Archive for the Crafting the Noosphere Category

TEDx Boston LogoTEDx Boston could have been a bit overwhelming. OK,it was a bit overwhelming. Luckily I have a trick up my sleeve for situations exactly like TEDx, where I’ll be bombarded by a large amount of data in a short amount of time. There is no way that I would be able to take standard, linear notes that would capture the richness of the experience. So, just as I did throughout undergrad part II and grad school, I mind mapped like crazy, prompting many an onlooker to comment.

Other folks have posted their own summaries of the day’s proceedings so I will not duplicate their work. I will link to them, though, at the bottom of this post. Please, take a look at the map I’ve created, and use it as I do, as a way to make concrete the shape and structure of the day, the interrelationships and resonances, the confirmations and contradictions between the ideas presented. So many of them are so compelling, I’m sure that many of these memes have infected my brain.

Please note, the mind map linked to is very, very large. Below the map is a translation of the map into a linear outline, all courtesy of Freeplane, an open source, java based mind mapping tool. I’m mostly happy with it, though it could stand some improving. For example, I could not find the spell check feature they swear is in there.

Anyway, the map is linked below. Have fun!

TEDx Boston Mind Map

TEDX Mindmap

TEDx Boston Mind Map

Creative Commons The map is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution – Noncommercial – Share Alike 3.0 United States License.

Please let me know what you think.


And now those Promised blog links.

More as I come across them.


I was not the only person drawing like mad during the presentations. Graphic Facilitators from Collective Next were busily illustrating the key ideas in each presentation. They were displayed en masse at the post-conference reception.

Dave McLaughlin, Economic Growth Through Crowd-SourcingSusan Avery, The Ocean and UsSeth Prebatsch, The Game Layer on Top of the WorldMary Gunn: Two Problems, One SolutionLynwood Walter, Claudia Gold, Matt Gordon: Digital Fabrication of Homes

John Harthorne: Starting a Startup RenaissanceCesar Hidalgo: Global Economic DevelopmentAlex Bok: Making the Promise of Renewable Energy RealFelice Frankel: More Than Pretty PicturesJohn Werner, MacCalvin Romain: Learning Out of the Box

Bill Walczak: Community Health CareBill Staby: Harvesting Ocean WavesSapir Ng: New Life for an Abandoned TunnelSusan Rogerson: Love, Creativity and CommunityScott Kirsner: We Need a Cultural Revolution

Conor White-Sullivan: The Revolution Will Not Be TelevisedFrank Reynolds: Changing the Face of NeuroscienceLarry Lessig: Redefining Campaign FundingEric Mongeon: Edgar Allan Poe, Fear and CreativityAnn Christensen: A Lesson Learned

Omar Wasow: How a $10 Computer Changed My LifeVibha Pingel: Beyond MicrofinanceBill Warner: Building Startups from the Heart

TEDx Boston LogoToday I spent all day at TEDx Boston. My brain is full of intriguing ideas; some I agree with, some of which I’m not too sure of, all of which have me thinking. Thinking more than usual.

If you know me, that’s a lot of thinking.

What is TEDx Boston? For that matter, what is TED? Well, you could just follow the link, but I’ll tell you. TED is a small nonprofit devoted to Ideas Worth Spreading. TED originally stood for Technology, Entertainment, Design, but the conference has grown in scope far beyond that.

What then is TEDx? TEDxis a new program that enables local communities such as schools, businesses, libraries, neighborhoods or just groups of friends to organize, design and host their own independent, TED-like events.

If you know me, you know that I’m a mind mapper. For me it is the fastest way for me to record notes in high density, along with recording connections amongst and between ideas. Plus, the physical act of diagramming improves my recall. Re-drawing my notes improves my recall even more, in addition to allowing me to tease out even more connections / references / reflections / refractions / contradictions in the idea space presented and represented.

That’s why I’m not going to say anything more about TEDx Boston until this coming Sunday. The mind maps I generated are so huge, that it will take that long for me to straighten them out. They’ll be an integral part of my next post.

Until then, Keep Thinking. Share those Ideas.

Come on in! How do you like the new digs?

If you belong to any Yahoo Groups this is important .

Yahoo is now using something called “Web Beacons” to track YahooGroup
users around the net and see what you’re doing and where you are going — similar to cookies, but not cookies. Yahoo is recording every website and every group you visit.

Take a look at their updated privacy statement:
http://privacy.yahoo.com/privacy

About half-way down the page, in the section on cookies, you will see a link that says web beacons.

Click on the phrase web beacons. That will bring you to a paragraph entitled “Outside the Yahoo Network.”

In this section you’ll see a little “click here to opt out” link that will let you “opt-out” of their new method of snooping.

Once you have clicked that link, you are exempted.

Notice the “Success” message on the top of the next page. Be careful because on that page there is a “Cancel Opt-out” button that, if clicked, will *undo** the opt-out.