latest posts
Future of Energy – Harnessing the Sun: Embarking on Humanity’s next Giant Leap
September 7th, 2007
In this seventh installment of our on-going series of interviews with some of the leading thinkers and scientists on the subject of energy, we interview Dr. Feng Hsu.
Facing and solving the multiple issues concerning energy is the single most pressing problem that we face as a species. There is a lot of media coverage about energy, alternative energy and global warming, but what has been missing is the knowledge and point of view of scientists, at least in the main stream media. If you have missed the first five interviews, please scroll down the right side of the page and …
A New Cell Phone Milestone
August 28th, 2007
In prior columns, here and here I have written about the transformative power of the cell phone. Currently there are more than 2.1 billion cell phone accounts in the world and more than 220 million in the US. More people have cell phones than have computers or use the Internet. Globally, there are some 15 to 20 million news cell phone accounts opened up every month.
The cell phone has obviously changed the way we communicate. We are all available all the time no matter where we are. Text messaging is a new form of communication that did not …
It is All Global
August 16th, 2007
There are two future thinking filters through which I view the recent upheavals in the financial markets. The first is that we are moving to a new and developing global society and that this can first be seen economically. The second is that debt is something that must be looked with new perspective. Today we look at the first filter.
Humanity has conclusively moved into the global stage of its evolution. There is no turning back. There are more than six billion of us and that fact alone is enough to reorganize human endeavor to a global orientation. Human history shows …
The Financial Exchange for the 21st Century
August 1st, 2007
The New York Stock Exchange was founded in 1817. This was some 50 years after the beginning of the Industrial Age. The need for the NYSE was, in part, a result of the transition of the U.S. economy from one that was completely agricultural to one that was rapidly becoming industrial. During the course of the 1800s the NYSE became increasingly important to the economy as a financial market that could provide both financial liquidity to listed companies and as a way to establish valuation and worth of all companies traded.
In the 20th century the NYSE was joined by many …