Way back in February of 2011, I wrote an extensive article for H+ on 3D printing and how it would allow a transition between an economy based on material “value” and scarcity to one based on nonmaterial “value” and abundance.
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Suggested by Spaceweaver onto Knowmads, Infocology of the future |
Way back in February of 2011, I wrote an extensive article for H+ on 3D printing and how it would allow a transition between an economy based on material “value” and scarcity to one based on nonmaterial “value” and abundance.
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July 19, 2012 4:06 AM
This visualization attempts to organize a series of emerging technologies that are likely to influence education in the upcoming decades. Via Culture of Choice, ddrrnt Delete the scoop?
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The point is to show how advances in imaging and data visualization technologies enable inter-disciplinary research which just a decade ago would have been impossible to conduct. There is also a somewhat artistic quality to these images, which reinforces the notion of data visualization being both art and science.
CONNECTOME: http://www.scoop.it/t/science-news?tag=connectome
Via Sakis Koukouvis Delete the scoop?
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