We already registered around 30 journalists, and media coverage of Lift10 is starting. Here is a brief note published today by GenevaLunch, an online media started by Ellen Wallace after her time at Lift06 that has been striving for the past three years!
Geneva’s winter and spring schedule of conferences which are open to the public is getting underway, and it includes two favourites with the international population: the February Geneva Writers Workshop and Lift10, which moves from its previous February dates to May this year. [...]
Lift10, 5-7 May at the ICC (International Conference Centre) in Geneva will pull in 1,000 participants from 40 countries to reflect on “Connected People”, the myriad ways in which people connect, which remains at the heart of innovation. The conference has grown in just five years from a technology-oriented meeting to a conference with an international reputation for lively debates that look ahead and consider where society is going, always in relationship to innovation and technology. It is unusual in that it brings together people from business, government, NGOs, and academia.
Key speakers at Lift10 to date include:
* Rahaf Harfoush: works with organizations to build authentic relationships by aligning their social media initiatives with their vision. She was involved in the extraordinary effort that helped bring President Barack Obama to the White House in 2008;
* Amelia Andersdotter: elected to the European Parliament as a representative of the “Pirate Party” that rocked Swedish elections in 2009, and made it to centre stage using new tactics;
* Jamais Cascio: named one of the top 100 global thinkers by Foreign Policy “for being our moral guide to the future”.
Nice post by Chang Kim (former speaker and one of Korea's top blogger at Web 2.0 Asia) about Lift Asia:
LIFT is more about fundamental trends and inspirations than about, say, the latest protocol for web data exchange. How does "objects that blog about their interactions with the environment", or "a building that changes shape in real time depending on its inhabitants' behavior" sound to you? Pretty cool, ain't it? [...]
Of course the key difference between spending your early Fall in other nice places and Jeju is that, with LIFT Asia, you can recharge your intellectual mojo while also bathing in the sun. Speakers are definitely top-notch and are bringing with themselves lots of exciting experiences and expertise. If not for LIFT, where can you possibly meet the folks who are building next-generation robots, buildings, and games in one place?
Well, simply saying "meet" would not be sufficient, because the networking session will make everyone into friends. Jeju's secluded environment keeps all attendees and speakers away from big-city distractions and almost force them to spend the evenings together. You want some real networking? LIFT Asia is the right conference for you to attend.
Here is coverage of Lift France 09 from Tiburon.tv, a great series of interviews of participants and speakers captured in Marseille.
Intelligent robots are no longer the stuff of science fiction. They are walking into everyday life and are in widespread use performing jobs cheaper or more reliably than humans. But before using a robot in the real world you want to test it in many situations and repeat the situation over time modifying the environment.
„Most of the time robots are used in dangerous situations or complicated environments so testing in simulation saves a lot of time and money. We create easy-to-use simulation editors to help people use simulation“ explains Bertrand Copigneaux, COO and co-founder of SimplySim. „I’ll give you an example: One of the projects of French robot constructor robosoft is to have an autonomous vehicle in a city. To test it you would have to block the city in order to have a situation which is close to the use cases of the robot.“
Bertrand and his two co-founders Nicolas Dalmasso and Nicolas Oudit started SimplySim in April 2008 when they were still students. For now the 3D Simulation Experts are mainly a service company but they are also working on offering products like a robot simulator with a more realistic way to simulate robots, especially with regard to physics simulation. Bertrand wrapped up his interview with Viktoria by giving a presentation of a 3D simulation they have developed for Microsoft Imagine Cup Competition.
Here is coverage of Lift France 09 from Tiburon.tv, a great series of interviews of participants and speakers captured in Marseille.
Luckily there are some people out there who are looking for ways to help save the planet. Romain Vailleux, co-founder and community manager at Paris-based Hop-Cube, is one of them. His startup offers a new approach to sustainable development by providing ecological scoring on a wide range of consumer goods. The service is specifically designed for online marketplaces and will be displayed next to each product referenced in the product catalog.
„Hop-Cube gathers information that is already accessible to the public, analizes and ranks it with a specific score out of ten given by our HopScore indicator“ explains Romain. „All kinds of criteria like conception, transport, usage of the product and its recycling are applied. We also collaborate with eco-labels to bring their labels to the consumer.“ E-commerce companies pay based on a monthly subscription - around €5 per product for the scoring service, but Hop-Cube also makes different offers depending on the company size and the number of visitors on the website.
There are some eco-portals providing information on the web, but other than Hop-Cube’s service at one glance, these portals oblige the users to come to their portal and choose their products through it. Anyone interested in providing more support for Hob-Cube: They just started two months ago and still need consumers to help them continue as well as funding in order to grow further...
Here is coverage of Lift France 09 from Tiburon.tv, a great series of interviews of participants and speakers captured in Marseille.
„The biggest hurdle we have is that we teach our entrepreneurs the MBA courses. With our core business and core competence thinking we have been generating an awful lot of waste, unwanted consequences and collateral damage“ finds Gunter Pauli - founder and director of the "Zero Emissions Research Initiative" of the United Nations University in Tokyo. „Natural systems are so efficient that there is no one unemployed and there is no waste - everyone is put to work with pleasure. Evolution is really all about doing much more with less, building up social capital and having everyone contributing to their capabilities. The entrepreneur can also see in the natural system ways that this reduction of material requirements comes even to the point where you can do something with nothing.“
„Nature is on a continuous path of improvement, that is also what entrepreneurship is all about. You can be competitive in the market with a new idea even if you have no experience because you can envision very clearly how you can achieve the same service or product with much less.“ Gunter hopes that future entrepreneurs raise hell for the existing economic profile and accelerate economic innovation. For him, the condition for innovation acceleration is that the players have no experience and that they accept the fact that they will make mistakes but will correct them on route.
According to the founder and former President of Worldwatch Europe and author of eight books, the experience on the ground is the key to success: „We have to bring us to such a high level of emotional intelligence, motivation and perseverence that we can start without seeing the big picture, because we’re creating it. Generate multiple cash-flows by responding to multiple needs with one system and get multiple results by resolving multiple issues. Keep on searching for connections that make sense and then create partnerships. Once you have made a connection the logic sticks with you forever.“
Sorry for the mistaken title in the middle of the video...
So, where do I blog? I'm live-blogging on my blog Climb to the Stars. I also posted a "pre-transcript" of my Open Stage talk (where's the video, btw? did I misunderstand that we were being filmed?). But should I have posted it here? I hesitated.
What are your thoughts on cross-posting?
I have to say I'm already struggling about whether to post certain things on my blog or on the Going Solo blog blog.
I want to write a few words about my workshop yesterday (it went well despite the small number of laptops present for a practical "learn to actually blog" thing), and the one I attended. What's the best place to blog about this? I like to collect all I write on CTTS, so I have a tendancy to want to cross-post if I blog elsewhere.
Anybody else facing the same problems? How do you deal with this?