Showing posts with label innovation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label innovation. Show all posts

Saturday, June 13, 2009

At home with the Black Hats

Inventor of the term "lateral thinking", Mild cigarettes (those tiny little holes around the filter? That was him) and all-round shit-stirring genius Edward de Bono is visiting our shores.

Kathryn Ryan has a word with him the other day on NatRad, while David Cohen is drooling over the anticipated mind meal in person at the Human Resources Institute gig. Fair point too. De Bono reckons the best thing NZ could do to help the Middle East situation is to export a few tonnes of Marmite to them, seeing how they need to zinc up their unleavened bread a bit.

But no-one has a monopoly on wisdom. This was apparent when Ryan basically asked him to the answer to the ultimate question and got a variation on 42. NZ are well-known Black Hats. In de Bono's Six Hats scheme of things, we are a nation of knockers. If there's a hole, we'll find it. If you need a cloud for your silver lining, come to us.

There's a quote I've been saving up for bloody ages. I was going to use it to start my never never novel, Kiwianatopia. It's from Richard Feynman when he came to Auckland University for the Douglas Robb Memorial lectures in 1979. It's about 20 minutes into the first lecture:
"I've been here three days. It's beautiful, there's not too many people. I thought you'd be happy here. But everyone talks themselves down. I dunno, something must have happened to it. At least you had Rutherford, so it's OK."
If only we spent a few more hours worshipping ideas and not bloody rugby, we might generate an easier way of life. Here's an idea, fresh off the lobe. Get people interested in science by hauling this guy from Oz across here one summer and have him perform with his Tesla coils down at the waterfront. That'll impress them.

Friday, June 12, 2009

What buggered the buggies?

How does a supposed NZ export dream go so wrong? Mike Booker at Idealog looks at why the wheels fell off Mountain Buggy. Read of distribution agent nightmares, brand dilution and what is rising from the ashes of the old company. There's lessons for everyone from small business start-ups through to Fonterra in there.

I don't think research that came out last year showing that "children benefit from facing and interacting with the person pushing them (usually the parent); that children facing forward may be emotionally impoverished and isolated" would have helped either.

Saturday, September 20, 2008

OLPC

The last session of Software Freedom Day I attended was an interesting presentation on the One Laptop Per Child programme. From what I understood, New Zealanders will be able to take part in the Give1Get1 program later on this year.



A big thanks to Catalyst IT, Internet NZ and other sponsors for a great day, and CafeNet for the free wifi.

UPDATE: Duh. A big thumbs up to Havana too, for having a free espresso stand there.

Census mashups

I've been accidentally invited to Software Freedom Day 08 at the Wellington Town Hall. Early afternoon sessions on Copyright and the Economics of Open Source depressed the hell out of me. Fortunately, a bloke called Gordon Anderson has been demonstrating his mash-up of meshblock census data and Google Earth. This is one hell of a public policy tool. Behold some examples:





Tuesday, July 15, 2008

The Big Think

The excellent 7x7 series returns to Wellington next week. $7 admission, 7 speakers, 7 minutes each. This year is chaired by Rod Oram, and speakers include the New Zealand Institute's David Skilling, independent scholar and commentator Brian Easton and leading agricultural scientist Jacqueline Rowarth.

The 2008 topics are (pdf flyer here):

Seven Foundations – Tuesday 22 July, 6pm
Our Reality 2008, Our Future 2028

Seven Trailblazers – Monday 4 August, 6pm
Insights from NZ Entrepreneurs in the Global Market

Seven Directions – Tuesday 12 August, 6pm
Bold Steps for Transformation

Seven Connections – Monday 18 August, 6pm
Creating the NZ Powerhouse

Seven Imaginations – Tuesday 26 August, 6pm
Things to do Today

Get a season pass for $35 now.

Tuesday, May 22, 2007

Buying the election

Among the many chunks of meaty goodness in the latest Agenda program, Michael Cullen was detailing what the unallocated budget funding was for. Remember before last election, when Dr Cullen hid the interest-free student loan bunny in unallocated spending? Remember it was only an OIA request that brought the Treasury costing estimates to light just before E-Day? If you're looking for how to buy an election, unallocated spending is where you'll find it.

Deborah Hill-Cone was hassling the FM about the $2 billion black hole of unallocated money in last week's budget. Dr Cullen filled in that hole, pointing out that about one billion is to pay for the business tax cuts. Around three-quarters of a billion is for increased health spending. Assuming a 2 million personal taxpayer base, that is an increase in health spending of $375 per worker in one year (Remember, by definition government spending cannot cause inflation). That's about a quarter of the premium on a private health scheme.

Yes, Dr Cullen is right; the health ticket is getting pricier all the time. When the old man got his hip replaced in 1981, it was bleeding edge technology. The procedure was so novel it made the headlines. There was even a picture of Trev holding up his old hip bone next to his most trusted friend, a German short-haired pointer called Kaiser, who was looking wistfully at the bone. Nowadays, hip replacements are soundbite units of measurement for health sector productivity. Every New Zealander has the right to have their hips replaced on the government purse.

Thing is, $750 million into health will buy votes and little else. One could arguably do more for the health sector by throwing even half that much into R&D. Hell, even a tenth would be an improvement on what was offered to R&D in the budget.

So, why the fixation on R&D? Well, if you want to make money, look for where the lawyers are. There they are, feasting on patent and intellectual copyrights. NZ's path to riches, or at least mediocrity, lies in thinking up shit no-one else has and clamping a monopoly on the idea for a few years. It is the only feasible way for NZ to catch up in the OECD league and stop our housing being snapped up by Yanks.

NZ used to be the flipside of fickle weather countries such as Ireland (William Hamilton), Scotland (Logie Baird, inventor of the electric babysitter) and the Scandinavians (dynamite, anyone?). We've had William "Bill" Hamilton, inventor of the jet boat, Joseph Nathan, founder of Glaxo of Bunnythorpe, and the creator of the first carbon fibre motorbike, John Britten.

There are some lights on the horizon. Anyone who has followed David Haywood's blog knows that somewhere, somehow, some Kiwis are exploring wave tech. Which, considering we are surrounded by waves, seems a good path of enquiry. Work on superconductors continues apace. But the government could do much more to encourage new ideas. To give you a random fr'instance, research into the medicinal qualities of marijuana honey still lags. Now that would give you a bit more bang for your health dollar.

Wednesday, February 28, 2007

A Thing Well Made

Attention property developers and architects! Next time you build an apartment block, consider using this "now why didn't I think of that" idea:



Imagine the hours of conversation starters you would have explaining how the stains got on the wall.

Hat Tip Boing Boing