Share this postPetervan's DelicaciesPeter Vander Auwera - Issue #11Copy linkFacebookEmailNotesMorePeter Vander Auwera - Issue #11PetervanSep 15, 2015Share this postPetervan's DelicaciesPeter Vander Auwera - Issue #11Copy linkFacebookEmailNotesMoreShareThree lessons in sense makingAgency, a socially conscious creative studio based in Sydney and New York, is challenging people to rethink how we talk about, and therefore think about people being forced to flee their homelandsLong unsung, financial tech companies that lend, process, or even create money have flooded the Inc 500.Actually, Holacracy is highly structuredWe live in a technologically advanced society. Unfortunately, the study of organizational innovation has never been more…Head of policy for GoogleX hints it could possibly move towards mass manufacturing of fully autonomous prototypes, ahead of road tests in AustinThe tech giant is trying to digitally replicate and curate the world’s art and culture, and it’s facing head-on doubts about its true intentions.nullNew courses will study the origins of Bitcoin, and its surprisingly varied potential applications.Human genomics is just the beginning: the Earth has 50 billion tons of DNA. What happens when we have the entire biocode?Using technology is like having sex. We like the fun, the feelings, and the connection with others. But if aren’t mindful of downstream consequences like having babies, spreading disease, and dealing with psycho ex-lovers, we can end up in situations that we never anticipated. Silicon Valley's hoodied hordes are massing at Wall Street's gates. And the suits might just let them in.If you can’t remember life before the Internet, there’s one reality you probably find it really hard to grok: in the lat…Katy Lederer writes about the origins of the G.D.P. as a measure of the economy’s health and about why we should probably stop using it.I was recently invited to address a conference on planning in elite sports – as part of the 2024 Olympics preparation. It got me thinking that whenFaster, More Adaptive TeamsA web obsessed with gathering data about our habits becomes less valuable to us, showing us only more and more of the same.PreviousNext