Showing posts with label IdeaCity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label IdeaCity. Show all posts

Friday, July 9, 2010

What's in Your Pocket?

Hey, hey, no dirty jokes! I don't wanna hear anything about pocket pool, or bananas in pockets, unless you really do have a banana in your pocket, and I mean the fruit kind.

At IdeaCity I asked my friend Yousry what he had in his pocket. Instead of magical treasures (such as I have) he had normal type things, which I will list below. Because they were so normal I have decided to make two lists of pocket items: one for reality and one for imaginary. Reality vs. Imaginary!!

1. George Castanza Oversize Wallet / Wombat (I'm in a silly mood today!)

2. Lemon Raspberry Halls / Sweet Melting Jewels

3. Blackberry / Old School Walkie Talkie

4. Coins / Magic Wishing Change for the Fountain

5. Nothing / Room for Treasure!!

Saturday, June 26, 2010

IdeaCity 2010 - Class Photo!


Photo by Gene Driskell. Can you find me?

IdeaCity 2010 - Presenter - Liz Canner

I am so happy to be able to post this next vid, a trailer for ORGAMS INC., because it's the same one we saw at IdeaCity when Liz Canner spoke. It's really interesting, and thought provoking.

Liz Canner concluded that the reasons for FSD (Female Sexual Dysfunction) are sociological, and not physical, and the pharmaceutical companies discussed in her film first create a disease and then provide a cure for it, which = big $$$

Enjoy!

Wednesday, June 23, 2010

IdeaCity 2010 - Presenter - HoneyHoney

HoneyHoney played with Adam Cohen and they were awesome. Such talented musicians, and NICE too!!! Suzanna's voice was amazing. I have to prevent myself from lapsing into some flowery description (too much flowery-ness today!) SO here's their vid of "Little Toy Gun" and then you can love them forever, like me.

IdeaCity 2010 - Presenter - Adam Cohen

Adam is awesome. He performed each day of IdeaCity with the band members from HoneyHoney.

I can't wait for his new album "Like A Man". There's a song on there, I think it's called "Anne", and I thought it was one of the most romantic songs I'd ever heard. It wasn't romantic in the wispy carry-me-into-the-sunset type of way. It was romantic in a subtle and sweet kind of way. It described all of those small endearing habits that you notice in someone you love... (I'm such a mush, huh?)

Anyhow, here's a link to Adam singing "Bird On The Wire":

IdeaCity 2010 - Presenter - Lakshmi Pratury

Lakshmi is the Hindu goddess of wealth. And how do we measure wealth? Here, in this place I call home, there are people who measure it by the car you drive, by the designer bag you carry, by the accumulation of possessions. By monetary profit. And by aspiring to sit at the Top 100 of the Forbes list.


But Lakshmi Pratury had a message, and a suggestion. Why not make memories our currency? Why not count the experiences of our lives as riches? A life should be lived with goodness, and with consciousness. Every life is so incredibly valuable, so why do we not appreciate our moments more? And when our moments influence other people, then why don't we bank on their moments too? It's like a wonderful reverberating pyramid scheme.


Lakshmi Pratury's talk was one of the most memorable for me this year at IdeaCity. Her topic of discussion wasn't new, or cutting-edge, or revolutionary, but her perspective was sweet and touching. It was just a reminder to bring the very act of LIVING back into focus. And how do we live?

I don't call myself an expert on this subject, but I have some suggestions... I try to pause and be present. I try to be aware of my feelings at any given moment. I've made sure to never lose my curiosity, and to be fearless, as a child is. I like to make friends and enjoy them and value them for the wonderful people they are. And most of all, I am honest, with the people around me, and with myself.

So, it's no surprise that this talk really resonated with me. I aspire to build a wealth of moments. If memories are money, then I am a BILLIONAIRE!!

Lakshmi's website: http://lakshmislounge.com/

IdeaCity 2010 - Presenter - Brigitte Berman

Brigitte Berman spoke at IdeaCity about her new film, "Hugh Hefner: Playboy, Activist, and Rebel". 

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

IdeaCity 2010 - Presenter - Natalie Tyler Tran

One word: HILARIOUS.



Her Youtube channel is called communitychannel

Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/natalietran
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/pages/community-channel/6783117830

IdeaCity 2010 - Panasonic 3-D

Sometimes I feel like I can't be surprised by anything anymore. I see something new, and I think "Oh, that's kinda neat", and then move on. Like the Strawberry Bloom doughnut, or the Slap Chop...

But last week at IdeaCity I could not BELIEVE the 3-D-ness coming out of this TV screen. It's not like the red and blue 3-D glasses. And it's not even the 3-D experience you get at the movie theatre (kinda blurry). BUT HOLY MOLEE you need to see this new technology that is out now for the 3-D TV screens. I seriously could not believe it. I actually FELT like I could reach INTO the TV.


And then they showed an underwater coral reef scene and I almost got vertigo because all of a sudden I felt like I was underwater. It was a little bit bananas. 

This must be what people felt like when colour came around in the 50's... Just go out and try it... Then get back to me and tell me what you thought... for serious...

IdeaCity 2010 - DAY THREE!


I forgot to take a picture of my IdeaCity Day Three drawing, so I had to improvise using my Photoshop savvy. Please forgive the choppiness of it all. The touch-pad on my lap-top computer is a bit shaky. This was pretty much it, as far as I can remember.

Saturday, June 20, 2009

IdeaCity Day 3 - The End




These three days were my first three at IdeaCity. I was a new attendee, or a new "Idealist", as they called it. I have ALWAYS wanted to go, having seen bits and pieces of the conferences on TV, so when I was asked to be the correspondent for Panasonic I jumped at the opportunity.

Today, on the last day, I sat close to the back of the room so I could observe my fellow Idealists as we took in the presentations.

Overall, I was impressed with the eloquence and passion of the speakers, and overcome with the level of energy generated in the audience. The theater was brimming with inspiration, an electric hum of activity getting ready to launch change into the world.

Educational. Fascinating. Intelligent. Motivational.

I will take all of this away with me and let it sit for a while. As I wrote on my Facebook wall: "~ if you think I was ambitious and motivated before, well, you ain't seen nothin' yet!! ~"... I already feel the calm before the storm, and it feels nice. I just hope that one day I can be up there on that stage encouraging thought and sharing my experiences, a catalyst of change... I hope that one day I too will be able to inspire people like myself, standing on the shores of their futures, looking out at the horizon, ready to go...

I express my most enthusiastic THANKS for everyone involved in this conference, and everyone allowing for this to happen for me. I hope I have done it justice in this little blogging-report... IdeaCity; a platform for creativity, passion, inspiration, innovation, and of course, IDEAS...

MY list of "10 things I want to do before I die":

1. Live in the south of France for a while, no car, just a bicycle.
2. Drift in a little boat on the pond in Central Park on a golden afternoon
3. Visit Japan during the cherry-blossom festival
4. Publish everything I've written
5. Stop being so critical of myself
6. Use and perfect all the languages I know
7. Finish reading every book on my list
8. Volunteer abroad for months at a time
9. Ride the Orient Express across Asia
10. Have a lot of kids, a lot of land, and no television... (there must also be a pond, a garden, some chickens, a beehive, a tree fort, a giant kitchen, and a studio for me!)

IdeaCity Day 3 - highlights and afterparty pics!

Day three started off with a croissant from Starbucks. They were catering the whole event, and I don't think I've ever drank so much coffee! Ok, maybe during exams, but along with this coffee came a selection of treats. Treats that I should not eat. Treats with 600 calories each... WHY are there no healthy things to tempt me?



After my croissant I walked up to the theater doors, brisk, energetic, and ready for a new day of knowledge-y fun...

I caught a seat near the back and got my notebooks ready. I like the back rows because there are TVs set up, and when someone makes a presentation with slides you can see them better with the help of plasma screen TVs close by... :)

Siwan Anderson spoke about "missing women" around the world. She has found population imbalances between males and females. In places like China, India, and Sub-Saharan Africa, males are preferred to females and females are disposed of. Sons inherit property, live with their parents, and preform various funeral rights, while the birth of a girl is a burden. Girls become part of the husband's family and in places like India the dowries are crushing.

Technology has assisted in this phenomenon by providing sneak peeks into the uterus through ultrasound. When the fetus is found to be a female, it is aborted. In India the deaths are not only during infancy but during marrying and child-bearing years of life, and in Sub-Saharan Africa young girls die while children due to diseases where the medicine or food has been given to the boys.

John Peterson Myers is actively researching the effects of industrial chemicals on our bodies. We are in close contact with so many different types of chemicals every day: chemicals in our clothes, in our environment, in food packaging, and even in the food itself affect our well-being. We carry these around in our systems which lead to all kinds of different health problems.

And even though the levels may be low, we do not know how they act in the long-term or how they affect our children. These chemicals, alone or in combination with one another, can turn on and turn off certain genes which affect health later in life. For example, a pregnant woman in contact with the chemical Bisphenol A (BPA) exposes her child in utero. This chemical is found in the lining of cans and in plastic items. BPAs can cause problems such as autism and obstructed bladder syndrome later in life.

SCARY VID FROM YOUTUBE - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BTXPESL_riY

Learn more on this website - www.ourstolenfuture.org

And Albert Nerenberg made everyone laugh, and even laughed at Moses Znaimer. Laughter decreases stress and has beneficial long term effects, like longevity!

One of my FAVORITE talks was from Candace Savage. She is an author and a bee naturalist. She loves insects, like me! I wear a little golden bee around my neck and I wanted to get a picture of her pointing to it... But alas, I could not find her afterwards.



Bees are the sexual go-betweens for flowering plants, and bees are just flower-fixated wasps, if you really want to simplify things... But I am not a fan of wasps, and I adore bees. Especially fuzzy ones. Ones that you can touch. And now, in addition to ALL of the other projects I have, I would like to start a little bee hive in the backyard...

"Oh, for the bees' experience of clovers and noon" - Emily Dickinson

It reminded me of the orangey coloured bee that I helped out in Switzerland. He was wandering around on the walk-way and I picked him up and put him by a tree. Maybe he was sick or dying, but it's better to be under a tree than under someone's foot.





Rob Stewart, a director and documentarian, loves sharks like me. I remember being obsessed with sharks in Grade 3 and visiting all the surrounding libraries reading every book about sharks I could find. I even did a workshop on sharks for the kids at the summer camp I worked at...

Anyways, while trying to film a beautiful movie about the magnificence of sharks, he ended up with a documentary "filled with corruption, espionage, attempted murder charges, and mafia rings." He named it "Sharkwater" and went on to become the most award-winning documentary of 2007. It would have been nice to talk with him more, but the conference was so busy. He also shares this incredible and maddening passion for conservation of our earth, and his speech was truly touching.


The SHARKWATER trailer!! - www.youtube.com/watch?v=ggtxA4wuXzY




Scott Cassell talked all about another sea creature, the Humboldt squid who has three hearts and has blue blood (the blood is copper based, not iron based like ours!!)

The we made paper airplanes with Louis-Rene Lafond, and it was time for another break which meant MORE coffee, and one more croissant... Just one... I promise it will be my last one...



Ray Zahab and Colin Angus told us of their exploring adventures, and Edna Levitt lead us in some afternoon fitness exercises!

- photo by Gene Driskell

"Ben Gulak, a native of Milton, Ontario, is the 19-year-old creator of the Uno, a "one-wheeled" zero emissions motorcycle".



The bike uses gyroscopic technology, kind of like the Segway. It would be great for scooting around, especially in densely populated cities.

-photo by Gene Driskell

Terry Mosher took us on a visual trip through politics, and Ali Velshi reminisced about his experiences as chief business correspondent for CNN.

As the conference wound to a close I started thinking about that lovely pink blouse in my bag, hiding somewhere in the theater! Time for the after party!


The AMAZING venue!!


My outfit, straight from Florence, rescued from the clutches of the secret bakery!

Making plans for poutine with Laura Archer

Discussions about life, the universe, and everything with Ali Velshi

Making constellations with Astrophysicist Jaymie Matthews


A perfect day, a perfect conference... Celebrating with a glass of red...

Friday, June 19, 2009

IdeaCity Day 2 - robots


I must admit, I really dig robots. And not just the cute little cartoon ones that clean your house or deliver cakes (are those only in my dreams?)... And not just robots like Wall-E (who is my boyfriend, by the way)... I love the concept of making the inanimate animate.



Today we heard from Ryan Adams who is building computers that can see. We learned a lot about how our eyes work, and did you know that when your eyes are moving you are actually blind? Yes, this means that when you look from one point to the next the movement between is unseen, unrecognised... It's like your brain internalizes for that instant and Mr. Adams can prove it to you:
Get a mirror. And find a friend.
Look into your friend's eyes. You can see them moving back and forth, yes?
Now look into the mirror and notice that you cannot see your own eyes shift back and forth... You are blind in the interim...

David Hanson creates bio-inspired robots. Some you can have conversations with, and are life-like in bodily movement and facial expression... This one is called Zeno. Watch how the artificial skin moves. It's called "frubber" for flesh and rubber:

Zeno... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q88FK37Q8jU

But the one that REALLY flipped me out was the robo-dog. Just WATCH how it can move across different terrains and how it reacts when pushed, or when sliding across ice... AMAZING


Go Robo-Dog!!
- http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cHJJQ0zNNOM




Stephen Paulter spoke about surgical robotics. He has applied the use of a tiny robotic hand during minimally invasive laparoscopic surgery. This kind of stuff was what made me want to be a surgeon when I was 12. I went to the U of T open house and cut the peel off a banana using laparoscopic tools, but they were simple scissors and a grasper. I think I would have made a great surgeon...



And when you make the inanimate animate, we must remember puppetry. Ronnie Burkett also spoke, and I remember seeing one of his puppet shows in high school called "Streets of Blood"... Do you guys remember that?

IdeaCity Day 2 - Architecture!

"I used to hate Toronto, but as you become more involved in a place it becomes fabulous, it reveals it's secrets"
- Will Alsop, locally he is best known for designing "The Tabletop" at OCAD... or, as I like to call it "The Giant Stapler"...



Les Klein’s idea for transforming the Gardiner Expressway was striking, and sensible! Everyone has talked about tearing it down, or building an underground road, or some other idea that seems like a lot of work and a lot of money. But Les proposes that we build a garden over the Gardiner.



It would cost a fraction of the price of tearing the whole highway down, it would allow people to walk or bike to work, and it would be constructed without interrupting normal traffic flow. The idea of riding my bike along that route seems pretty cool, and personally, it’s an idea that I’d like to see materialize. You could also have picnic lunches there, and we all know how much I love picnics!

Here we are infront of the Panasonic plasma screen TVs... Full of the starry night sky...

Thursday, June 18, 2009

IdeaCity Day 1 - summary


The day is segmented and every segment has a theme. Spirituality was the theme of the second segment, and my favorite speakers had to be the two last.

We heard from Richard MacDonald who is a Dignified Death Advocate at the Final Exit Network. He feels that a humane society should not deny one's personal choice to end their own life if they are terminally ill. This network is informative only and does not provide the means of ending one's life, but people who contact them want control over the location, manner, and time of their exit.

Rick Miller performed his one-man hit show titled "Bigger Than Jesus"... What can I say about this? It was great. You'll just have to check it out on your own:

http://www.biggerthanj.com/

The next segment was about Human Rights, and at one point I had to sneak out of the theater to write. After all of this information, all of this inspiration, I felt punch-drunk and had to get some of my thoughts down...

Preston Manning spoke about creating a more democratic society, John Ralston Saul spoke about the political roots of Canada, and Irwin Cotter each touched on human rights and the horrors of genocide.



But it was Laura Archer who really got me. And how do I sum her up? She is a nurse and an artist. She has traveled to war-torn lands assisting people, treating diseases, delivering babies... She's been kidnapped and been witness to the extremes of human suffering and human injustice... And at the end of it all I just wanted to extend my hands and ask "How can I help?".

Her words were full of power and urgency. Her stories were sad and horrific, but also hopeful. She reminded me of myself a long time ago, when I was so politically active and so socially aware. I had felt so empowered and so powerless at the same time. Like her, my passion for change was driving those around me away, and it made me realize just how much people close their eyes.

So it begs the questions: How can I help? What can I do? And how do you battle two powerful enemies? The injustice and the denial? How do you stand up against oppression and against a mind's closed doors? How do you make a difference?



The IdeaCity bio of Laura Archer

I also had a chance to meet and speak with Marilyn Lightstone, actress and artist. She is so lovely and engaging, AND she played Ms. Stacey on Anne of Green Gables. That movie has been so instrumental in my development and it was really interesting (and a little surreal) to talk with a character who I had admired growing up!



My favorite speakers of the next segment were Maude Barlow, Wade Davis, And Robert F. Kennedy Junior. All environmental talks, all so inspiring...

The only comment I can provide is one of hope. There are ways that we can help to make a difference, but the changes must come from within us. And we must believe so fiercely that change is possible. We cannot look to our neighbors. We must find it within ourselves to act with the earth and it's living things, and act quietly. Start doing, and those around you may also do.

I really wish I had it in video so I could post it and show you. I have are some pics that I took from the conference... My Lumix camera is amazing! I'm loving the big screen at the back and the way the lens opens and closes. My friend told me that it has a Leica lens, which is a good lens, good for zooming...

Time for sleep, looking forwards to another incredible day tomorrow...



1. Richard MacDonald
2. Moses Znaimer
3. John F. Kennedy Jr
4. Wade Davis

Idea City Day 1 - noontime


So far, I've traveled into and out of the cosmos, and into and out of cells... I've seen the glow of the universe. I've been inspired and stunned, and it's only 11:00 am... !!

Jacob Abrahamse, a child soprano, opened the conference with his angelic voice, and was followed by Marcel Danesi who spoke about symbols and meanings. Marcel Danesi is a pop culture semiotician.

This is the 10th anniversary of IdeaCity, and the symbol "X" is everywhere, X being the roman numeral for ten:

"X is crossed swords, combat - who will be the victor? we do not know, so the mystics adopted X as the sign of destiny, and algebraists chose it to represent the unknown..." - Victor Hugo

"In cartoons, X is a symbol of death. Draw X's over the eyes and that little critter is toast".

Would you like to see something totally neat? - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A2cmlhfdxuY&feature=fvw

Next, I learned about the rings of Saturn in a funny and astounding speech by Mark Showalter, a planetary systems expert who had worked on the Cassini mission. The back-lit image (forward-scattered image) of Saturn was astounding. Usually we see an image of Saturn face on, in full sunlight, but the Cassini image it is back-lit, an eclipse, and all of the dusty filaments of rings are visible. An outer ring was discovered, and in it, a little satellite... And on this little satellite, geysers, liquid water, and green stripes indictiave of life...



COOL!

Barth Netterfield was next. We learned about balloon borne telescopes... The balloons can float for weeks, but they need to be warm so the gas inside won't condense and cause the balloon to fall. The solution when the sun rises and sets? Fly them at the north or south pole! They have constant sunlight there, depending on the season... The particular telescope that was launched could "see" into the dark matter in galaxies where new stars are born...

"Space is really empty, even when it is full".

David Ben was the last speaker before the break. He is a magician and showed us how professional cheaters cheat at poker using sophisticated shuffling techniques... I made notes: Never play poker with David Ben.

http://www.ideacityonline.com/

More pictures to come, I had to get used to playing with my camera.