This is part of a series of talks about the global power shift.
In a bit of serendipity, MIT's Technology Review a while back had a list of interesting things on this topic and they will serve to guide our conversations today.
Don’t be alarmed, but the world is at risk. Despite humanity’s best efforts to prosper, there are international threats—some man-made, others beyond our control—that could cripple or destroy modern life as we know it. This macabre trawl through the MIT Technology Review archive will help you work out which ones you really need to worry about.
But maybe there's hope in structural changing
The 14 Principles Of The Future Organization. From Forbes, some thoughts from Jacob Morgan.
Containers Will Not Fix Your Broken Culture (and Other Hard Truths)
Bridget Kromhaut in COMMUNICATIONS OF THE ACM | APRIL 2018 | VOL. 61 | NO. 4
We'll spend some time in groups deciding which topic will be led by which group, and then each of the groups will take the lead in discussing their future topic with the rest of the class.
Plan to work in groups for about a half hour, and then we'll have futures discussions for the rest of our time.
If your group doesn't think one of these topics is the most important to discuss, introduce and lead a discussion on a topic of your choice. But tie your topic and your discussion to the twin themes of information and organizations.
In the PBS television series about the history of jazz music, it was mentioned that a 1938 concert in Carnegie Hall was the big breakthrough for jazz music into the American mainstream. But at the start of the concert, things were dragging and not looking good. Gene Krupa couldn't stand it and burst forth with a solo on his drums, a solo that no one had expected. According to the Smithsonian Magazine, At a groundbreaking Benny Goodman concert in Carnegie Hall on January 16, 1938, Krupa’s sensational driving beat behind “Sing Sing Sing” ... defined him as the very model of a modern drummer.
... this prolific studio player grew up in Maryland before moving to New York in the early 1960s where he got his start doing sessions with jazz artists like Nina Simone and Gabor Szabo. Known for his intricate hi-hat "ghost notes," Purdue soon became one of the most in-demand drummers in the entire industry, serving as Aretha Franklin's musical director for several years when he wasn't busy recording with everyone from Steely Dan to Mongo Santamaria to Bob Marley. The question isn't who Pretty Purdie played with; it's who he hasn't.
Eight-year-old Yoyoka Soma's favorite drummer is John Bonham, so for her entry into the 2018 Hit Like A Girl drum contest, she covered Bonham's part on Led Zeppelin's "Good Times Bad Times." ... She absolutely smashes through the song with three foot pedals and polka dot socks putting in bass work. She's even got the facials and head banging down. And the dampening of the cymbal is a detail only a tenured drummer like herself could add.
This is a 12 year old Spanish girl, singing in the competition for the Spanish entry to the Junior Eurovision Song Contest. This is both an operatic voice and a call from the future to those of us in the present.
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