13, 2010 at 1:00pm —
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Well, let's first discuss what I'll be doing between now and then...
- I'll visit Afghanistan for the second time
- I'll have got my Ph.D. in Cognitive Neuroscience (hopefully)
- I'll have gotten a position with a leading research university
So in 2020, besides my research and teaching, I hope to be bridging the educational gap with countries that don't currently value a higher, broad-based, non-biased education like we in the West do. I'd like to…
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Added by Keith Adam Britt on March 4, 2010 at 10:37pm —
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Ira Glass... he's the host and producer of This American Life that most American's can listen to on NPR. Find his bio here:
What I like about Ira, and the rest of the This American Life staff for that matter, is that they continually seek out and find stories that inspire people. If you listen to This American Life on a regular basis, you can't…
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Added by Keith Adam Britt on March 4, 2010 at 10:26pm —
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Here's my own personal secret to social innovation... do it all over again. In software design we call this process refactoring. Write the code, get it to work and then start all over again learning from the mistakes you made doing it the first time.
As someone that's been to one of the world's worst countries (and I mean that economically, environmentally, and every other sub category by which you could judge a sovereign state), I can tell you the one big mistake that WE…
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Added by Keith Adam Britt on March 4, 2010 at 10:13pm —
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