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On 2001, Creativity and Entrepreneurship, Business Thought Leadership, and more

Highlights from the AAI Foresight Blog

In this issue, AAI Foresight managing principal Tim Mack and consulting editor Cindy Wagner review 2001: A Space Odyssey as an example of collaborative futuring and visual and textual storytelling.

Collaborative Visioning in Science Fiction: 2001 and Minority Report
(excerpt)

By Timothy C. Mack

Collaborative Visioning in Science Fiction: 2001 and Minority Report

Tim Mack

Tim Mack

In contrast to science fiction novels and short stories, movies have increasingly been a team effort. Accordingly, various futurists have been able to work in partnership with production staff, providing content and design advice for landmarks of science fiction. 2001: A Space Odyssey had Arthur C. Clarke on board from the beginning, which produced a vision which continues to be quite persuasive 50 years after its release in 1968.

On Reading 2001 for the First Time

Cindy Wagner

Cindy Wagner

The first time I saw Stanley Kubrick’s film 2001: A Space Odyssey—or rather, tried to watch it—was in college not too many years after it was released. I mostly slept through it, and by the end of the film I suspect others in the audience were as mesmerized by what they were smoking as by what they were watching. In the maybe half dozen times I’ve tried to watch it on TV since, I’ve made it through the film’s entirety just once. By that time, the graphics seemed dated, we still weren’t taking commercial flights to space stations or the Moon, and the placidly sinister mechanical voice of HAL is really all I remember.

Designing Tomorrow’s Cities, Understanding Blockchain, Telling Stories with Data, and more

Designing Cities for Our Future

The Cities for Our Future design challenge has selected a dozen finalists from 1,200 entries for a £50,000 prize, to be awarded in November. The global competition was organized by the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS) in partnership with the United Kingdom National Commission for UNESCO and the Association of Commonwealth Universities.

Blockchain Technologies: Not a One-Trick Pony

randallmayes

randallmayes

As a futurist, if you have scanned “blockchain,” you most likely have learned about the volatile value of Bitcoin and that top banker Jamie Dimon and top investor Warren Buffett are critical of it. Buffett admits he has been wrong before, and Dimon apparently has shifted from fast thinking (emotional) to slow thinking (rational updater). JPMorgan Chase & Co. now has a dedicated section investigating blockchain technologies as an investment and as a potential competitor to banking. So, what do we actually know about blockchain technologies? By Randall Mayes

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