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Design Education Globalization Network OLPC OpenSource Technology

OLPC Peru makes a difference

Cannot help but wonder what American school children (Grades K-6) could accomplish with One Laptop per Child XO Laptop.  Dare I say the ‘competition’ for XOs in America this holiday season are gaming systems?  Actually the Give a Laptop, Get a Laptop Program isn’t really all that expensive in comparison with the top gaming systems:

Wii value bundle: $325.00
XBox 360 Pro: $300.00
PlayStation3 80GB Console: $400.00

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Education Globalization

China purchasing LA/SanFran real estate

Chinese real estate companies are planning to visit two of the US Cities who have lost significant housing market values (Los Angeles and San Francisco) to purchase property.

SouFun, the biggest real estate website in China will look at properties in California and possibly Nevada. Liu Jian, the company’s chief operating officer, said about 300 people had expressed interest in the idea in the three days since it was advertised, though the company would take only a small group on the first trip.

The Chinese have also expressed interest in GM which just last week opened its 8th auto plant on the mainland.

Tags: China, Los Angeles, economy, globalization, San Francisco, GM, trends

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Education Globalization Technology

Hot, Flat and Crowded

Finally I am pushing my way through Tom Friedman’s Hot, Flat, and Crowded: Why We Need a Green Revolution–and How It Can Renew America. If your a fan of his The World Is Flat series you’re in for a fast, real-world update about the state of the environment.  Its safe to say our global carbon footprint is ruining the planet.

hot, flat and crowded

I was very impressed with his chapter on energy poverty was very well written.  Energy is the capacity to do work:  1 in 6 people do not have access to energy.  Even in India almost 700,000,000 citizens are not on any energy grid.  There has not been a power plant built in over 30 years anywhere across Africa … with the exception of white South Africa.  I never really considered Africa’s real problem has been an energy problem all along. Fighting AIDS, hunger and the other noble causes are quite restricted when you cannot even turn on a lamp at night.

But as Friedman outlines in the book Africa needs green energy. Coal burning solutions that would only contribute to the world’s global warming problems.  And China is bringing on new coal burning plants every other week?

For the health of the planet we need to place as much green energy as possible – Friedman acknowledges that many green solutions cannot yet scale to cover Africans, Indians, Chinese AND Americans – at the base of every country’s economic pyramid.

Looking forward to the remaining half of the book.

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Design Education Globalization Network OLPC OpenSource Technology

2008 OLPC: Give One Get One

The 2008 holiday Give One Get One program for OLPC is now in full swing.  Please consider donating a unit to a child in need.  A new print on-demand manual is now available.  Looks like the Amazon links are not functional yet, so check out the details at Laptop.org and see how you can change the world one person at a time.

Tags: OLPC, Give One Get One, Amazon, XO, G1G1, globalization, trends

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Design Education Globalization Network Reading

Latest read: Competing in a Flat World

Searching for the next emerging career in business?  Its Network Orchestrator and this does not refer to computer networks or chamber music.  If you understand fluid, globalized supply chains your on the right track.  Competing in a Flat World: Building Enterprises for a Borderless World proves success is less about what a company can do itself and more about what it can connect to in the global world in order to succeed.

Enter Globalization 3.0 and now business must be in a position to take advantage of a Network Orchestrator.

This book follows Li & Fung, a garment company which produces annual sales over $8 billion for some of the most respected brands in the world.

What may surprise you is that Li & Fung do not own any factories.

This book may be crafted for business schools but its larger impact is for educators.

More importantly parents should read this to see how the world has already changed and learn how their children (regardless of profession) will enter a vastly different marketplace.  The changes from their generation are drastically different.  Li & Fung’s message is quite simple: evolve or die.