Pinboard (robertogreco)
https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/public/
recent bookmarks from robertogrecoSara Hendren — Our Bodies, Aliveness, and the Built World | The On Being Project2023-12-02T02:42:02+00:00
https://onbeing.org/programs/sara-hendren-our-bodies-aliveness-and-the-built-world/
robertogrecosarahendren 2023 bodies kristatippet personhood design art engineering downsyndrome builtenvironment environment parenting vulnerability humans diversity adaptability age aging difference disabilities disability accessibility measurement normal culture humanness humanism religion society identity templegrandin needfulness life living dignity disabilitypolitics ada accommodations citizenship infrastructure medicine health leonarddavis dependence alasdairmacIntyre gillesdeleuze cooperation social frailty help assistance independence freedom support independentliving edroberts adaptivereuse hospitals aliveness self-determination judyheumann us individualism interdependence loneliness perspective narrative technology assistivetechnology ramps mobility adaptation inclusivity inclusion eugenics average nature jonathanadler storytelling lifenarrative existence storymaking care community need grace gracefulness intergerationalliving conviviality mutuality reciprocity everyday problemsolving making medicalization proshttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:db55bfde3d4b/Crows and magpies using anti-bird spikes to build nests, researchers find | Animal behaviour | The Guardian2023-07-15T06:36:02+00:00
https://www.theguardian.com/science/2023/jul/11/crows-and-magpies-show-their-metal-by-using-anti-bird-spikes-to-build-nests
robertogreconature birds corvids 2023 crows magpies behavior resistance materials nests multispecies morethanhuman adaptationhttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:7c8c444745f0/The importance of remembering everything but the music : NPR2022-12-20T23:09:21+00:00
https://www.npr.org/2022/12/16/1143379524/the-importance-of-remembering-everything-but-the-music
robertogrecoharmonyholiday 2022 via:shiraz music jazz oraltradition howwewrite howweread memory remembering retelling memorization secrets accuracy change improvisation adaptation unfinished writing readinghttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:aa6d1b1f495a/The hidden sensory world of animals | Ed Yong - YouTube2022-09-09T18:20:30+00:00
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pzsjw-i6PNc
robertogrecoedyong 2022 allthesenses senses morethanhuman multispecies animals birds sight vision hearing taste light smell smells touch video umvelt perception experience otters dogs spiders odor survival adaptation biology elephants owls behavior proust marcelproust fish catfish insects flies butterflieshttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:ef26b11b8f2d/Shari Frilot - Sundance Film Festival & New Frontier 2022 AD 225 - YouTube2022-06-08T23:07:59+00:00
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MptNFZ-mKNg
robertogrecosharifrilot 2022 sundance newfrontier transhumanism identity futurism technology pain hardship art film filmmaking newmedia optimism immersion web3 nfts climatechange climate socialchange jamaicaheolimeleikalaniosorio mikebrett stevejamison arnautcolinart pierrezandrowicz morethanhuman daanishmasoodalavi benjosephandrews emmaroberts valenciajames samgreen karimbenkhelifa jessedamiani kevinmccoy jennifermccoy perception change disruption digital adaptation nonbinary queer dance abba music performance empathy blindness socialconsciousness bodieshttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:12ca0c56512e/Why urban bears know when it's trash day2022-06-07T20:07:02+00:00
https://www.nationalgeographic.com/magazine/article/why-urban-bears-know-when-its-trash-day-feature
robertogrecoanimals urban urbanism adaptation bears coyotes raccoons 2022 human-animalrelations human-animalrelationships multispecies morethanhuman cities nature christinedell'amorehttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:1af1fa26e672/In “Station Eleven,” All Art Is Adaptation | The New Yorker2022-01-15T06:22:05+00:00
https://www.newyorker.com/culture/on-television/in-station-eleven-all-art-is-adaptation
robertogrecokatywaldman 2022 stationeleven tv television adaptation change art dystopia emilystjohnmandel writing pandemic patricksomerville hbohttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:3db568c14851/Station Eleven rewards the viewer in ways "puzzle TV" doesn't.2022-01-15T06:21:04+00:00
https://slate.com/culture/2022/01/station-eleven-anti-puzzle-tv-ending.html
robertogrecolililoofbourow 2022 stationeleven tv television pandemic dystopia adaptation despair uncertainty grief emilystjohnmandel patricksomerville hbohttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:41de84bb01d2/Nonlinear Delivery Options: The Times of "Station Eleven"2022-01-15T06:19:38+00:00
https://lareviewofbooks.org/article/nonlinear-delivery-options-the-times-of-station-eleven/
robertogrecostationeleven 2022 film filmmaking storytelling time jorgecotte adaptation tv television emilystjohnmandel patricksomerville timelines nonlinear linearity past present future hbohttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:a7362bec88d2/The climate crisis is messing with birds' body shapes - CNN2021-11-21T04:30:22+00:00
https://edition.cnn.com/2021/11/12/americas/birds-bodies-amazon-rainforest-climate-change-scn/index.html
robertogrecoclimatechange nature animals multispecies morethanhuman birds bodies climate 2021 adaptation survivalhttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:cd395a92a746/COVID-19 and Climate Change Have the Same Root Cause - The Atlantic2020-09-02T15:25:56+00:00
https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2020/08/covid-19-and-climate-change-have-same-root-cause/615844/
robertogrecobathshebademuth covid-19 coronavirus pandemics climatechange anthropocene siberia multispecies landscape adaptability adaptation change via:justinpickardhttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:ff419acd2495/dandan the transient on Twitter: "I see these two found each other, bleh. For the record decolonization is about a return to traditional values and ways of thinking, adaptation to and of tech is a cornerstone of most Native traditions." / Twitter2019-11-10T22:45:44+00:00
https://twitter.com/DanDanTransient/status/1174738599755096065
robertogreco@loisdum I’m convinced it’s a buzz word now with roots in something honorable but has lost its way. Wanting “decolonization” but utilizing the wheel, western technology, doesn’t make sense to me…
My ancestors didn’t see steel and think, “how nice but that’s not traditional.”
No they traded for and adapted it to their needs. The took the improved material and formed it into their traditional (and better) shape (the ulu).
I have any old ulu made out of a food lid that an ancestor made when Russians gave them canned foods.
Natives were often better armed then the US Army, with plains NAtives going from bows to repeater rifles while the cavalry still often used black powder.
(Note in most situations a good bow is better then black powder).
From methodology to material when most tribes found something useful they traded for it and found a way to impRove it for their use.
Adaption, ingenuity, and cleverness are traditional values.
That is why the majority of modern foods (like 87% from one article) originated from precontact Native food science.
Medicine, architecture, leadership, governmental systems, pragmatism, the list goes on, all because we experimented, discovered, and improved.
All that said, the wheel was known by most tribes before contact, and it was surely seen and understood not soon after.
It was deemed for the most part not very useful when we had canoes that could go farther, faster, and with less work.
The wheel requires roads to not only be built, but maintained. Don’t believe me, ask why the military has been trying to develop mechanical legged gear haulers since WW2. Or why hikers aren’t taking trailers on thru hikes.
And tracked vehicles are extremely damaging.
The wheel is great if you want to build and maintain an infrastructure, something pre industrial societies needed cheap or free labor to do the building and maintaining.
Laborers weren’t considered disposable to most Native cultures.
And why even go to that work when a river gets you there twice as fast and a fraction of the work?
Why struggle with a wagon up a mountain pass when a travois will glide along? I know which I’d rather have to repair on the fly.
A better question than “why didn’t Natives build wheels?” is “why did Europeans spend decades blocking, damming, and covering their natural roadways instead of just discovering kayaks and canoes?”
But now we have roads so not taking advantage of that with the wheel would be silly and untraditional.
The environment has been changed and we adapt as we always have.
A lot of folks bringing up “no domesticated beasts of burden” so let me remind you llama, dogs, and horses.
Just cause colonial history taught y’all an entire continent was filled with horses in 30 years from 8 escaped Spanish mounts don’t make it true.
https://www.dropbox.com/s/y815zgfbox6wknk/Collin.Horse.Dissertation.pdf?dl=0&fbclid=IwAR1lLBDf6SD9hl9ivIpGnuN_z7G-mlhtx54wKMpD3QJVqKq1yEptAGDuNI8
Add to your knowledge even European history (though untrustworthy compared to Indigenous history) records that at least 3 Inuit at different times crossed over to England, one of them kayaking into London on a rainy day, all preColombus
We discovered you [quoting @DanDanTransient:]
And Inuit in kayaks crossed into England and back as is recorded in history and story so I mean, there ya go
I guess I should connect these two as one does [quoting @DanDanTransient:]
Ok so I love the positive and informative comments on my wheel thread, but I want to address my favorite flavor of statement that I just couldn’t believe anyone like believed.
Summing them all up “Natives didn’t use the wheel because we didn’t have agricultural societies.”
Ok once I got done laughing at this wrong statement I doubled down on any of them in that I believe pre industrial societies require a system of forced labor to build and maintain roads. Few tribes had that here, laborers weren’t widely accepted as disposable.
I mean like Europeans may have tried for an agricultural society but I think it’s pretty verifiable that the rest of the world was doing it better.
dandan the transient
Like 87% of the world’s food today comes from pre contact American food science, and the majority of the rest came from outside europe.
Now that’s based on articles cause the closest I’ve came to being a scientist is wearing a lab coat and waving a microscope at climate change deniers.
So my numbers may be off, but we still gave the world most of its modern food.
But what I’m not off about is many tribes had flourishing agriculture both in the generally accepted method and in what I would consider non standard.
First in the generally accepted category those dudes in central America like created corn from grass, they weren’t just kinda playing around, they like made something.
Tomatoes are another example of “hey look at this little berry I’m gonna create something the size of an apple.”
Not too mention quinoa, rices, grains, and orchids that covered the land. Just cause Europeans burned a lot of it doesn’t mean it didn’t exist.
But let’s go beyond the standard accepted forms because innovation is traditional in both method and thought.
The spread of bear poop filled with huckleberry seeds to increase the amount of plants, clearing one style of tree to make room for more useful trees, clearing brush to prevent damaging fires, or carrying seeds to easier each locations for medicines and craftable plants.
When settlers arrived here they were shocked at the “wild” paradise filled with useful things, it was like forests were engineered to suit the tribes’ needs.
Spoiler it was like that because we engineered it that way.
We did the work.
Their inability to see terraforming for what is was doesn’t mean it didn’t happen. They benefited and continue to benefit from thousands of years of planning and labor.
The fact that we didn’t clear cut trees or make long straight rows to labor over doesn’t mean we weren’t planning out and caring for our lands, it means we were working smarter not harder.
Clearing wide spaces opens the door for erosion and a lack of diversity ruins the soil, increasing salt content and sapping nutrients.
Sure you can rotate crops or haul fertilizer to combat this, but why add that labor when animals and other plants will do it for you?
And let’s remember when thinking about both our ancestors and our place in modern society that: [quoting @DanDanTransient:
Adaption, ingenuity, and cleverness are traditional values.
And I think the environment will agree with me, if your definition of agriculture is limited to back breaking labor that destroys the land than agriculture needs 🚮.
But if your definition can expand to land stewardship that improves the land for human and nonhuman people 👍
And link to the next stage I guess [quoting @DanDanTransient:]
Before someone comes at this with the same energy they did the wheel thread talking about population let’s hit that myth.
”]]>indigenous technology wheels steel decolonization tradition culture trading horses natives blackpowder guns adaptation food science medicine architecture leadership governance government pragmatism canoes kayaks transportation roads vehicles terrain mobility infrastructure society industrialization labor maintenance repair environment waterways nature land history inuit 2019 agriculture ingenuity cleverness work terraforming clearcuts trees crops croprotation fertilizer animals plants horticulturehttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:28ba80f5d65f/Why the Spanish Dialogue in 'Spider-Verse' Doesn't Have Subtitles2019-02-18T21:11:41+00:00
http://remezcla.com/features/film/miles-morales-spider-man-spider-verse-spanish-dialogue/
robertogrecolanguage translation spanish español bilingualism bilingual srg edg glvo carlosaguilar 2018 spider-verse spiderman miami losangeles nyc coco subtitles specificity puertorico cuba immigration via:tealtan accents change adaptation latinidadhttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:4a48861e7f6d/David Graeber - Syria, Anarchism and Visiting Rojava - YouTube2019-01-09T06:30:33+00:00
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gqfoJvD0Ifg
robertogrecodavidgraeber syria anarchism anarchy rojava directdemocracy patriarchy capitalism anticapitalism antistatism democracy history cultofpersonality spain catalonia barcelona grassroots feminism ecology sustainability environment bureaucracy bullshitjobs economics self-governance iran iraq turkey kurdistan kurds activism defense hierarchy horizontality gender checksandbalances governance exploitation 2017 borders isis solidarity accountability projectmanagement administration organization freedom criticalthinking voice compulsion compulsory process power control consenus cv time sfsh tcsnmy openstudioproject lcproject listening slow voting morality politics efficiency rule improvisation ows occupywallstreet reason language evolution adaptability adaptation authority authoritarianism statelessness murraybookchin españahttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:477685ff91a9/Contra* podcast — Mapping Access2019-01-05T23:12:38+00:00
https://www.mapping-access.com/podcast/
robertogrecoaccessibility disability aimihamraie ableism podcasts disabilitystudies criticaldesign olincollege assistivetechnology technology poeticcreation creativity sarahendren ivanillich toolsforconviviality wendyjacob templegrandin stem knowledge power karenbarad adaptation materialculture socialimagination art design thinking inclusivity capitalism howwewrite howwethink making communication academia scholarship ethics politics difference jargon languagehttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:d4c6a92c20ce/How birds' genes influence adaptation to climate change2018-01-22T01:47:17+00:00
https://news.ucsc.edu/2018/01/yellow-warblers.html
robertogrecobirds nature climatechange adaptation genetics genes evolution survival globalwarming 2018 animals anthropocene multispecies morethanhuman kristenruegghttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:e90f90781b55/“Today’s world has no equivalent” – BLDGBLOG2016-08-12T00:25:11+00:00
http://www.bldgblog.com/2016/08/todays-world-has-no-equivalent/
robertogrecoIt is all but impossible to picture them—to see oneself standing on them—as you can with Pangaea. They have their magical names, which lend them reality of a sort despite the fact that, for some, even their very existence remains controversial. About Rodinia, Pannotia, Columbia, Atlantica, Nena, Arctica or distant Ur, the mists of time gather ever more thickly.
The amazing thing is that this cycle will continue: long after North America is expected to reunite with Eurasia, which itself will have collided with North Africa, there will be yet another splintering, following more rifts, more bays and inland seas, in ever-more complicated rearrangements of the Earth’s surface, breeding mountain ranges and exotic island chains. And so on and so on, for billions of years. Bizarre new animals will evolve and bacteria will continue to inter-speciate—and humans will long since have disappeared from the world, unable to experience or see any of these future transformations.
While describing some of the potential ecosystems and landscapes that might result from these tectonic shifts, Nield writes that “our knowledge of what is normal behavior for the Earth is extremely limited.”
Indeed, he suggests, the present is not a key to the past: geologists have found “that there were things in the deepest places of Earth history for the unlocking of whose secrets the present no longer provided the key.” These are known as “no-analog” landscapes.
That is, what we’re experiencing right now on Earth potentially bears little or no resemblance to the planet’s deep past or far future. The Earth itself has been, and will be again, unearthly.
In any case, I mention all this because of a quick description found roughly two-fifths of the way through Nield’s book where he discusses lost ecosystems—landscapes that once existed here but that no longer have the conditions to survive.
Those included strange forests that, because of the inclination of the Earth’s axis, grew in almost permanent darkness at the south pole. “These forests of the polar night,” Nield explains, describing an ancient landscape in the present tense, “withstand two seasons: one of feeble light and one of unremitting dark. Today’s world has no equivalent of this eerie ecosystem. Their growth rings show that each summer these trees grow frenetically. Those nearer the coast are lashed by megamonsoon rains roaring in from [the lost continent] of Tethys, the thick cloud further weakening the feeble sunshine raking the latitudes at the bottom of the world.”
There is something so incredibly haunting in this image, of thick forests growing at the bottom of the world in a state of “unremitting” darkness, often lit only by the frozen light of stars, swaying now and again with hurricane-force winds that have blown in from an island-continent that, today, no longer exists.
Whatever “novel climates” and unimaginable geographies lie ahead for the Earth, it will be a shame not to see them."]]>blgblog geoffmanaugh naturalhistory earth tednield immortality humans pangaea ecosystems change forests darkness adaptation geography time climate climates landscapeshttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:57ec62cce10b/Zebreda Makes It Work | Assistive Technology & Creativity2016-02-16T20:18:27+00:00
http://www.zebredamakesitwork.com/
robertogrecozebredadunham customization adaptation assistivetechnology technologyhttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:5952b713f7b3/a-small-lab by Chris Berthelsen: Human(e) Aspects of Tokyo: Creative climate, small places of anarchy, stigmergy.2015-12-27T04:54:16+00:00
http://a-small-lab.com/presentations/humane-aspects-of-tokyo
robertogrecochrisberthelsen 2011 japan tokyo messiness unschooling deschooling anarchy anarchism creativity innovation neighborhoods urban urbanism individuals process social environment openstudioproject lcproject happiness personhood personality intrinsicmotivation knowledge climate culture traditions rituals values freedom trust openness playfulness play humor time resources resourcefulness cities community agency space place consumption consumerism capitalism control technology pocketsofresistance resistance planning urbanplanning policy change adaptability adaptation scale slow small order cohabitation landscape self-organization complexity stimergy coordination emergence emergentcurriculum handmade seams gaps pockets remkoolhaas ivanillich teresaamabile scottisaksen goranekvall engram trace aldoushuxley ritualhttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:25dac4005dc4/002_2 : by hand2015-10-31T06:31:00+00:00
http://a-small-lab.com/text/002_2/
robertogrecoplay gardening aiweiwei ivanillich christopheralexander murraybookchin anarchism anarchy life living jacquesellul remkoolhaas zizek richardsennett johnzerzan raoulvaneigem reality consumerism society pleasure gardens space bernardstiegler marcaugé flows grammes yi-futuan sace commoditization experience buckminsterfuller flexibilty understanding adaptationhttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:41646486b852/Senongo Akpem - Responsiveness, being a chameleon - Video Archive - The Conference by Media Evolution2015-09-30T14:29:54+00:00
http://videos.theconference.se/senongo-akpem-responsiveness-being-a
robertogrecosenongoakpem 2015 culturalresponsiveness highcontext lowcontext culture design webdev webdesign 2013 ambiguity directness collectivism individuality power relationships powerrelationships authority slow fast messaging speed communication difference adapting adaptation universality context inequality fastmessaging slowmessaging fastmessages slowmessages gov.uk individualism appropriation punchingup truthtopower yinkashonibarehttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:95a1ee805ebf/It’s Not Climate Change — It’s Everything Change — Matter — Medium2015-07-31T18:20:47+00:00
https://medium.com/matter/it-s-not-climate-change-it-s-everything-change-8fd9aa671804
robertogrecoEveryone knows that all life requires energy. But we rarely consider how dependent art and culture are on the energy that is needed to produce, practice and sustain them. What we fail to see are the usually invisible sources of energy that make our art and culture(s) possible and bring with them fundamental values that we are all constrained to live with (whether we approve of them or not). Coal brought one set of values to all industrialized countries; oil brought a very different set… I may not approve of the culture of consumption that comes with oil… but I must use [it] if I want to do anything at all.
Those living within an energy system, says Lord, may disapprove of certain features, but they can’t question the system itself. Within the culture of slavery, which lasted at least 5,000 years, nobody wanted to be a slave, but nobody said slavery should be abolished, because what else could keep things going?
Coal, says Lord, produced a culture of production: think about those giant steel mills. Oil and gas, once they were up and running, fostered a culture of consumption. Lord cites “the widespread belief of the 1950s and early ’60s in the possibility of continuing indefinitely with unlimited abundance and economic growth, contrasted with the widespread agreement today that both that assumption and the world it predicts are unsustainable.” We’re in a transition phase, he says: the next culture will be a culture of “stewardship,” the energy driving it will be renewables, and the art it produces will be quite different from the art favored by production and consumption cultures.
What are the implications for the way we view both ourselves and the way we live? In brief: in the coal energy culture — a culture of workers and production — you are your job. “I am what I make.” In an oil and gas energy culture — a culture of consumption — you are your possessions. “I am what I buy.” But in a renewable energy culture, you are what you conserve. “I am what I save and protect.” We aren’t used to thinking like this, because we can’t see where the money will come from. But in a culture of renewables, money will not be the only measure of wealth. Well-being will factor as an economic positive, too.
The second book I’ll mention is by anthropologist, classical scholar, and social thinker Ian Morris, whose book, Foragers, Farmers, and Fossil Fuels: How Human Values Evolve, has just appeared from Princeton University Press. Like Barry Lord, Morris is interested in the link between energy-capture systems and the cultural values associated with them, though in his case it’s the moral values, not only the aesthetic ones — supposing these can be separated — that concern him. Roughly, his argument runs that each form of energy capture favors values that maximize the chance of survival for those using both that energy system and that package of moral values. Hunter-gatherers show more social egalitarianism, wealth-sharing, and more gender equality than do farmer societies, which subordinate women — men are favored, as they must do the upper-body-strength heavy lifting — tend to practice some form of slavery, and support social hierarchies, with peasants at the low end and kings, religious leaders, and army commanders at the high end. Fossil fuel societies start leveling out gender inequalities — you don’t need upper body strength to operate keyboards or push machine buttons — and also social distinctions, though they retain differences in wealth.
The second part of his argument is more pertinent to our subject, for he postulates that each form of energy capture must hit a “hard ceiling,” past which expansion is impossible; people must either die out or convert to a new system and a new set of values, often after a “great collapse” that has involved the same five factors: uncontrolled migration, state failure, food shortages, epidemic disease, and “always in the mix, though contributing in unpredictable ways–- climate change.” Thus, for hunting societies, their way of life is over once there are no longer enough large animals to sustain their numbers. For farmers, arable land is a limiting factor. The five factors of doom combine and augment one another, and people in those periods have a thoroughly miserable time of it, until new societies arise that utilize some not yet exhausted form of energy capture.
And for those who use fossil fuels as their main energy source — that would be us, now — is there also a hard ceiling? Morris says there is. We can’t keep pouring carbon into the air — nearly 40 billion tons of CO2 in 2013 alone — without the consequences being somewhere between “terrible and catastrophic.” Past collapses have been grim, he says, but the possibilities for the next big collapse are much grimmer.
We are all joined together globally in ways we have never been joined before, so if we fail, we all fail together: we have “just one chance to get it right.” This is not the way we will inevitably go, says he, though it is the way we will inevitably go unless we choose to invent and follow some less hazardous road.
But even if we sidestep the big collapse and keep on expanding at our present rate, we will become so numerous and ubiquitous and densely packed that we will transform both ourselves and our planet in ways we can’t begin to imagine. “The 21st century, he says, “shows signs of producing shifts in energy capture and social organization that dwarf anything seen since the evolution of modern humans.”"]]>climate climatechange culture art society margaretatwood 2015 cli-fi sciefi speculativefiction designfiction capitalism consumerism consumption energy fossilfuels canon barrylord coal anthropology change changemaking adaptation resilience ianmorris future history industrialization egalitarianism collapse humans biodiversity agriculture emissions environment sustainability stewardship renewableenergy making production makers materialism evolution values gender inequality migration food transitions hunter-gatherershttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:4972c074142c/Cultural factors in web design | Design | Creative Bloq2015-01-02T22:12:57+00:00
http://www.creativebloq.com/design/cultural-factors-web-design-3135752
robertogrecosenongoakpem webdev webdesign culture 2013 highcontext lowcontext ambiguity directness collectivism individuality power relationships powerrelationships authority slow fast messaging speed gov.uk culturalresponsiveness communication difference adapting adaptation universality context individualismhttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:0f1362374ca1/Is it time to cut adrift from island thinking? – Libby Robin – Aeon2014-12-19T15:47:12+00:00
http://aeon.co/magazine/science/no-island-is-an-island-in-a-cosmopolitan-age/
robertogrecolibbyrobin via:anne 2014 iceland islands science isolation cosmopolitanism judithschalansky picoiyer surtseyisland peterveth charlesdarwin alfredrusselwallace galápagos alexandervonhumboldt newzealand australia bali lombok ecology biology life robertmacarthur edwardowilson ecosystems discreetness nature wilderness complexity extinction dispersal invasion adaptation competition biogeography geography lordhoweisland yrjöhaila equilibrium conservation adrianmanning jakobvonuexküll flows circulation borders people humans separation anthropocene darwinhttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:e005edaeac1d/How urbanisation can be a friend to birds – John M Marzluff – Aeon2014-10-09T20:13:22+00:00
http://aeon.co/magazine/society/how-urbanisation-can-be-a-friend-to-birds/
robertogreconature birds animals cities biodiversity adaptation evolution wildlife 2014 johnmarzluff crows corvids aldoleopold empathy urban urbanism conservation suburbs subirdia suburbia ecologyhttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:8423c0f99911/The Splendid Vagabond: VERY QUICKLY2014-10-06T19:22:01+00:00
http://splendidvagabond.blogspot.com/2012/06/very-quickly.html
robertogrecosolarpunk resilience peakoil technology adaptation internetofthings energy efficiency iothttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:2e482071bf12/guiding principles for an adaptive technology working group | Abler.2014-08-20T22:47:28+00:00
http://ablersite.org/2014/08/20/guiding-principles-for-an-adaptive-technology-working-group/
robertogrecoart design making sarahendren 2014 assistivetechnology adaptivetechnology manifestos rhizomes adaptation human humans bodies criticaldesign conviviality ivanilllich normalcy functionality orchestratedadjacencies hitech lowtech agency makers socialpractice transparency questionasking askingquestions jeremydeller studios lcproject openstudioproject howwework ethics ideals disability disabilities differences time change conversation principles adaptive olincollege body low-techhttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:f67df2775b02/In the Loop: Designing Conversations With Algorithms | superflux2014-04-10T21:29:44+00:00
http://www.superflux.in/blog/conversations-with-algorithms
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http://www.neh.gov/about/awards/jefferson-lecture/wendell-e-berry-lecture
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http://changeobserver.designobserver.com/feature/jazz-inspired-leadership/37947/
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L69cmnLNnW0
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http://www.spur.org/events/calendar/spacesuit-and-cities
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http://johanhedback.com/beuys.html
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2S0k12uZR14
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http://www.raumlabor.net/
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JG6Uf-g-cEY
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http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/26/science/26evolve.html?pagewanted=all
robertogrecoscience urban environment evolution nyc biology jasonmunshi-south paolococco stephenharris 2011 pollution change adaptationhttps://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:cc5226ea1da1/LITTLE BROTHER LIVE2011-07-04T09:17:25+00:00
http://littlebrotherlive.wordpress.com/
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OErQa5yIiUk
robertogrecolearning schools teaching crows turkeys tcsnmy lcproject unschooling deschooling creativity dyslexia toshare fernetteeide brockeide 2011 problemsolving reasoning deductivereasoning ittakesallsorts complexity change adaptability adaptation criticalthinking innovation nonlinear linear thinking tools projectbasedlearning testing standardizedtesting standards standardization pbl linearity non-linear alinear corvidshttps://pinboard.in/https://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:4f65a8a9055c/Phenotypic plasticity - Wikipedia2011-02-23T22:45:11+00:00
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phenotypic_plasticity
robertogrecoscience deschooling biology phenotypicplasticity unschooling change gamechanging adaptability adaptation via:steelemaley environmenthttps://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:5d781b743499/Bilingualism | Hilery Williams2011-02-21T06:56:55+00:00
http://hileryjane.wordpress.com/2011/02/17/bilinguilism/
robertogrecolanguage bilingualism cognition cognitive cognitivedisability adaptability plasticity memory flexibility retrieval problemsolving information freethinking listening adaptation distractionhttps://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:a1a25e3401f1/Communication Nation: The connected company2011-02-12T18:51:07+00:00
http://communicationnation.blogspot.com/2011/02/connected-company.html
robertogrecobusiness management collaboration complexity organizations small scale flexibility adaptability organisms connectivism listening adaptation space social society cities urban urbanism design culture socialbusiness planning people humans inefficiency efficiency division identity ecosystems activelisteninghttps://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:91416aec19fa/On Resilience § SEEDMAGAZINE.COM2011-01-02T04:59:37+00:00
http://seedmagazine.com/content/article/on_resilience/
robertogrecoresilience innovation psychology ecology environment via:theplayethic elinorostrom economics blackswans eutrophication climatechange overfishing planet sustainability future humanity society anticipation adaptation adaptability learning lcproject unschooling deschooling buzzholling complexity sciencehttps://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:4a90df302c92/Why is Berlin the place to be? - Berlin Meeting of Connections 20102010-10-11T05:22:19+00:00
http://portal.kessels-smit.com/berlin/berlininsights
robertogrecoberlin via:cervus cities creativity glvo independence possibility expectations structure rules adaptationhttps://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:253ee6f253dc/The city is a hypertext2010-08-13T14:50:23+00:00
http://kottke.org/10/08/the-city-is-a-hypertext
robertogreco tag on web. I'm sure can trim back some extra text & lights in our towns & cities. We're versatile creatures. Just give us time."]]>architecture cities timcarmody kottke media perception transportation ubicomp urbanism psychology infrastructure technology culture design environment history information infooverload adaptability adaptation urban stevejobs cars cognition hansmonderman resilience traffic georgsimmel 1903 2008 2010 shifts change luddism fear humans versatitlity web internet online modernism modernity hypertext attention brain research theoryhttps://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:ca0648803ab2/Fixing the Bus System : Artsy Techie2010-08-06T06:14:35+00:00
http://olivier.thereaux.net/2010/08/04/fixing-the-bus-system/
robertogrecobuses adamgreenfield transportation newcomers travel cities learning adaptability adaptation transmobility readwriteurbanism urban urbanism ubicomp everyware urbancomputinghttps://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:f6c598172a66/Bird wing shape changing as possible adaptation to environmental change - Front Page - Conservation Maven2010-02-19T22:16:20+00:00
http://www.conservationmaven.com/frontpage/birds-changing-wing-shape-as-possible-adaptation-to-environm.html
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http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/03/books/review/Gopnik-t.html?partner=rss&emc=rss&pagewanted=all
robertogrecobookfuturism alisongopnik timcarmody books reading neuroscience technology plasticity learning media newmedia brain adaptation adaptability noamchomsky stanislasdehaenehttps://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:6ac3f4276e20/Eide Neurolearning Blog: Dyslexic NYTimes Best Selling Author of Political Thrillers, Vince Flynn2009-12-29T20:56:59+00:00
http://eideneurolearningblog.blogspot.com/2009/12/dyslexic-nytimes-best-selling-author-of.html
robertogrecolearning dyslexia education difference writing adaptation social testing vinceflynnhttps://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:824e49e7e144/Global Guerrillas: RC JOURNAL: The Inevitable Failure of Suburbia?2009-11-30T07:02:25+00:00
http://globalguerrillas.typepad.com/globalguerrillas/2009/11/rc-journal-the-inevitable-failure-of-suburbia.html
robertogrecosuburbia suburbs johnrobb future adaptation adaptability resilience change communities communityhttps://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:6e5362c0eb26/Local Bookstores, Social Hubs, and Mutualization « Clay Shirky2009-11-23T04:18:53+00:00
http://www.shirky.com/weblog/2009/11/local-bookstores-social-hubs-and-mutualization/
robertogrecobookselling books business clayshirky adaptation community trends publishing digital bookstores culture future online local thirdplaces social media activism commerce thebookworks bookfuturism technofuturism thirdspaceshttps://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:caa382fa11df/UX Week 2009 » Blog Archive » VIDEO: Matt Webb2009-11-16T02:51:02+00:00
http://www.uxweek.com/announcements/video-matt-webb
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http://rossignol.cream.org/?p=850
robertogrecohomes housing climatechange europe jimrossignol brucesterling video serbia floating reuse danube rivers architecture design adaptation adaptive adaptabilityhttps://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:f5bdd65df20b/cityofsound: Cars b/w Are Friends Electric2009-05-14T05:12:43+00:00
http://www.cityofsound.com/blog/2009/05/cars-are-friends-electric.html
robertogrecodanhill cars bikes cities noise sound safety change adaptation streets design cityofsound urban urbanismhttps://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:cf9f7e3efac8/English Russia » Smartest Dogs: Moscow Stray Dogs2009-04-12T19:55:47+00:00
http://englishrussia.com/?p=2462
robertogrecovia:javierarbona quiltros kiltros dogs animals behavior intelligence russia adaptation psychology learning culture glvohttps://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:eb821d947c2e/The Long Now Blog » We are programmed to be interrupted.2009-02-20T18:41:46+00:00
http://blog.longnow.org/2009/02/20/we-are-programmed-to-be-interrupted/
robertogrecoattention continuouspartialattention multitasking singletasking productivity longnow science psychology internet socialmedia culture society brain change adaptation maggiejackson technology distraction monotaskinghttps://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:60e4ace528da/sevensixfive: X Ways to Ride a Bike in the City2009-02-01T04:45:44+00:00
http://765.blogspot.com/2009/01/x-ways-to-ride-bike-in-city.html
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http://schulzeandwebb.com/blog/2008/09/18/adaptive-interfaces/
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http://www.ew.com/ew/article/0,,20213004,00.html
robertogrecocomics alanmoore watchmen interviews film adaptation books via:rodcorp thewire davidsimonhttps://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:b88c65bb2452/Domusweb | NEWS | Adapted spaces and minimal interventions2008-06-10T10:19:56+00:00
http://www.domusweb.it/domus2k6/source/contents/item.cfm?type=NWS&ID=137492&lingua=_eng
robertogrecoarchitecture exhibitions play urban space via:cityofsound art adaptationhttps://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:72ac0e6da301/TED | Talks | Joshua Klein: The amazing intelligence of crows (video)2008-05-24T19:12:23+00:00
http://www.ted.com/index.php/talks/view/id/261
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http://www.wired.com/science/planetearth/news/2008/05/bird_climate
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http://russelldavies.typepad.com/planning/2008/04/dying-like-coal.html
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http://blog.oup.com/2008/03/text_message/
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http://russelldavies.typepad.com/planning/2008/01/reskilling-for.html
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http://www.people.com/people/article/0,26334,1212568,00.html
robertogrecoblind echolocation lifehacks sound adaptationhttps://pinboard.in/u:robertogreco/b:7b995b3e652c/Neurophilosophy : Seeing with sound: The boy who echolocates2007-10-26T15:22:15+00:00
http://scienceblogs.com/neurophilosophy/2007/10/seeing_with_sound_the_boy_who.php
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http://www.onesmallproject.com/
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http://www.darkhorse.com/zones/wotw/wotw_popup.php?p=
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http://www.answers.com/exaptation&r=67
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