Your body is a gift of the earth; in the end you will give it back.Rhea Myers
This document contains a collection of quotes, statements, and ideas on the topics of communication, technology, networks, and their evolution. Some of the key points discussed include:
- Effective communication depends on shared knowledge between parties.
- Networks have the ability to reconfigure by deleting redundant or useless nodes and adding new ones.
- As technology advances, it can appear magical or be indistinguishable from magic.
- Networks and interconnected systems have properties similar to living things, with an ability to evolve and adapt over time.
Blockchain trends, opportunities and challenges. decentralized governance and how Blockchain can transform the world. How technology convergence of Artificial intelligence, Blockchain and IOT can create sustainable value for future.
Denise McKenzie, the Executive Director of Communication and Outreach at the Open Geospatial Consortium, gave a strategic conference. She discussed her role at OGC and that she is an Australian citizen living in the UK who travels globally. She also summarized some of OGC's key technology trends such as data sciences, virtual and augmented reality, cloud computing, digital twins, autonomous vehicles, blockchain, and indoor mapping. The presentation addressed topics like the potential of digital twins to create virtual 3D models of the real world and the line between innovative IoT and mobile technologies and creepy intrusion into personal lives. McKenzie closed by saying this is a moment of great opportunity but also responsibility that can only be achieved through continued cooperation
This presentation was provided in 2009 and is certainly temporal, given the nature of the discussion.
Presentation roughly 10 minutes as part of a panel.
This document provides an overview of Citrix Systems, Inc.:
- Citrix generated $1.9 billion in revenue in 2010 and has 6,600 employees worldwide and over 10,000 partners in 100 countries.
- Citrix serves over 250,000 customers including all of the Fortune 500 companies. Citrix is the #1 provider of desktop and application virtualization and has over 75% of internet users and 80% of public clouds as customers.
- Citrix's vision is to enable people to work from anywhere through virtual workstyles and virtual datacenters to deliver virtual computing experiences for data, meetings, support, clients, desktops, apps, networks and servers across clouds.
A 20-minute talk, which incorporates the phases of the sharing economy, leading to what blockchain teaches us about the future of the economy and not only what's possible, but where things are culturally moving and must go for the sake of humanity and our planet.
We're sitting at the precipice of automation and the next phase of the sharing economy will connect humanity through blockchain technology in ways we've never considered (mostly because they haven't been possible).
You'll learn about the phases of the peer-to-peer economy and get insights and examples of what's next through the lens of blockchain technology covering the lessons of how value, exchange, incentives, and even currency itself will change.
This document discusses the potential for blockchain technology to create positive social change if implemented responsibly, as well as the risks of a dystopian outcome if not guided by ethical principles. It highlights grassroots startups already using blockchain to empower small farmers, certify supply chains, reduce costs for African businesses, and help refugees. However, it also notes the need for a "duty of care" given blockchain's ability to fundamentally transform structures, and that criminals could exploit vulnerabilities to manipulate important institutions without clear ethical guidelines.
Download the full report now: http://bit.ly/1QD3aDm
Imagine a future where you don’t have to think about money. Got it? Well you’re probably thinking about it the wrong way. Because today, right now, money isn’t real.
That bill you can hold in your hand is simply a representation of a transaction about to take place, completely dependent upon our belief that it has a value. We believe wholeheartedly that a piece of paper can be exchanged for a cup of coffee or a microwave oven. But, when we strip away our dependence on this concept of “money”, and the physicality of its exchange, what remains in the pure transaction. A transaction of value.
This report unpacks how our very concept of money is evolving, and describes how the system designed to manage its movement is ripe for disruption. This shift will create immediate opportunities for brands to connect with consumers as not only participants, but partners in modern culture.
Our report examines:
• The concept of value beyond traditional financial notions
• How value hinges upon trust, and the way trust is driving disruption
• Tech startups and small group communities working together to challenge the way we’re paying for our lives
• Peer to peer exchanges, dying middlemen and algorithmic security
• New asset classes and a working vision of the Internet of Things
49 pp., 23 illustrations
Our report points to the near future, where every person, place, and thing has a measurable value that can be exchanged intangibly, rapidly, securely, and most importantly, directly. It’s a system where abstract notions like social currency have a value that can be transacted in the same way that we now buy a cup of coffee. It’s a system that can empower a planet where every single device, every head of lettuce, every drop of fuel, every road and cable that make up our infrastructure have a value not only in and of itself, but also in the context of its use.
Meet your new value system, or the future of money. UnMoney.
Methodology
For this report, sparks & honey conducted research and interviewed experts at DevCon1 in London (2015) and the Scaling Bitcoin Workshop in Hong Kong (2015). Using new social listening tools, we gauged public sentiment around the disruption of established currencies and financial systems. And tapping into our global scout network and proprietary cultural intelligence system, we combed through thousands of signals to build a vision of the future of value in an unmonied world.
Your body is a gift of the earth; in the end you will give it back.Rhea Myers
This document contains a collection of quotes, statements, and ideas on the topics of communication, technology, networks, and their evolution. Some of the key points discussed include:
- Effective communication depends on shared knowledge between parties.
- Networks have the ability to reconfigure by deleting redundant or useless nodes and adding new ones.
- As technology advances, it can appear magical or be indistinguishable from magic.
- Networks and interconnected systems have properties similar to living things, with an ability to evolve and adapt over time.
Blockchain trends, opportunities and challenges. decentralized governance and how Blockchain can transform the world. How technology convergence of Artificial intelligence, Blockchain and IOT can create sustainable value for future.
Denise McKenzie, the Executive Director of Communication and Outreach at the Open Geospatial Consortium, gave a strategic conference. She discussed her role at OGC and that she is an Australian citizen living in the UK who travels globally. She also summarized some of OGC's key technology trends such as data sciences, virtual and augmented reality, cloud computing, digital twins, autonomous vehicles, blockchain, and indoor mapping. The presentation addressed topics like the potential of digital twins to create virtual 3D models of the real world and the line between innovative IoT and mobile technologies and creepy intrusion into personal lives. McKenzie closed by saying this is a moment of great opportunity but also responsibility that can only be achieved through continued cooperation
This presentation was provided in 2009 and is certainly temporal, given the nature of the discussion.
Presentation roughly 10 minutes as part of a panel.
This document provides an overview of Citrix Systems, Inc.:
- Citrix generated $1.9 billion in revenue in 2010 and has 6,600 employees worldwide and over 10,000 partners in 100 countries.
- Citrix serves over 250,000 customers including all of the Fortune 500 companies. Citrix is the #1 provider of desktop and application virtualization and has over 75% of internet users and 80% of public clouds as customers.
- Citrix's vision is to enable people to work from anywhere through virtual workstyles and virtual datacenters to deliver virtual computing experiences for data, meetings, support, clients, desktops, apps, networks and servers across clouds.
A 20-minute talk, which incorporates the phases of the sharing economy, leading to what blockchain teaches us about the future of the economy and not only what's possible, but where things are culturally moving and must go for the sake of humanity and our planet.
We're sitting at the precipice of automation and the next phase of the sharing economy will connect humanity through blockchain technology in ways we've never considered (mostly because they haven't been possible).
You'll learn about the phases of the peer-to-peer economy and get insights and examples of what's next through the lens of blockchain technology covering the lessons of how value, exchange, incentives, and even currency itself will change.
This document discusses the potential for blockchain technology to create positive social change if implemented responsibly, as well as the risks of a dystopian outcome if not guided by ethical principles. It highlights grassroots startups already using blockchain to empower small farmers, certify supply chains, reduce costs for African businesses, and help refugees. However, it also notes the need for a "duty of care" given blockchain's ability to fundamentally transform structures, and that criminals could exploit vulnerabilities to manipulate important institutions without clear ethical guidelines.
Download the full report now: http://bit.ly/1QD3aDm
Imagine a future where you don’t have to think about money. Got it? Well you’re probably thinking about it the wrong way. Because today, right now, money isn’t real.
That bill you can hold in your hand is simply a representation of a transaction about to take place, completely dependent upon our belief that it has a value. We believe wholeheartedly that a piece of paper can be exchanged for a cup of coffee or a microwave oven. But, when we strip away our dependence on this concept of “money”, and the physicality of its exchange, what remains in the pure transaction. A transaction of value.
This report unpacks how our very concept of money is evolving, and describes how the system designed to manage its movement is ripe for disruption. This shift will create immediate opportunities for brands to connect with consumers as not only participants, but partners in modern culture.
Our report examines:
• The concept of value beyond traditional financial notions
• How value hinges upon trust, and the way trust is driving disruption
• Tech startups and small group communities working together to challenge the way we’re paying for our lives
• Peer to peer exchanges, dying middlemen and algorithmic security
• New asset classes and a working vision of the Internet of Things
49 pp., 23 illustrations
Our report points to the near future, where every person, place, and thing has a measurable value that can be exchanged intangibly, rapidly, securely, and most importantly, directly. It’s a system where abstract notions like social currency have a value that can be transacted in the same way that we now buy a cup of coffee. It’s a system that can empower a planet where every single device, every head of lettuce, every drop of fuel, every road and cable that make up our infrastructure have a value not only in and of itself, but also in the context of its use.
Meet your new value system, or the future of money. UnMoney.
Methodology
For this report, sparks & honey conducted research and interviewed experts at DevCon1 in London (2015) and the Scaling Bitcoin Workshop in Hong Kong (2015). Using new social listening tools, we gauged public sentiment around the disruption of established currencies and financial systems. And tapping into our global scout network and proprietary cultural intelligence system, we combed through thousands of signals to build a vision of the future of value in an unmonied world.
Brands, Blockchains & The Creation of Value - Laura Masse - Sept 2022.pdfLauraMasse1
Brands, Blockchains & The Creation of Value shines light on the myriad capabilities, applications and benefits of blockchain technology for business. It charts a course through decentralized finance and Web3 to unpack fresh opportunity for brands to harness the technology to create a symbiotic and self-propelling circle of value with their customers. And finally, it provides a glimpse into the Metaverse and frames key questions for forward-thinking executives. The velocity of today’s technological tsunami and the hype surrounding it can make it difficult to discern the opportunity, to separate the noise from the light. This paper provides inspiration for that heavy lifting.
Brands, Blockchains & The Creation of Value - Laura Masse - Sept 2022.pdfLauraMasse1
Brands, Blockchains & The Creation of Value shines light on the myriad capabilities, applications and benefits of blockchain technology for business. It charts a course through decentralized finance and Web3 to unpack fresh opportunity for brands to harness the technology to create a symbiotic and self-propelling circle of value with their customers. And finally, it provides a glimpse into the Metaverse and frames key questions for forward-thinking executives.
The velocity of today’s technological tsunami and the hype surrounding it can make it difficult to discern the opportunity, to separate the noise from the light. This paper provides inspiration for that heavy lifting.
Blockchain organizing is a new way to transfer value between parties without needing to trust each other. Blockchain allows for nearly zero transaction costs and acts as a digital supply chain to connect supply and demand through secure record keeping. Blockchain technology is still in an early phase similar to the internet in the 1970s but has potential to transform how we organize data, trust, work and economic systems. New organizational models may replace traditional hierarchies and intermediaries with distributed networks leveraging blockchain's ability to programmable secure transactions.
Metaverse - A new Playground for Financial WealthFüzuli Aliyev
Metaverse is convergence of our physical and digital lives, creating a unified, virtual community where we can work, play, relax, transact and socialize.
Almost every day company or celebrity joins that virtual universe.
Blockchain has enabled digital currencies and NFTs.
The new methods to transact and own digital goods are allowing creators to monetize their activities through tokens.
Metaconcerts
Metawedding
Metaembassy
This document provides information about Metasynergy, a decentralized metaverse and cryptocurrency project. It summarizes Metasynergy as a virtual world consisting of tradeable objects and properties that will generate value for owners. It describes Metasynergy's mission to support creativity in multi-level marketing and its focus on customer service, operations, and products. The document also outlines Metasynergy's profit sharing and referral bonus structure for investors and discusses the project's goals of listing on exchanges and guiding protocol development.
The metaverse is a concept of a persistent, online, 3D virtual environment that combines multiple virtual spaces. Users will be able to interact with each other through avatars in these 3D spaces. While a fully realized metaverse does not yet exist, some current platforms incorporate metaverse-like features. Online video games provide the closest experience currently by hosting virtual events and creating virtual economies. Blockchain technology is also well-suited for powering elements of the metaverse through features like digital ownership and governance.
Will the collaborative economy create meaningful and purposeful organizations?OuiShare
OuiShare Connector Cristóbal Gracia facilitated 30' keynote about the Collaborative Economy at the EBBF's 25th annual conference about unity and collaboration.
Mckinsey how blockchains could change the worldmartin tan
Don Tapscott believes that blockchains, the technology underpinning Bitcoin, have the potential to revolutionize the global economy. Blockchains allow for direct peer-to-peer transactions without powerful intermediaries through an open-source distributed ledger secured by cryptography. This could transform industries like finance, music, and more by facilitating new forms of collaboration and ensuring creators are compensated. However, challenges around governance, energy use, and job disruption could hinder its potential if not addressed.
This document provides an overview of blockchain technology and its applications from the perspective of the Director of RMIT Blockchain Innovation Hub. It defines blockchain as a new economic infrastructure that allows records to be maintained in an append-only public ledger. Bitcoin is discussed as an early example of blockchain, combining technologies like cryptography, peer-to-peer networking, and consensus algorithms. Potential uses of blockchain include facilitating trade, creating new economies and currencies, implementing smart contracts, and innovating on governance models. Specific applications highlighted include supply chain management, autonomous machines and the Internet of Things, digital law, and community decision making platforms. The document concludes by discussing blockchain-focused education courses to prepare students for jobs in the emerging blockchain economy.
This document provides an overview of blockchain technology and its applications from the perspective of the Director of RMIT Blockchain Innovation Hub. It defines blockchain as a new economic infrastructure that allows records to be maintained in an append-only public ledger. Bitcoin is discussed as an early example that solved double spending using cryptography, peer-to-peer networking, and consensus algorithms. Potential applications mentioned include facilitating trade, creating new economies and cryptocurrencies, implementing smart contracts, and enabling decentralized governance models. Specific examples discussed are using blockchain for supply chain management, autonomous machines and devices, and digital law. The document concludes by outlining blockchain-related courses offered at RMIT to prepare students for work in the emerging blockchain economy.
How is blockchain technology going to change the worldAmanKumarSingh97
If you look at the chronology, you'll see that the decentralized cryptocurrency was established around the period of the last global financial crisis, which elevates the significance of this finding.
Self-sovereign identity (SSI) allows individuals to control their digital identities and data. Current identity systems are centralized and do not give individuals ownership over their data. SSI uses blockchain technology and decentralized identifiers to return control and ownership of digital identities to individuals. The document discusses concepts needed to build decentralized identity systems, including issuers, holders, verifiers, and governance frameworks. It also covers ethics and building systems that improve people's lives.
Blockchain Insider | Chapter 2: The Name of The GameKoh How Tze
All things blockchain, ledger technology, and cryptocurrencies.
If you don't believe me or don't get it, I don't have time to try to convince you, sorry. I don't know the future. I didn't write this to tell you how this is going to end. I write about how it all begins. I'm going to show you a world without boundaries. A world where anything is possible. Where we go from here is a choice I leave to you.
This is part of my project related to Blockchain technology. If you like the work above, and would like to make a contribution to this work, you are welcome to make some Bitcoin donation in support of this project to this wallet:
1PuENxGUTYxMe5tSk53kCPXPaoFVN2vKTU
You can also reach me at SteemIt community here, if you are a Steemian:
https://steemit.com/@howtze
For project related updates, kindly visit the official website:
http://www.BCInsider.MY
Thank you.
The document discusses the state of enterprise blockchain technology. It provides the following key points:
1) While blockchain attracted billions of dollars in investments and hype in recent years, evidence of practical scalable use cases is still limited according to a McKinsey report.
2) However, the technology is still developing with hundreds of projects and startups working in the area and attracting technical talent to solve problems around trust and transparency.
3) A Deloitte survey found that most enterprises see blockchain becoming mainstream and believe there is a business case for the technology, with over 40% considering it a priority.
How the blockchain is changing money and business, is it the currenc.pdfmohammedfootwear
How the blockchain is changing money and business, is it the currency of the future? Why or
Why not.
Solution
Over the past thirty years, no intellect of the digital age has higher explained ensuing huge factor
than Don Tapscott. In Wikinomics (2006) he was the primary to point out however the net
provides the primary world platform for mass collaboration. currently he writes a couple of
profound technological shift which will modification however the planet will business – and
everything else – mistreatment blockchain technology, that powers the digital currency Bitcoin.
The Internet as we all know it\'s nice for collaboration and communication, however deeply
imperfect once it involves commerce and privacy. The new blockchain technology facilitates
peer-to-peer transactions with none go-between like a bank or brass. this suggests personal|that
non-public} data is private and secure, whereas all activity is clear and incorrupt – reconciled by
mass collaboration and keep in code on a digital ledger. In different words we tend to won’t
ought to trust one another within the ancient sense, as a result of trust is constructed into the
system itself.
Bitcoin is just one application for this nice innovation in applied science. The blockchain will
hold any instrument, from deeds and wedding licenses to instructional degrees and birth
certificates. Tapscott calls it “the World Wide Ledger.” It permits sensible contracts, localized
autonomous organizations, localized government services, and transactions among things.
The forthcoming book can show however the blockchain can form ensuing era of prosperity in
finance, business, healthcare, education, governance, and lots of different fields.
The blockchain is largely a distributed info. consider a large, world computer program that runs
on millions and various computers. It’s distributed. It’s open supply, thus anyone will
modification the underlying code, and that they will see what’s occurring. It’s really peer to peer;
it doesn’t need powerful intermediaries to evidence or to settle transactions.
It uses progressive cryptography, thus if we\'ve a worldwide, distributed info that may record the
actual fact that we’ve done this dealing, what else might it record? Well, it might record any
structured data, not simply World Health Organization paid World Health Organizationm
however conjointly World Health Organization married whom or who owns what land or what
lightweight bought power from what power supply. within the case of the net of Things, we’re
getting to want a blockchain-settlement system beneath. Banks won’t be able to settle trillions of
period transactions between things.
So this can be a unprecedented factor. Associate in Nursing changeless, unhackable distributed
info of digital assets. this can be a platform for truth and it’s a platform for trust. The
implications square measure staggering, not only for the financial-services trade however
conjointly right across nearly each facet of soc.
Blockchain, whose origins are blended (and often blurred) with the cryptocurrency Bitcoin, is a disruptive technology with the potential to transform how goods and services are exchanged over the internet. Blockchain allows complex transactions to be carried out transparently and securely, on a distributed interaction model that ousts multiple established intermediaries, eradicating the control held by central authorities in traditional methods of digital transaction.
Future of the sharing economy An emerging view 30 March 2017Future Agenda
Humans have always shared. More recently, enabled by technology, new forms of sharing and access have begun to transform industries as well as the way we live our lives, creating financial return and social reward for participants. From AirBnB (爱彼迎 ) to Uber and Didi Chuxing, the sharing economy has rapidly moved from niche to mainstream in a number of categories, most notably accommodation and transportation.
But where next? Building on insights from the wider Future Agenda programme with recent research and interviews with a number of industry leaders and experts, we’re delighted to share an emerging view of the Future of the Sharing Economy.
Over the next few weeks we are asking for feedback and opinion from around the world. We’d really welcome your perspective, comments, challenge and additional insights to co-create an enriched informed future view for all. We will then update and share.
As with all Future Agenda output, this is being published under creative commons (share alike non commercial) so you are free to share and quote as suits.
Openbar 3 - Leuven - The Ledger - Where's the business in BlockchainOpenbar
This document discusses the potential of blockchain technology and shared ledgers to establish trust and truth in digital systems. It explores how humans perceive reality and form social order, and proposes that blockchain allows for a shared concept of truth through distributed, immutable ledgers. Several use cases are presented, including skill certification and building renovation records. The document promotes collaboration to further develop blockchain applications and build trust between organizations.
ThynkBlynk is creating ChainTrail.com, an online subscription service powered by blockchain that enables identity-attribute based transactions to be executed securely, efficiently and digitally. Co-founded by executives with over 60 years of combined international experience, ChainTrail.com will offer a global marketplace with local solutions. The presentation discusses what blockchain is, how it differs from traditional databases, examples of public and private blockchain applications, and how ChainTrail.com aims to change transactions by providing a unified network for storing and transacting with digitally verified credentials.
Persona descriptions for Resort Reservation Systemroses/foundation
This document profiles 4 potential RV park guests - Tom Mitchell, Isabella Torres, Linda Dupont, and George Krevet. Each profile includes demographic information like gender, age, occupation, as well as details about their RV, stay duration, interests, habits, and preferences to help identify their needs and how they might enjoy their stay. The profiles provide insight into guests' hobbies, technology use, social activities and more to assist staff in ensuring a positive experience.
The document describes a mobile application called Treever that allows users to create and share custom multimedia messages called "treeves". Key features include integrating users' photos, music and text to automatically generate unique 8-15 second "digital dopamine delights"; scheduling and automation tools; and potential revenue streams like subscriptions, branded templates, and partnerships. It provides an overview of the company's vision to bring greater emotional engagement to mobile messaging through music and discusses their platform, development roadmap, and financial needs.
Contenu connexe
Similaire à Future of Blockchain - TEDx Presentation Design
Brands, Blockchains & The Creation of Value - Laura Masse - Sept 2022.pdfLauraMasse1
Brands, Blockchains & The Creation of Value shines light on the myriad capabilities, applications and benefits of blockchain technology for business. It charts a course through decentralized finance and Web3 to unpack fresh opportunity for brands to harness the technology to create a symbiotic and self-propelling circle of value with their customers. And finally, it provides a glimpse into the Metaverse and frames key questions for forward-thinking executives. The velocity of today’s technological tsunami and the hype surrounding it can make it difficult to discern the opportunity, to separate the noise from the light. This paper provides inspiration for that heavy lifting.
Brands, Blockchains & The Creation of Value - Laura Masse - Sept 2022.pdfLauraMasse1
Brands, Blockchains & The Creation of Value shines light on the myriad capabilities, applications and benefits of blockchain technology for business. It charts a course through decentralized finance and Web3 to unpack fresh opportunity for brands to harness the technology to create a symbiotic and self-propelling circle of value with their customers. And finally, it provides a glimpse into the Metaverse and frames key questions for forward-thinking executives.
The velocity of today’s technological tsunami and the hype surrounding it can make it difficult to discern the opportunity, to separate the noise from the light. This paper provides inspiration for that heavy lifting.
Blockchain organizing is a new way to transfer value between parties without needing to trust each other. Blockchain allows for nearly zero transaction costs and acts as a digital supply chain to connect supply and demand through secure record keeping. Blockchain technology is still in an early phase similar to the internet in the 1970s but has potential to transform how we organize data, trust, work and economic systems. New organizational models may replace traditional hierarchies and intermediaries with distributed networks leveraging blockchain's ability to programmable secure transactions.
Metaverse - A new Playground for Financial WealthFüzuli Aliyev
Metaverse is convergence of our physical and digital lives, creating a unified, virtual community where we can work, play, relax, transact and socialize.
Almost every day company or celebrity joins that virtual universe.
Blockchain has enabled digital currencies and NFTs.
The new methods to transact and own digital goods are allowing creators to monetize their activities through tokens.
Metaconcerts
Metawedding
Metaembassy
This document provides information about Metasynergy, a decentralized metaverse and cryptocurrency project. It summarizes Metasynergy as a virtual world consisting of tradeable objects and properties that will generate value for owners. It describes Metasynergy's mission to support creativity in multi-level marketing and its focus on customer service, operations, and products. The document also outlines Metasynergy's profit sharing and referral bonus structure for investors and discusses the project's goals of listing on exchanges and guiding protocol development.
The metaverse is a concept of a persistent, online, 3D virtual environment that combines multiple virtual spaces. Users will be able to interact with each other through avatars in these 3D spaces. While a fully realized metaverse does not yet exist, some current platforms incorporate metaverse-like features. Online video games provide the closest experience currently by hosting virtual events and creating virtual economies. Blockchain technology is also well-suited for powering elements of the metaverse through features like digital ownership and governance.
Will the collaborative economy create meaningful and purposeful organizations?OuiShare
OuiShare Connector Cristóbal Gracia facilitated 30' keynote about the Collaborative Economy at the EBBF's 25th annual conference about unity and collaboration.
Mckinsey how blockchains could change the worldmartin tan
Don Tapscott believes that blockchains, the technology underpinning Bitcoin, have the potential to revolutionize the global economy. Blockchains allow for direct peer-to-peer transactions without powerful intermediaries through an open-source distributed ledger secured by cryptography. This could transform industries like finance, music, and more by facilitating new forms of collaboration and ensuring creators are compensated. However, challenges around governance, energy use, and job disruption could hinder its potential if not addressed.
This document provides an overview of blockchain technology and its applications from the perspective of the Director of RMIT Blockchain Innovation Hub. It defines blockchain as a new economic infrastructure that allows records to be maintained in an append-only public ledger. Bitcoin is discussed as an early example of blockchain, combining technologies like cryptography, peer-to-peer networking, and consensus algorithms. Potential uses of blockchain include facilitating trade, creating new economies and currencies, implementing smart contracts, and innovating on governance models. Specific applications highlighted include supply chain management, autonomous machines and the Internet of Things, digital law, and community decision making platforms. The document concludes by discussing blockchain-focused education courses to prepare students for jobs in the emerging blockchain economy.
This document provides an overview of blockchain technology and its applications from the perspective of the Director of RMIT Blockchain Innovation Hub. It defines blockchain as a new economic infrastructure that allows records to be maintained in an append-only public ledger. Bitcoin is discussed as an early example that solved double spending using cryptography, peer-to-peer networking, and consensus algorithms. Potential applications mentioned include facilitating trade, creating new economies and cryptocurrencies, implementing smart contracts, and enabling decentralized governance models. Specific examples discussed are using blockchain for supply chain management, autonomous machines and devices, and digital law. The document concludes by outlining blockchain-related courses offered at RMIT to prepare students for work in the emerging blockchain economy.
How is blockchain technology going to change the worldAmanKumarSingh97
If you look at the chronology, you'll see that the decentralized cryptocurrency was established around the period of the last global financial crisis, which elevates the significance of this finding.
Self-sovereign identity (SSI) allows individuals to control their digital identities and data. Current identity systems are centralized and do not give individuals ownership over their data. SSI uses blockchain technology and decentralized identifiers to return control and ownership of digital identities to individuals. The document discusses concepts needed to build decentralized identity systems, including issuers, holders, verifiers, and governance frameworks. It also covers ethics and building systems that improve people's lives.
Blockchain Insider | Chapter 2: The Name of The GameKoh How Tze
All things blockchain, ledger technology, and cryptocurrencies.
If you don't believe me or don't get it, I don't have time to try to convince you, sorry. I don't know the future. I didn't write this to tell you how this is going to end. I write about how it all begins. I'm going to show you a world without boundaries. A world where anything is possible. Where we go from here is a choice I leave to you.
This is part of my project related to Blockchain technology. If you like the work above, and would like to make a contribution to this work, you are welcome to make some Bitcoin donation in support of this project to this wallet:
1PuENxGUTYxMe5tSk53kCPXPaoFVN2vKTU
You can also reach me at SteemIt community here, if you are a Steemian:
https://steemit.com/@howtze
For project related updates, kindly visit the official website:
http://www.BCInsider.MY
Thank you.
The document discusses the state of enterprise blockchain technology. It provides the following key points:
1) While blockchain attracted billions of dollars in investments and hype in recent years, evidence of practical scalable use cases is still limited according to a McKinsey report.
2) However, the technology is still developing with hundreds of projects and startups working in the area and attracting technical talent to solve problems around trust and transparency.
3) A Deloitte survey found that most enterprises see blockchain becoming mainstream and believe there is a business case for the technology, with over 40% considering it a priority.
How the blockchain is changing money and business, is it the currenc.pdfmohammedfootwear
How the blockchain is changing money and business, is it the currency of the future? Why or
Why not.
Solution
Over the past thirty years, no intellect of the digital age has higher explained ensuing huge factor
than Don Tapscott. In Wikinomics (2006) he was the primary to point out however the net
provides the primary world platform for mass collaboration. currently he writes a couple of
profound technological shift which will modification however the planet will business – and
everything else – mistreatment blockchain technology, that powers the digital currency Bitcoin.
The Internet as we all know it\'s nice for collaboration and communication, however deeply
imperfect once it involves commerce and privacy. The new blockchain technology facilitates
peer-to-peer transactions with none go-between like a bank or brass. this suggests personal|that
non-public} data is private and secure, whereas all activity is clear and incorrupt – reconciled by
mass collaboration and keep in code on a digital ledger. In different words we tend to won’t
ought to trust one another within the ancient sense, as a result of trust is constructed into the
system itself.
Bitcoin is just one application for this nice innovation in applied science. The blockchain will
hold any instrument, from deeds and wedding licenses to instructional degrees and birth
certificates. Tapscott calls it “the World Wide Ledger.” It permits sensible contracts, localized
autonomous organizations, localized government services, and transactions among things.
The forthcoming book can show however the blockchain can form ensuing era of prosperity in
finance, business, healthcare, education, governance, and lots of different fields.
The blockchain is largely a distributed info. consider a large, world computer program that runs
on millions and various computers. It’s distributed. It’s open supply, thus anyone will
modification the underlying code, and that they will see what’s occurring. It’s really peer to peer;
it doesn’t need powerful intermediaries to evidence or to settle transactions.
It uses progressive cryptography, thus if we\'ve a worldwide, distributed info that may record the
actual fact that we’ve done this dealing, what else might it record? Well, it might record any
structured data, not simply World Health Organization paid World Health Organizationm
however conjointly World Health Organization married whom or who owns what land or what
lightweight bought power from what power supply. within the case of the net of Things, we’re
getting to want a blockchain-settlement system beneath. Banks won’t be able to settle trillions of
period transactions between things.
So this can be a unprecedented factor. Associate in Nursing changeless, unhackable distributed
info of digital assets. this can be a platform for truth and it’s a platform for trust. The
implications square measure staggering, not only for the financial-services trade however
conjointly right across nearly each facet of soc.
Blockchain, whose origins are blended (and often blurred) with the cryptocurrency Bitcoin, is a disruptive technology with the potential to transform how goods and services are exchanged over the internet. Blockchain allows complex transactions to be carried out transparently and securely, on a distributed interaction model that ousts multiple established intermediaries, eradicating the control held by central authorities in traditional methods of digital transaction.
Future of the sharing economy An emerging view 30 March 2017Future Agenda
Humans have always shared. More recently, enabled by technology, new forms of sharing and access have begun to transform industries as well as the way we live our lives, creating financial return and social reward for participants. From AirBnB (爱彼迎 ) to Uber and Didi Chuxing, the sharing economy has rapidly moved from niche to mainstream in a number of categories, most notably accommodation and transportation.
But where next? Building on insights from the wider Future Agenda programme with recent research and interviews with a number of industry leaders and experts, we’re delighted to share an emerging view of the Future of the Sharing Economy.
Over the next few weeks we are asking for feedback and opinion from around the world. We’d really welcome your perspective, comments, challenge and additional insights to co-create an enriched informed future view for all. We will then update and share.
As with all Future Agenda output, this is being published under creative commons (share alike non commercial) so you are free to share and quote as suits.
Openbar 3 - Leuven - The Ledger - Where's the business in BlockchainOpenbar
This document discusses the potential of blockchain technology and shared ledgers to establish trust and truth in digital systems. It explores how humans perceive reality and form social order, and proposes that blockchain allows for a shared concept of truth through distributed, immutable ledgers. Several use cases are presented, including skill certification and building renovation records. The document promotes collaboration to further develop blockchain applications and build trust between organizations.
ThynkBlynk is creating ChainTrail.com, an online subscription service powered by blockchain that enables identity-attribute based transactions to be executed securely, efficiently and digitally. Co-founded by executives with over 60 years of combined international experience, ChainTrail.com will offer a global marketplace with local solutions. The presentation discusses what blockchain is, how it differs from traditional databases, examples of public and private blockchain applications, and how ChainTrail.com aims to change transactions by providing a unified network for storing and transacting with digitally verified credentials.
Similaire à Future of Blockchain - TEDx Presentation Design (20)
Persona descriptions for Resort Reservation Systemroses/foundation
This document profiles 4 potential RV park guests - Tom Mitchell, Isabella Torres, Linda Dupont, and George Krevet. Each profile includes demographic information like gender, age, occupation, as well as details about their RV, stay duration, interests, habits, and preferences to help identify their needs and how they might enjoy their stay. The profiles provide insight into guests' hobbies, technology use, social activities and more to assist staff in ensuring a positive experience.
The document describes a mobile application called Treever that allows users to create and share custom multimedia messages called "treeves". Key features include integrating users' photos, music and text to automatically generate unique 8-15 second "digital dopamine delights"; scheduling and automation tools; and potential revenue streams like subscriptions, branded templates, and partnerships. It provides an overview of the company's vision to bring greater emotional engagement to mobile messaging through music and discusses their platform, development roadmap, and financial needs.
Hilo is a social networking platform that allows users to follow cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin, share insights with friends and influencers, and learn about cryptocurrencies through discussion. Hilo aims to make learning about cryptocurrencies easier by providing a single platform where users can view prices, indicators and engage with other users, from beginners to experts. Hilo's mission is to empower people to embrace cryptocurrencies through learning and conversation in an accessible way.
Case studies and work samples from the portfolio of Michael Dariusroses/foundation
The document provides an overview of the work experience and design projects of Michael Darius. It summarizes his roles designing visual systems and interfaces for companies like Cisco, Apple, and wearable tech startups. Some of his notable projects include designing the Cisco Symphony design system, visual language and pattern library for Cisco's next generation of endpoint systems in 2016, as well as his work on interfaces for early Apple products and services like the iTunes Store, iPhoto, and iCloud between 2000-2014.
The document summarizes research conducted by a designer at two optical shops in Seattle, Washington. At Ottica, the designer found a good selection of brands and helpful staff who noted customers frequently change their reading glasses to suit fashion trends. However, at Market Optical, the staff were confrontational and discouraged the designer from taking notes. The designer also included sketches for a new women's eyewear collection with descriptions of different frame styles suited to certain face shapes.
Visual Guidelines Document for Location-Based GPS App (Spime)roses/foundation
Maps use colors to represent different types of roads and routes. Major highways and interstates are typically shown in red, while smaller roads and streets are usually blue or green. Additional colors may indicate roads that are unpaved or private access routes.
M Concepts boutique design consultancy brochure v2roses/foundation
The document discusses product design for the human condition and describes several projects led by Michael, a principal product designer, including designing virus detection software for Mac, developing the first anonymous SMS service for iPhone, expanding a music player to the Android platform, establishing an elegant location-based widget, and creating centralized bookmark access within Apple's .Mac suite. The document provides details on the design process, goals, and outcomes of these various projects.
M Concepts boutique design consultancy brochure v1roses/foundation
The document describes a boutique design consultancy called M Concepts located in La Jolla, CA that specializes in product design for technology companies. M Concepts takes a human-centered approach to design and details their integrated 5 phase design process. The document also provides case studies highlighting projects M Concepts has worked on for companies like Apple, Sonosite, and McAfee.
Rethinkcafé is a 5-month service design incubator and founders program that coaches accepted applicants through iterative design sprints. Participants will connect with industry leaders and investors while working to iterate their service designs over the course of the program. The program includes weeks dedicated to problem identification, prototyping solutions, testing with customers, and unveiling designs.
The document advertises an invite-only conference called "Beyond Wearables" taking place May 28-29 at the Terra Museum in San Francisco. The conference will bring together CEOs, entrepreneurs, and industry experts to discuss the latest advances in technology beyond wearables and the Internet of Things. It will include sessions on augmented reality, machine-to-machine communication, smart innovations, and business insights for startups. The first day and morning of the second day will be a closed-door executive event, while the afternoon of the second day will be open to select participants.
The document provides design flows and mockups for the iPhone 5 interface of a social media application called Weeve. It includes 22 pages describing screens for signing up, entering email, confirming on Facebook, viewing a content feed with two posts, and using the browser. Each screen includes detailed properties for various interface elements like images, text labels, and buttons. The flows progress from an initial launch screen to signing up or logging in via Facebook, to viewing a content feed and browser functionality.
The document describes several personas - fictional profiles of potential users of a product. It provides details about each persona's goals, motivations and behaviors to help understand how they might use the product. The personas include Yashar Farina, a celebrity music producer; Cindy Falkner, a journalist and wedding photographer; Jin Lee, an engineering team lead planning her wedding; Tiana Sorenson, an aspiring photographer and fashionista; and Mike Monahan, a single father and teacher. The purpose of creating personas is to help design a product that meets people's needs and helps them achieve their goals.
This document provides an overview of the Hilo platform and its features. It describes the team behind Hilo including their investors and advisors. The roadmap outlines key milestones from January to October, including whitepaper, website, funding, advisors, beta testing, marketing campaigns, and the token sale. Features of the Hilo platform include a dashboard for activity, market data and portfolio tracking. The token sale aims to raise $10 million which will be distributed among advisors, development partners, and a user growth pool.
The document provides an overview of ProSphere 2.0 and its proposed workflow improvements. It includes wireframes of the updated design process, which streamlines uniform creation by guiding users through selection of player/team details, uniform components, fabrics, colors, graphics, and review/ordering. The redesign aims to make custom uniform design and purchasing more intuitive and efficient.
The document summarizes the design process for MANTIS, a fashion-forward heads-up display. It describes the discovery phase which included competitive research of other HUDs and creating a mood board. It then details the design phase where hand-drawn sketches were used to create basic shapes for a prototype using mirror-painted plastic and fabric. Feedback was gathered by taking the prototype out in the field. The final delivery phase was creating a presentation to showcase the process.
Inside the Google Glass Interaction Layer — Presentation given at the Qualcom...roses/foundation
This presentation was given at the Qualcomm Research Center discussing the nuances of the Google Glass Interaction Layer.
Here were a few of the topics covered throughout the evening:
How does the Google Glass’ interaction layer work and what constitutes good design when designing interactions for the device.
First we will define ‘what an interaction is’ on Google Glass. We will proceed to identify and classify good use cases from bad ones and then address where there is a margin for innovation surrounding those various use cases
This presentation by Thibault Schrepel, Associate Professor of Law at Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam University, was made during the discussion “Artificial Intelligence, Data and Competition” held at the 143rd meeting of the OECD Competition Committee on 12 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/aicomp.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
This presentation by Katharine Kemp, Associate Professor at the Faculty of Law & Justice at UNSW Sydney, was made during the discussion “The Intersection between Competition and Data Privacy” held at the 143rd meeting of the OECD Competition Committee on 13 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/ibcdp.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
This presentation by Professor Giuseppe Colangelo, Jean Monnet Professor of European Innovation Policy, was made during the discussion “The Intersection between Competition and Data Privacy” held at the 143rd meeting of the OECD Competition Committee on 13 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/ibcdp.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
Why Psychological Safety Matters for Software Teams - ACE 2024 - Ben Linders.pdfBen Linders
Psychological safety in teams is important; team members must feel safe and able to communicate and collaborate effectively to deliver value. It’s also necessary to build long-lasting teams since things will happen and relationships will be strained.
But, how safe is a team? How can we determine if there are any factors that make the team unsafe or have an impact on the team’s culture?
In this mini-workshop, we’ll play games for psychological safety and team culture utilizing a deck of coaching cards, The Psychological Safety Cards. We will learn how to use gamification to gain a better understanding of what’s going on in teams. Individuals share what they have learned from working in teams, what has impacted the team’s safety and culture, and what has led to positive change.
Different game formats will be played in groups in parallel. Examples are an ice-breaker to get people talking about psychological safety, a constellation where people take positions about aspects of psychological safety in their team or organization, and collaborative card games where people work together to create an environment that fosters psychological safety.
This presentation by OECD, OECD Secretariat, was made during the discussion “The Intersection between Competition and Data Privacy” held at the 143rd meeting of the OECD Competition Committee on 13 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/ibcdp.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
This presentation by OECD, OECD Secretariat, was made during the discussion “Competition and Regulation in Professions and Occupations” held at the 77th meeting of the OECD Working Party No. 2 on Competition and Regulation on 10 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/crps.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
This presentation by OECD, OECD Secretariat, was made during the discussion “Pro-competitive Industrial Policy” held at the 143rd meeting of the OECD Competition Committee on 12 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/pcip.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
This presentation by Nathaniel Lane, Associate Professor in Economics at Oxford University, was made during the discussion “Pro-competitive Industrial Policy” held at the 143rd meeting of the OECD Competition Committee on 12 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/pcip.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
This presentation by Yong Lim, Professor of Economic Law at Seoul National University School of Law, was made during the discussion “Artificial Intelligence, Data and Competition” held at the 143rd meeting of the OECD Competition Committee on 12 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/aicomp.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
XP 2024 presentation: A New Look to Leadershipsamililja
Presentation slides from XP2024 conference, Bolzano IT. The slides describe a new view to leadership and combines it with anthro-complexity (aka cynefin).
The importance of sustainable and efficient computational practices in artificial intelligence (AI) and deep learning has become increasingly critical. This webinar focuses on the intersection of sustainability and AI, highlighting the significance of energy-efficient deep learning, innovative randomization techniques in neural networks, the potential of reservoir computing, and the cutting-edge realm of neuromorphic computing. This webinar aims to connect theoretical knowledge with practical applications and provide insights into how these innovative approaches can lead to more robust, efficient, and environmentally conscious AI systems.
Webinar Speaker: Prof. Claudio Gallicchio, Assistant Professor, University of Pisa
Claudio Gallicchio is an Assistant Professor at the Department of Computer Science of the University of Pisa, Italy. His research involves merging concepts from Deep Learning, Dynamical Systems, and Randomized Neural Systems, and he has co-authored over 100 scientific publications on the subject. He is the founder of the IEEE CIS Task Force on Reservoir Computing, and the co-founder and chair of the IEEE Task Force on Randomization-based Neural Networks and Learning Systems. He is an associate editor of IEEE Transactions on Neural Networks and Learning Systems (TNNLS).
This presentation by Professor Alex Robson, Deputy Chair of Australia’s Productivity Commission, was made during the discussion “Competition and Regulation in Professions and Occupations” held at the 77th meeting of the OECD Working Party No. 2 on Competition and Regulation on 10 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/crps.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
This presentation by OECD, OECD Secretariat, was made during the discussion “Artificial Intelligence, Data and Competition” held at the 143rd meeting of the OECD Competition Committee on 12 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/aicomp.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
This presentation by Tim Capel, Director of the UK Information Commissioner’s Office Legal Service, was made during the discussion “The Intersection between Competition and Data Privacy” held at the 143rd meeting of the OECD Competition Committee on 13 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/ibcdp.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
1.) Introduction
Our Movement is not new; it is the same as it was for Freedom, Justice, and Equality since we were labeled as slaves. However, this movement at its core must entail economics.
2.) Historical Context
This is the same movement because none of the previous movements, such as boycotts, were ever completed. For some, maybe, but for the most part, it’s just a place to keep your stable until you’re ready to assimilate them into your system. The rest of the crabs are left in the world’s worst parts, begging for scraps.
3.) Economic Empowerment
Our Movement aims to show that it is indeed possible for the less fortunate to establish their economic system. Everyone else – Caucasian, Asian, Mexican, Israeli, Jews, etc. – has their systems, and they all set up and usurp money from the less fortunate. So, the less fortunate buy from every one of them, yet none of them buy from the less fortunate. Moreover, the less fortunate really don’t have anything to sell.
4.) Collaboration with Organizations
Our Movement will demonstrate how organizations such as the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, National Urban League, Black Lives Matter, and others can assist in creating a much more indestructible Black Wall Street.
5.) Vision for the Future
Our Movement will not settle for less than those who came before us and stopped before the rights were equal. The economy, jobs, healthcare, education, housing, incarceration – everything is unfair, and what isn’t is rigged for the less fortunate to fail, as evidenced in society.
6.) Call to Action
Our movement has started and implemented everything needed for the advancement of the economic system. There are positions for only those who understand the importance of this movement, as failure to address it will continue the degradation of the people deemed less fortunate.
No, this isn’t Noah’s Ark, nor am I a Prophet. I’m just a man who wrote a couple of books, created a magnificent website: http://www.thearkproject.llc, and who truly hopes to try and initiate a truly sustainable economic system for deprived people. We may not all have the same beliefs, but if our methods are tried, tested, and proven, we can come together and help others. My website: http://www.thearkproject.llc is very informative and considerably controversial. Please check it out, and if you are afraid, leave immediately; it’s no place for cowards. The last Prophet said: “Whoever among you sees an evil action, then let him change it with his hand [by taking action]; if he cannot, then with his tongue [by speaking out]; and if he cannot, then, with his heart – and that is the weakest of faith.” [Sahih Muslim] If we all, or even some of us, did this, there would be significant change. We are able to witness it on small and grand scales, for example, from climate control to business partnerships. I encourage, invite, and challenge you all to support me by visiting my website.
This presentation by Juraj Čorba, Chair of OECD Working Party on Artificial Intelligence Governance (AIGO), was made during the discussion “Artificial Intelligence, Data and Competition” held at the 143rd meeting of the OECD Competition Committee on 12 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/aicomp.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.