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Archive for Entrepreneurship

Portable Light improves the lives of people without electricity

The Portable Light is a self sufficient and sustainable source of power that can be easily folded and transported. Designed by KVA MATx, each portable light unit generates about two watts of electricity and about one hundred lumens of white light, enough to read a book or do domestic tasks by. It can even be used as a power supply to charge a cell phone, or used in conjunction with other units to increase its power supply so it can charge medical equipment or laptops. This breakthrough technology is great news for the 2 billion people in the world who live without electricity.

The Portable Light is on display at MoMA Feb 24 – May 12 as part of their Design and the Elastic Mind exhibition.

For additional images and video of Portable Light adapting to a variety of different uses, click here.

To hear Sheila Kennedy at Pop!Tech discussing the inspirations for Portable Light, click here.
Woman with portable light
Courtesy of KVA matx

Peggy Shea Andrews

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National Geographic Names Zinny Thabethe an Emerging Explorer

While talk of AIDS has become nothing but white noise for many, Zinhle Thabethe, a counselor working on the frontlines of the South African HIV epidemic, is taking action. Through home visits, working with AIDS orphans, educating nurses and doctors, and singing in the internationally acclaimed HIV-positive Sinikithemba Choir, Zinny’s goal is to fight stigma by raising awareness, and to ensure that people with HIV get plugged into treatment and stay on treatment – all in one of the most resource-constrained environments in the world.

Now, National Geographic is recognizing Zinny’s extraordinary contributions by naming her one of the 2008 class of Emerging Explorers – individuals who represent the next generation of world-changing talent from many different fields.

We continue to work with Zinny and her colleague, Dr. Krista Dong of iTeach, on Project Masiluleke, a Pop!Tech Accelerator project focused on using mobile devices to improve HIV care in South Africa and beyond. And we join in congratulating Zinny on her National Geographic nomination.

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Pop!Tech Opens the doors to the Carbon Initiative

In today’s program, Andrew Zolli, announced the Pop!Tech Carbon Initiative. This initiative is the second iteration of our commitment to being “carbon negative”. This is not your parent’s carbon neutrality. The idea of being carbon negative means that you are offsetting in excess of your carbon emissions.

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Representatives of each benefiting project in Pop!Tech’s listings are participating in this year’s Pop!Tech conference as “Pop!Tech Carbon Fellows.” Fellows include:

* Robert Freling, the Executive Director of The Solar Electric Light Fund (SELF), an organization dedicated to helping rural communities in the developing world power a brighter future through innovative uses of solar energy. SELF is bringing solar powered irrigation to Benin’s Kalale District in West Africa where over 80% of the villages do not have a source of surface water. The villages are provided with a source of clean renewable energy, eliminating the need for diesel & gas powered pumps.

* Dr. Sarah Otterstrom, the Executive Director of Paso Pacífico, a non-profit organization seeking to build wildlife corridors along the Pacific slope of Central America by supporting private landowners and small-scale farmers in sustainable land use and conservation activities. She is currently working on the restoration and conservation of endangered forest ecosystems in the Rivas Province of Nicaragua. This project also reduces the vulnerability of local communities to extreme climate events while improving ecosystem services and the viability of endangered species.

* Stefano Merlin, the Director of Ecologica Network and President of Instituto Ecologica, which coordinates several socio-environmental programs including the Bandeira Switching Non-Renewable Biomass Project in the North of Brazil. This project addresses the problem of deforestation and reduces the quantity of biomass decaying which, in turn, cuts down on green house gas emissions.

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When you visit the Pop!Tech Carbon Initiative website, you can input some information to get your annual carbon footprint. The average American’s carbon footprint is 9.44 tons of CO2. Mine was 14 tons and to offset that amount towards Paso Pacifico would work out to be only about $77 dollars)

How do you compare to that average?

Also, Mark Anderson of Wired Magazine just wrote a story about the program as a part of Wired coverage of the event.

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A New Sustainable Tech Blog from GigaOm

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Katie Fehrenbacher, who has been writing for the popular tech site GigaOm, has launched a new blog called Earth2Tech. The brand new site, which launched this week, is unique in that it can be broken up into three parts:

1. Clean Tech startup news coverage
2. Reviews of eco-initiatives from Big Business
3. Resource page for eco-entrepreneurs

This looks like a promising site and is already filled with some great posts about things like “The World’s Most Important Mushroom”…well, really, you are probably sold by now.

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You’ve Just Been Dissed by Business 2.0 …Oh Snap!

This month Business 2.0 published their list of “The 50 Who Matter Now”. The list includes up-and-coming entrepreneurs, some usual suspects like the guys from Digg, Facebook, Second Life, and of course the media’s latest darling…You. Me? Yes, You!

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Have You had your fifteen minutes of fame? According to Business 2.0, you have. The publication is waving its finger at us and our YouTube loving ways. It was only last year that, according to Business 2.0 and Time Magazine, we were No. 1. We are now swimming in the bottom five. How the mighty have fallen.

This is what the magazine had to say:

You: Web-enabled mass participation

Rank: 45

Why you matter: Can we be blunt? You had a disappointing year. It began with great promise, when this magazine placed You in the No.1 slot on the 2006 edition of this list. “You’ve become an integral part of the action as a member of the aggregated, interactive, self-organizing, auto-entertaining audience,” we said, and we really meant it! A few months later, our corporate cousins at Time concurred and named You the 2006 Person of the Year.

Then You got lazy. All those YouTube videos of cats dancing, playing the piano, and drunkenly running into walls? So derivative. Then there was all the fawning over Snakes on a Plane. What was up with that? And don’t even get us started on Sanjaya. Look, we still think You have lots of potential. But if You’re really going to change the media landscape, it’s time to step up Your game.”

Do you think You/We are changing the media landscape for the better or are we democratizing content to the point of buffoonery?

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Stephen Hawking Experiences Zero Gravity


Peter Diamandis on the bottom right

On April 26th 2007, famed astrophysicist Stephen Hawking experienced complete weightlessness making him the first person with a disability to have the experience. The historic trip also brings one of the most influential thinkers on the cosmos closer to the stars.

Zero-G
the privately held “space entertainment and tourism” company was founded by Peter Diamandis (Pop!Tech 2005 Speaker). Zero-G and The Sharper Image sponsored Hawking’s trip embarked from the NASA Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Flights take place in a modified Boeing 727-200 aircraft.

When asked about the experience, Hawking said, “It was amazing. I could have gone on and on–space here I come!”

The Hawking flight was organized to benefit several charities.

Easter Seals
Starlight Starbright Children’s Foundation
The X Prize Foundation
Augie’s Quest

Two seats aboard the flight were donated by Zero-G to each charity for them to auction off. All together the charities raised $144,000 dollars.

This trip on the Zero-G shuttle is in preparation for a hopeful space launch for Hawking on Richard Branson’s Virgin Galactic which launches in 2009.


And if you have $3,500 to spare, you can reserve a seat in one of Zero-G’s upcoming flights.

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The Green All-Stars from Outside Magazine

I flew up to Camden, ME this week to meet up with my fellow Pop!Techers. As I waited for my flight at New York’s JFK, I decided to ease myself into an outdoorsy frame of mind and bought the latest issue of Outside Magazine.

The banner across cover model, Governor Schwarzenegger’s chest, reads The Green Issue. In the magazine, they list some of the Green leaders and innovators from politics, health care, architecture and Hollywood.


Entrepreneur, explorer, eligible bachelor and Pop!Tech friend David de Rothschild is featured as one of these Enviro All-Stars. David is the founder of Adventure Ecology, a program that gets kids excited about adventure and fosters an appreciation for global responsibility.

“The environment is an area that requires a great deal of energy and optimism,” David says, “and, to my mind, kids have these features in abundance.”

Here is another feature from 2006 on David and how he started Adventure Ecology (also from Outside Magazine).

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The Carbon Negative Update

Great news! The installation of the solar panels in Benin, made possible by the Carbon Negative initiative from Pop!Tech 2006, will commence in the next few months.

Robert Freling, Executive Director of The Solar Electric Light Fund, has sent us some wonderful pictures from Benin, where 44 villages that are currently off the grid will receive clean, renewable energy to homes, schools, health care clinics thanks to the partnership between SELF, Lexus, and Pop!Tech.

The first image is of Bona Kida Setamou, the mother of Mamoudou Setamou, the person who first introduced Freling to the Benin Project opportunity. Note that she is holding a soon to be obsolute kerosene lantern.

Below the pictures is the original letter from Mamoudou. It’s a wonderful account of how SELF first got involved and it is always so rewarding to see the faces of those who are directly benefiting from these types of initiatives.


Dear Friend of SELF,

Hello. My name is Mamoudou Setamou. I was invited by the Solar Electric Light Fund to write this letter as a way of expressing my gratitude to each and every one of you who have helped my country and my people through your support of SELF.

The woman on the cover of the season’s greeting card you are holding is my mother. Her name is Bona Kida Setamou. She is 78 years old, and she lives in Dunkassa, a small village in the northern part of Benin, West Africa.

I live in Weslaco, Texas, with my wife and two children. I received my Ph.D. in Agricultural Entomology from the University of Hanover in Germany, and afterwards, continued my postdoctoral fellowship and professional life at Texas A&M University. Last year, while visiting my family in Benin, I met with the District Council of Kalelé, a region that is comprised of 44 villages, or approximately 100,000 people.

Not a single village in Kalalé District is served by the electric power grid. Not knowing if and when the grid would ever be extended to this remote part of Benin, we decided to
explore alternative energy options. I did some online research, and subsequently learned about the Solar Electric Light Fund.

One thing led to the next, and well, to make a long story short, a local NGO from Kalalé has established a partnership with SELF to bring solar power to all 44 villages in the area. In August of this year, SELF’s Executive Director, Bob Freling, visited a number of the villages in Kalalé, including Dunkassa.

You can’t imagine how happy I was when Bob sent me a photograph that he had taken of my mother. As you can see, she is holding a kerosene lamp, which is presently our only source of household lighting. Thanks to SELF, however, kerosene will soon be a thing of the past for the people of Kalalé. In addition, our schools and health clinics will also be powered by solar energy, and farmers will be able to grow food during the dry season, using a combination of solar water pumping and drip irrigation. And last but not least, a solar-powered wireless Internet network will be set up in Kalalé, enabling local villagers to access online information and communicate regularly with the rest of the world.

So thank you! With your support, SELF is helping the people of Kalalé to emerge from centuries of darkness into a brighter, solar-powered 21st century.

I wish you all a very happy and prosperous New Year.

Gratefully,

Mamoudou Setamou, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of Citrus Entomology
Texas A&M University – Kingsville

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Architecture for Humanity Gets a New Logo Through Flickr Competition


Architecture for Humanity has announced that they have selected a winning logo from their online design competition. They gathered 65 jurors from across the globe to select finalists from more than 800 entries. The coolest part of it all…the whole competition was conducted on Flickr. You can see the work of all the finalists online. And it’s really interesting to read visitors’ comments on each logo.

The winning entry was made by Oregon based designer Michael DiTullo with his simple design featuring a nice dimensional measurement reference.

Here were the criteria established by AFH:

Criteria

We are looking for a logo that will reflect both the mission and spirit of the organization. A good fit for us would include the following:

1. The logo should be able to be understood globally and inoffensive to all cultures.

2. A logo that is not overly representational as our work overlaps so many aspects of design i.e. Definitely no houses, no people, no people in houses and no houses in people.

3. Neither the mark nor the logotype would use the abbreviation “AFH.” there are too many organizations with abbreviations in the development and reconstruction world you end up getting lost in alphabet soup. Please use our full name, ‘Architecture for Humanity’ in the logotype.

4. The logo must be replicable for all Architecture for Humanity chapters. Therefore the logotype must accommodate everything from ‘Architecture for Humanity Roma’ to ‘Architecture for Humanity San Francisco.’ It is also suggested that entrants also explore chapter logos using both the local dialect and English. (ie. Architecture for Humanity Tokyo should be able to be read in Japanese and English)

5. The design should be able to be reversible and use both light on dark and dark on light.

6. The logo will be used for a myriad of print and online applications. It must be readable from use on silkscreened T-Shirts to dodgy fax machines in far off countries.

AFH following a growing trend in using sites like Flickr and YouTube to generate content such as Davos’ recent call for submissions. The competition, as it opens its doors to the outside design world, is wonderfully in line with its open-source architectural mission.

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eBay Puts a Ban on Listings for Virtual Items


The online auction site eBay has put a kibosh on any listing for virtual goods used in multiplayer online games such as World of Warcraft. However, the company has exempted Second Life from this decision and will allow trade to continue is the online community.

eBay spokesman Hani Durzy told CNET that “We think there is an open question about whether Second Life should be regarded as a game.”

Edward Castronova, an Associate Professor of Telecommunications at Indiana University and 2005 Pop!Tech speaker, studies synthetic worlds and their economies. He adds that “this is very, very good. Second Life wants to be an extension of the real economy, while World of Warcraft does not. Will judges and legislatures see the difference? At least eBay did.”

The question that continues to surround Second Life is whether or not Second Life is in fact a game. How do we define the Second Life phenomena? More importantly, in a virtual situation where users can make money and become millionaires while they are at it, how do we define the growing economy? One could say that because Second Life has not real “goal”, no levels to pass, no monsters to defeat it is not a game. It maybe be an extension of a very real first life, made accessible on the internet. But does that mean that Second Life will develop is own economy, will there be a SLSE (Second Life Stock Exchange)? And there are even rumors of taxation on virtual goods. It will be interesting how these issues develop as we see more and more business jump on the band wagon.

Thanks to Ed Castronova for the link.

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