Archive for April, 2010
Co-creating tools for co-creation
by Slava on Apr.06, 2010, under 6 future congeries

A working moment of a workshop to develop a new online platform, to help companies to master open innovation and the use of appropriate design tools.

Rotary Art Fair in Evoluon
by Slava on Apr.05, 2010, under 6 future congeries

Last Sunday I went to an art fair organized in the Evoluon Business Center by the Dutch Rotary Club. It was not a high-end show of contemporary art, of course, but the selection of participating galleries was quite thorough, and the most of the works on display were interesting and often provoking (yet still decorative enough so that a family could purchase them to hang or stand in the house).
The one above is a ’3D painting’ by Yorgos Kypros (Greece) made our of tiny metallic shells; not only they ‘flickr’ and reflect the light beams, creating an ongoing dance of light, they also move slightly, reacting to the flows of air around, Very simple, and very cool.
There were few other similar works, simple and elegant, yet somehow ‘changing the rules’, defying all too common ‘picture on the wall’ format of these exhibitions. I liked the glass installations by Marinke van Zanwijk, young Dutch artist presented by Zand Gallery from Eindhoven.

A tiny change in what is ‘glass’ and how it can be shaped, and how it can interact with other materials, that could lead to quite a profound transformation of how we see the reality.

Don’t put your images here! (says the image)
by Slava on Apr.04, 2010, under 6 future congeries

Consequences of transformations into the future
by Slava on Apr.03, 2010, under 6 future congeries

Also I apologize for the time I climbed down into your world and everyone freaked out about a lesbian orgy foreseen by a priest. – 721
Silicon Valley #2, this time near Moscow
by Slava on Apr.02, 2010, under 5 recent projects, 6 future congeries

While being in Russia I spotted one interesting subject in many conversations, and also in the media, a plan to clone a second ‘Silicon Valley’ near Moscow, heavily endorsed by the government. The very topic is not exactly new, apparently discussions had been held already last year, together with a close contest of a few prominent locations for such an Innovation City. The winner (who is to take all) seems to be Skolkovo, a small settlements not far from Moscow (see the map below) that currently host an international business school (see it on the map below).

The project is stuffed with the top-ranked governmental figures, such as Anatoly Chubais, currently in charge of Rusnano, nanotechnology think-&-do-tank of Russia; Vladislav Surkov, deputy head of the Presidential Administration, widely seen as a chief ideologist of Medvedev’s government; chairman of the Russian Saving Bank; and Viktor Vekselberg, Russian billionaire and a head of the huge cross-industrial Renova Group. Noble prize winner Jores Alferev is called to overview the research strategy, and many international gurus are also invited to assist the initiative, including Esther Dyson, chair(wo)man of the EDventure holdings. Small piece published recently in the Moscow News outlines the scope of the project (Skolkovo to host Russia’s Silicon Valley), although it develops rapidly and many crucial things changes daily.

(the above picture is how the Business Management School in Skolkovo, looks now)
The attitude toward this Innovation City project in Russia is controversial; from one hand, it is obvious that the country needs to find a way to lessen its dependency on selling mere resources (oil, gas, and many others) and instead (or at least in addition) focuses on innovative, research-driven industries. Coupled with deep pockets and entrepreneurial attitude this may results in a phenomenal eruption of the world-class products and solutions.
The skeptics are of course saying that all the above is a wishful thinking, and current heavily corrupted and ignorant bureaucracy will torpid any initiative of such sort, and will just move the budget funds into their private pockets. The title of the cover story of the Russian Newsweek is quite indicative. From the first glans it is a innocent rhyme (it literally means ‘Silicon Raspberry, or ‘малина’ instead of ‘долина’, or a valley).
But the second meaning of the word ‘malina’, well-known in Russia, is a gangsters’ lair, or a den. It reflects the worries of too many that the true intention is to blow, and then skilfully burst yet another bubble fed by the governmental investments.
There are also concerns of different kind. Some say that the commonly shared opinion about ‘huge scientific and technological potential of Russia’ is slightly overrated, and that the current academic and research establishment does not have anything of value in their sleeves, and also incapable to produce such intellectual assets, especially in a short while. There was a number of publications lately accusing Russia in loosing its scientific might, the allegations that strongly refuted by Kremlin (by the way, there is another nickname of the project, namely Кремливая Долина, that wittingly blends ‘Kremlin’ and ‘silicon’).

Why is it interesting for Summ( )n? Even if to only observe these developments from a distance, this is an interesting case, of developing innovative ways to innovate. There are lots of important issues here, and one of them, currently omitted in the majority of conversations around the project, is about the role of ‘creative industries’: design, cultural production, art. There is gut feeling here that a simple cocktail from science, technology, and money will not bring the desired eruption innovations, and that more complex recipe is in need. Can Summ()n add its 2c? That is an interesting question to think about.
Living near the future
by Slava on Apr.01, 2010, under 6 future congeries

Just one floor up.



