CyberInterNetics
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The Replacement of All Human Labor with Digital Technology Networks & Devices By 2052CE
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Lakshman Singh: Recharging Rajasthan | The Alternative

Lakshman Singh: Recharging Rajasthan | The Alternative | CyberInterNetics | Scoop.it
Lakshman Singh's ingenious method of rain water harvesting has made Laporia, a small village near Jaipur drought proof and poverty free.

 

 

Lakshman Singh and his friends in Laporia used 'Chauk' method of ground water recharging. A series of bunds, channels and pits are dug over a 5Km stretch in a checker board like pattern, following the natural slope of land. Rain water flows slowly across the Chauka system resulting in the retention of top soil and increase in moisture content. This also helps in recharging ground water.

The broken bund (mud embankment) was emblematic of all that was wrong with laporia. The inhabitants of this arid village in an arid district in India’s most arid state, Rajasthan, were dirt poor. They were malnourished, wore torn clothes and rarely washed. Soap, they could not afford. Nor sugar or milk in their tea. Many went to bed hungry every night. Diseases and illnesses went untreated, because there were no medicines. Children remained illiterate. Cattle died or thirst. Upper and lower castes crumbling property, dragging relatives to court.

The root cause of Laporia’s misery was acute water scarcity.

Farming was the main occupation for the 200 families. But drought, compounded by the crumbling bund, dry ponds and empty, wells doomed cultivation to a perennial losing battle with nature, city jobs become the sole meal ticket. Laxman Singh went to Jaipur to study, but dropped out of school because his family could not afford the fees. Miserable, he returned to the misery of his village. He faced a bleak future. No education meant jobs in the city; no water meant any farming in his village.

Laxman Singh was 18yeas old when he realized the only way to turn Laporia’s misfortune was to repair the bund along the dry pond. It had remained broken for 230years. If scanty rainfall could be collected in the pond, then feeder canals could be dug to irrigate the fields, making cultivation feasible. Laporia could turn “green”. Villagers mocked his fantasy. “And who would pay our wages to repair the bund?” they demanded sarcastically. Laxman Singh had no answer. He was stumped: no rich landlords to subsidize the labour; no philanthropists nearby to fund then and the government was far away and unconcerned. He was thoroughly depressed. There seemed no way out of this vicious cycle.

Then one day it struck him perhaps there is a way out: villagers could volunteer to repair the bund. After all, they were the beneficiaries. Neighbors scoffed at his suggestion. They had better thing to do Singh resolved to do it himself. One friend supported him. The pair decided to repair the bund themselves. It was no small task: the bund was 1.5Km. Long and 15 feet high. Armed with spades, they set off to the bund one summer day in 1978. Passersby wondered; “How can the bund be repaired by just two people?” Singh retorted “well, you can join us that would help”. Four village youths joined him. By the seventh day. The trickle swelled to 20. When rains came two months later. Water collected in the pond for the first times decades.

By 1984, the pond was irrigating 1,800 acres of farmland. From virtually no income, the average income of a family rose to Rs.14, 000 per annum – enough to provide a comfortable life. Villagers congregated for the ceremony to name the pond “Anna Sagar”: the sea of grain. Asserts Singh “If you really want to achieve anything in life, you have to get down and do it yourself. You can lead others only by setting yourself as an example.”

Laxman Singh also devised a simple but unique water harvesting program in the outskirts of his village. He call it’s the “Chauka” system. It comprises a series of channels and square pits fringed by two-foot high bunds in a chequer board pattern over a 5Km expanse in which rainwater slope of the land this not only enables the water to flow into the ponds nearby, but creates grassy patches on the pits on which cattle can graze. Thus, his dry wastelands bordering the villages were converted into grassy village common land, ideal for pasture.

Villages die when common land disappear. Called “gochar”, pasture is considered sacred by Hindu villagers. Across India, pasture for cattle grazing is vanishing, either due to drought or to land grabbers. Grassy gochar symbolizes healthy villages. It symbolizes the symbiotic relationship between man, nature and animals, if water is harvested, crops and grass grow and cattle have natural vegetation to feed on, which so cheaper and healthier than hormone-injected cattle feed. More cattle mean more dung, which is the cheapest and best natural fertilizer-cum-pesticide. Organic farming – which now the world acknowledges – is the healthy, natural way to cultivate crops. No pesticides and fertilizers that position the earth and drive farmers to penury says Laxman Singh: : the less we interfere with nature, the better it is for all of us. Everything and everyone has its place in our eco-system. We live in a natural cycle of inter-dependence –land, water, man, beast, all depend on each. If you don’t disrupt the cycle of dependency, this natural bio-rhythm, there will be harmony.”

Over the years, all the ponds of the village were rejuvenated. Villagers performed puja to celebrate the consecration of “Dev Sagar” and “Phool Sagar.” Crops were harvested twice a year Laporia became virtually self sufficient as farmers grew corn. Maize, bajra, jowar, wheat, lentils, groundnuts, chillis mustard, fenugreek and variety of vegetables.

Their new-found sense of well-being villagers feels the need to organize a thanks giving ceremony. In 1987, the villagers institutionalized their annual nature-worshipping ritual. Villagers gather to renew their bond with nature and each other, eat gud (melted jiggery), tie sacred threads and apply tilak on trees, birds, cattle, wells and ponds. They pray to Lord Indra to bless the village with rain. They tie rakhi on each other as mark of friendship and community bonding. It is day of festivity and rejoicing.

From an impoverished, drought-afflicted, conflict-ridden village, Laporia become a trail-blazing symbol of rural renewal, a self-sufficient oasis of agricultural produce, Pease and harmony, it’s fame spread. Other adjoining villages followed suit. Villagers started organizing the “Sharm Dhan”, to donate their labour to desilt the tanks and ponds. The desilting ceremony takes about five days. Over the years, this became a vibrant local tradition. Inhabitants of Laporia went on a padayatra to the adjoining villages to help with the desilting of their ponds. These villagers came to theirs. Now 500 villages participate in these padayatra to desilt their water bodies. In the evening, youngsters organize cultural entertainment – songs, dances and street theatre. The evening ends with a sumptuous feast prepared by the village housewives. Says Singh: “ as businessmen and officers, my classmates make more money than me. But I have the satisfaction of changing the life of my entire village.

Village development committees now decide on new programs to build roads, install taps, establish and education facilities. Self-sufficiency is the village mantra; Panchauyati Raj as Mahatma Gandhi envisioned. “Villagers must be encouraged to become custodians of their village and its surroundings. If every village becomes a viable, harmonious and peaceful economic unit, then people would be happy and India would be strong. When village life breaks sown, and youngsters are forced to migrate in reach of work, then Prime Minister. Gro Harlen Brundtland, who coined the phrase “sustainable Development” in the 1980s Singh, typifies the Indian village. Who blessed with robust common sense, needs no celebrity endorsements or academic studies, to convince him of the ancient wisdom that he carries in his genes, refreshed everyday by observing nature.

One would have expected Singh to be rewarded with a bouquet of citations for path-breaking work. Instead, village officials were displeased. They served him with a ‘show cause’ notice for usurping their authority. Laxman Singh had farmed new rules of his village. If a villager cut on tree, would have a plant five saplings as compensation. If he hunted animals, he must pay a fine of 11 bushels of grain. If he shot a bird, he would have to feed the village birds. Most complied; some complained. Local officials were annoyed. Punishing villagers was their job, not his. Laxman Singh was summoned to their office, but his entreaties and explanations that patwaris ignored such offences or took bribes from the offenders and released them, fell on deaf ears.

When he heard about this harassment, botanist from Jaipur, who had taken an interest in Laporia’s transformation. Contacted Delhi-based scientists, who in turn urged village officials to lay off Laxman Singh. They did brickbats turned to bouquets as the authorities began to reward him with prizes for his pioneering work to rejuvenate Laporia.

Perhaps, the most remarkable aspect about Laporia’s renewal is it’s forestation that has lured birds. Says Laxman Singh proudly: “Birds are the best signs of a healthy environment”. Varieties of birds now flock to Laporia. The village courtyard is a daily Kumbh mela of parrots. Peacocks perch on roof tops. Woodpeckers hug tress. Pigeons strut. Koels coo hauntingly. People of this once arid, godforsaken village greet each day with the birdsong of larks, warblers, nightingales and other winged minstrels of the forests.

UNSUNG is an ongoing project by photographer Mahesh Bhat. It came out as a book in 2007, authored by Mahesh Bhat and Anita Pratap. Published here by arrangement with the authors. All pictures copyrighted to Mahesh Bhat.

Connect with UNSUNG on their website and Facebook page -  www.facebook.com/unsungworld. The book is available here on Flipkart.

 


Via Giri Kumar
PlasmaBorneElectric's insight:

If we take back our lives we will break the tyranny of the .0001%

Ben DeVries's curator insight, May 14, 11:08 AM

Water is the ultimate resource for all of Earth's living creatures.  Monitoring and preserving our surface and ground water resources protects future generations.  If starving Laporia can innovate, anyone can!

Darran Upton's curator insight, June 6, 11:36 PM

The method of storing harvested water is paramount for people’s survival. This paper would allow students to understand the importance of harvesting water and how they might be able to make a more sustainable house. Students could then use EnQuest to design their own sustainable house/building.

 

 

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Another story set free with @HaikuDeck - "CyberInterNetics" by @plasmaborne4rel

Another story set free with @HaikuDeck - "CyberInterNetics" by @plasmaborne4rel | CyberInterNetics | Scoop.it
Created with Haiku Deck
PlasmaBorneElectric's comment, March 31, 2:30 PM
From www.wired.com - Today, 1:27 PM
Our most powerful 21st-century technologies - robotics, genetic engineering, and nanotech - are threatening to make humans an endangered species.
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Total Information Awareness TIA / NSA / CIA

Total Information Awareness TIA / NSA / CIA | CyberInterNetics | Scoop.it

What kind of #securityexpert is #SteveGibson if he hasn't known that #CorpGovLLC  capability always included ALL #communication  #interception  Every year the #CIA claims it loses a #TrillionDollars a year that it simply can not account for! Really?  This Trillion Dollars a year missing funds goes to #blackops CorpGovLLC is at least a #hundredyears ahead of consumer digital technology. You don't give us peons the most advanced technology in anything. That's how the .0001% maintain control. #Area51 about space alien technology. It's about Scalar technology (Nikola Tesla) and his Unified Field Operation [Unified Field Operation includes advanced flying technology]

btw

Apple's Headquarters shows Apple is an insider. Does that surprise anyone. And Google is also an insider. Surprised? Really? All CorpGovLLC's in every industry are insider players. Too Big to Fail? Nah. They know all the secrets of CorpGovLLC. That's why CorpGovLLC don't fail and why no insider who might squeal goes free from criminal conviction.  This is elementary deduction dear Watson.. I now return us to the Banality of Everyday LIfe within the Spectacle,Editor

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Product Design & Development Presents an Educational Webcast

Product Design & Development Presents an Educational Webcast | CyberInterNetics | Scoop.it

All Around the Globe scientist meet to discuss the future  Many times these meetings require scientist to sign a NDA [Non-Disclosure Agreement. This particular webinar is open.

 

Worth an attendance 

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How to shield your calls and internet activity from government surveillance

How to shield your calls and internet activity from government surveillance | CyberInterNetics | Scoop.it
Even when faced with the most ubiquitous of modern surveillance, there are ways to keep your communications away from prying eyes.
PlasmaBorneElectric's insight:

At this moment if you encryp offline or online you may get noticed yet if we can get the majority of offline/online users to encryp everything then encryption would not be a big deal in and of itself.

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Farming & Agriculture: Getting rid of Crabgrass

Farming & Agriculture: Getting rid of Crabgrass | CyberInterNetics | Scoop.it
Crabgrass can be really annoying, and if you're noticing it in your lawn, garden beds, or sidewalk cracks, you can use baking soda to get rid of it. Simply wet it down, then pour a thick dusting of baking soda on it.
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Sovereign John - Google+ - All those photos of your private parts sent over your…

Sovereign John - Google+ - All those photos of your private parts sent over your… | CyberInterNetics | Scoop.it
All those photos of your private parts sent over your smartphone.. The NSA thanks you.
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McAfee Patents Technology to Detect and Block Pirated Content | TorrentFreak

McAfee Patents Technology to Detect and Block Pirated Content | TorrentFreak | CyberInterNetics | Scoop.it
Security software company McAfee has patented a new technology that aims to prevent the public from accessing pirated movies and music online.
PlasmaBorneElectric's insight:

If you believe Internet is gonna be free sharing, think again. The free sharing was to get us all online and turn our lives over to digital technllogy. Now that we have turned out lives over to Digital Technology they'll now turn the screws of surveillance, tracking, data mining and closed private systems. 

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Let's All Move to Finland and Have Babies, Because They Give a Shit

Let's All Move to Finland and Have Babies, Because They Give a Shit | CyberInterNetics | Scoop.it
If you give birth in Finland, you're in luck! Along with your new bundle of joy, the government gives you a maternity box filled with clothes, sheets, toys, and a mattress.

Via Ulla M. Saikku
Ulla M. Saikku's curator insight, June 6, 5:40 AM

Someone in the comments: "Ok guys, seriously, is there ANYTHING that Finland isn't awesome at? Like, what exactly is stopping me from teaching myself Finnish and hopping on a plane... anything? Anyone?"

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BIG BROTHER will be SPYING on you everwhere you go. INTELLISTREETS being installed in U.S.

http://www.youtube.com/WorldNews2013i Subscribe for Latest World News Updates 2013 BIG BROTHER will be SPYING on you everwhere you go. INTELLISTREETS being i...
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Amazon.com: Protecting Your Internet Identity eBook: Theodore Claypoole, Theresa M. Payton, Chris, Swecker: Kindle Store

Protecting Your Internet Identity - Kindle edition by Theodore Claypoole, Theresa M. Payton, Chris, Swecker. Download it once and read it on your Kindle device, PC, phones or tablets.
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The Banality of ‘Don’t Be Evil’ by Julian Assange

The Banality of ‘Don’t Be Evil’ by Julian Assange | CyberInterNetics | Scoop.it
Two Google leaders have written a manifesto for technocratic imperialism.
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Cornell develops beer-pouring robot that anticipates people's actions | ZeitNews

A robot in Cornell’s Personal Robotics Lab has learned to foresee human action and adjust accordingly. The robot was programmed to refill a person’s cup when it was nearly empty.
PlasmaBorneElectric's insight:

This is a great way to get CIN into the mainstream. Appeal to the needs of beer drinkers everywhere. Drink up. Everythings under control politically, socially, commercially and science wise. 

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Help Save Podcasting!

Help Save Podcasting! | CyberInterNetics | Scoop.it
We need your help to save podcasting. EFF is partnering with leading lawyers to bust a key patent being used to threaten podcasters. But we need your help to find prior art and cover the filing fees for a brand new patent busting procedure.
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Mass Surveillance and State Control: The Total Information Awareness Project: Elliot D. Cohen: Amazon.com: Kindle Store

Mass Surveillance and State Control: The Total Information Awareness Project: Elliot D. Cohen: Amazon.com: Kindle Store
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NSA logo

NSA logo | CyberInterNetics | Scoop.it
PlasmaBorneElectric's comment, June 12, 3:00 PM
Top Secret logo of NSA
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jitsi.org | Jitsi: Secure Online Communication

jitsi.org | Jitsi: Secure Online Communication | CyberInterNetics | Scoop.it

Secure video calls, conferencing, chat, desktop sharing, file transfer, support for your favorite OS, and IM network

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Abdullatif Arıtan - Google+ - #atheism  

Abdullatif Arıtan - Google+ - #atheism   | CyberInterNetics | Scoop.it
#atheism  
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Willi Bleimeister [G+ Comment]: Concept of Privacy

Willi BleimeisterJun 8, 20131Share  +Sovereign John
At one time, yours was the Common Sense default consensus on the concept of  privacy, based on 240 years of US Law & 800 years of English Common law...to think otherwise would align you with Totalitarianism...but when the rulers of one's country routinely send out Militarised Hit Squads (over very minor 'crimes' ) to intimidate the citizenry & occupy their neighbourhoods, one might assume a new consensus to have primacy, one which lacks so much Historical perspective, that it even denies the old concepts of 'Privacy' ever existed. Therefore, if one attempts to bring up past practises on privacy protection, one becomes a dangerous radical, propounding Ideals the Man in Armour has never heard of, dealing with issues that are now classified...further proof of Treason...they rule us by Military Occupation, and they're starting to kill us like they did Iraqis & Afghans...in other words, if an Armoured Man pointing a Gun at you shows up; !!!! ;you don't have Privacy...this is how they see your role in their Empire.....( but I'm bitter today)....
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Twitter / MarshaCollier: 3D Printing Helps @Ford Cut ...

Twitter / MarshaCollier: 3D Printing Helps @Ford Cut ... | CyberInterNetics | Scoop.it
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Sovereign John - Google+ - The day we all can masturbait in public is the day I'll…

Sovereign John - Google+ - The day we all can masturbait in public is the day I'll… | CyberInterNetics | Scoop.it
The day we all can masturbait in public is the day I'll consider privacy a non-issue 
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Spytech: Digital Privacy is an Illusion

Spytech: Digital Privacy is an Illusion | CyberInterNetics | Scoop.it

Editorial: 

 

I'm all for keeping out amateurs from your digital devices however I'm sure professional criminal hackers and/or Government police agencies  have hackers and technology to break any attempt at privacy. If it's digital it's insecure from professional criminals and/or Government spying. Connected to Internet or not. 

We have space satellites that monitor light years of space visually and audibly.  Those same type of space technologies are pointed back at the Earth. Listening/Watching/tagging/filing/compiling/storing/analyzing anything and everything. If you believe the Government which spends Trillions of our tax dollars each year on secret projects lacks the capacity or the ability to monitor ever digital activity then continue to live in denial. 

Area 51 alone has technology a hundred years ahead of any current consumer digital device. It is simple common sense you don't give the people the same quality or advance technology that those in control have. Their advanced technology assures they can stay in control anytime things would get really out of hand. 

Surprise, Area 51 isn't just about Unified Field Operation technology. It's the whole gambit of control put into Unified Field Operation technology. Just as drones can kill with bombs or spy with cameras and/or listening devices.

 

PS

 

I'm an Electronic Engineer

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How to Keep Your Personal Information Private and How to Regain Some Lost Privacy

How to Keep Your Personal Information Private and How to Regain Some Lost Privacy | CyberInterNetics | Scoop.it
The Statistics are scary, and the process to remove your information from public web sites is daunting, but its well worth it. “Every 79 seconds, a
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Cypherpunks: Julian Assange, Jacob Appelbaum, Andy Müller-Maguhn, Jérémie Zimmermann: Amazon.com: Kindle Store

Cypherpunks: Julian Assange, Jacob Appelbaum, Andy Müller-Maguhn, Jérémie Zimmermann: Amazon.com: Kindle Store

 

28 of 30 people found the following review helpful 5.0 out of 5 stars Assange on the Internet: Democratic Opportunity vs. Mass Surveillance DystopiaDecember 30, 2012
By Lou Thomas
Format:Paperback
This book summarizes one of the great struggles of our age: the opportunity offered by the Internet for creating transparency and organizing resistance to dominance hierarchies, vs. the already-advanced mass surveillance that has been made possible by the increasingly cheap and available technologies for capturing not just specific communications, but *every* communication, whether by voice or text, on the entire Internet, with very few exceptions.

Cryptography is presented as a technical means through which to counteract this mass surveillance. Political constraints on surveillance are also explored, including an appraisal of both strategic (e.g., grassroots organizations) and tactical (e.g., Internet businesses) allies in supporting such constraints.

In a way, it's a race to see which tendency will get to the finish line first. Just as the opportunities for spreading knowledge, and for organizing, are increasing, the risks of being snooped upon, and stymied, by those supporting hierarchical institutions are ramping up.

The book starts with an eloquent - at times startlingly so - "call to cryptographic arms." "The Internet, our greatest tool of emancipation, has been transformed into the most dangerous facilitator of totalitarianism we have ever seen...The platonic nature of the Internet, ideas and information flows, is debased by its physical origins. Its foundations are fiber optic cable lines stretching across the ocean floors, satellites spinning above our heads, computer servers housed in buildings in cities from New York to Nairobi. Like the soldier who slew Archimedes with a mere sword, so too could an armed militia take control of the peak development of Western civilization, our platonic realm...The state, like an army around an oil well, or a customs agent extracting bribes at the border, would soon learn to leverage its control of physical space to gain control over our platonic realm. It would prevent the independence we had dreamed of, and then, squatting on fiber optic lines and around satellite ground stations, it would go on to mass intercept the information flow of our new world...

"..But we discovered something. Our one hope against total domination. A hope that with courage, insight and solidarity we could use to resist. A strange property of the physical universe that we live in.

"The universe believes in encryption."

Following this formal introduction, the book proceeds with a discussion between Assange and his co-authors, Jacob Appelbaum, Andy Muller-Maguhn, and Jeremie Zimmermann, all prominent (and younger) activists for Internet freedom. Topics include communication vs. surveillance, the militarization of cyberspace, legal constraints upon surveillance, private sector involvement in surveillance, the merging of such private surveillance with that of state organizations, encryption technologies that support democracy, economic systems (both hierarchical and free), censorship, privacy, transparency, the attacks upon Wikileaks itself, and prospects for improvement, and its opposite, going forward.

Footnote:

I looked for this book here a few weeks ago and it was nowhere to be found. I had to go to the publisher's Web site, where the book was offered in all electronic formats. Now, we see it on this site only thanks to a small third-party bookseller - Earthlight Books - not Amazon itself.

As another reviewer has noted, this seems odd, given the importance and notoriety of the author. It seems even more odd when we consider that Amazon de-hosted Assange's Wikileaks site from its EC2 service in the heat of the Wikileaks Cablegate revelations. Or maybe not so odd at all...

I don't believe that Amazon hates Wikileaks, but I do suspect that it is bowing to government pressure to throw roadblocks in the path of Wikileaks and its innovative brand of journalism. As the UK's Guardian wrote at the time, "The company [Amazon] announced it was cutting WikiLeaks off [thereby disabling its Web site] yesterday only 24 hours after being contacted by the staff of Joe Lieberman, chairman of the Senate's committee on homeland security."

I am forced to ask: "Who loves you, Amazon? Your customers, or the censors of the national security state? And, even more importantly, who do *you* love?"

Having said that, it is good to see a listing, at least, because this is a very important book.
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Graphically Speaking: Future Plan of Technology by Sane People

Graphically Speaking: Future Plan of Technology by Sane People | CyberInterNetics | Scoop.it
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Simple Minds "Don't You" (Forget About Me)

My Favorite Band.
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Rip. Mix. Make.

Rip. Mix. Make. | CyberInterNetics | Scoop.it
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