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Aug 09

venetian blinds made out of junk mail#9:  Venetian blinds

If you throwing junk mail into the recycling is a bit too dull, Proquo has a good list of creative things that we can do with all the excess paper ads that we receive on a weekly bases.  Most of the ten come complete with step-by-step instructions.

I particularly enjoyed #7.  ;)

Link

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Aug 08

A Global Warming Rug

Mexican design collective NEL has created A Global Warming Rug.  Manufactured by Nanimarquina, it will be on display at the International Furniture Festival in Valencia, Spain in late September.

The rug is 100% hand-tufted New Zealand wool with a felt bear.

via Neatorama.

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Aug 06

World City to City Internet Connections | chrisharrison.com

Mark Dykeman makes an interesting analogy on how broadband internet service drives today’s economy in the same way how cheap oil powered the industrial economy

Cheap oil was a hallmark of recent economic boom periods, permitting stable, continued economic development. Today, more expensive oil (not withstanding any recent price fluctuations) is leading to price increases in many sectors of the global economy, slowing growth by making it more expensive to travel, manufacture goods, heat our homes, and so on…

Cheap broadband Internet access has worked the same as cheap oil, powering the expansion of e-commerce, Web 1.0 and Web 2.0. At one time people were limited to dial up access for either Internet or other private online services (e.g. the original America Online, CompuServe, the Well, etc.) As telecos and other technology companies gradually built a high speed communications infrastructure –- first in major centers across the world and then expanding to wider areas of coverage -– applications gradually began appearing that could take advantage of increasing communications bandwidth. Images, audio, and video applications grew tremendously as broadband Internet access became available.

It reminds me of a talk given by ZipCar founder Robin Chase on (the excellent site) TED.com, where she notes that the explosion of car sharing services around the world would not be possible without the leaps we’ve made in communications technology over the past 15-20 years (video here).

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Aug 06

Creative Commons license by domat33f

Alan Ehrenhalt at The New Republic has an excellent article on how cities in the United States are changing. Using his home town as a case study:

In the past three decades, Chicago has undergone changes that are routinely described as gentrification, but are in fact more complicated and more profound than the process that term suggests. A better description would be “demographic inversion.” Chicago is gradually coming to resemble a traditional European city–Vienna or Paris in the nineteenth century, or, for that matter, Paris today. The poor and the newcomers are living on the outskirts. The people who live near the center–some of them black or Hispanic but most of them white–are those who can afford to do so.

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