Thursday, December 26, 2013

Tampa Hackerspace (Tampa, FL) - Meetup

Tampa Hackerspace (Tampa, FL) - Meetup: Located in the ground floor of CoWorkTampa: 3104 N. Armenia Ave., Tampa

Web: http://tampahackerspace.com/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/HackTampa

Facebook: https://facebook.com/groups/TampaHack/

Event calendar: http://bit.ly/1dGVPBw

Some of the projects our members work on: aquaponics, FIRST robotics, Arduino, Raspberry Pi, electronics, ham / amateur radio, wearable electronics, home automation, microcontrollers, quadcopters, drones, 3D printing, art, etc.

Saturday, December 7, 2013

FoodARC: Food Action Research Centre,at Mount Saint Vincent University

FoodARC | ACT for CFS | Resources & Publications: The Political Economy of Food Policy Change

The Political Economy of Food Policy Change

Within ACT for CFS, we are using a “Political Economy” approach to thinking about policy change. The Policy Working Group prepared a document to provide ACT for CFS participants with an overview of what policy is, how it is created, and how it can be changed. The paper presents a framework for analysis of community food security based in the theory of political economy, which is a way of understanding the deeper power dynamics of policy making.

Saturday, November 2, 2013

International Network for Urban Agriculture

About Us | International Network for Urban Agriculture: INUAg's vision: Communities worldwide are reconnected to the production of their food.

INUAg's mission: To inspire and foster urban farming through networking, education, and advocacy.

INUAg.org is an up-to-date, organized and searchable resource for individuals, communities and organizations interested in urban agriculture. We are striving to be comprehensive in geography, sector, topic, growing methods, business models, policy and other topics as urban agriculture grows.

INUAg is based in Chicago serving a global membership. Inuag.org has forums for members to exchange ideas, best practices and resources. INUAg is looking to develop partnerships with existing urban agriculture organizations and coalitions to help expand the viability and success of urban agriculture.

Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Outcome Mapping Learning community

About - Outcome Mapping Learning community: About the Outcome Mapping Learning Community
The Outcome Mapping Learning Community is an informal group of over a thousand members from around the world. It acts largely as a dynamic platform for sharing knowledge and experiences relating to Outcome Mapping. Members come together to solve problems, to showcase and trade their discoveries and good practices, and to support one another in applying OM.

The platform is owned, populated and updated by OM users worldwide. It includes a menu of tools that allow members to communicate efficiently, to find the information they want, and to share knowledge with others.

When you join the OMLC, you can:

  • Join discussion forums and mailing lists and debate with other members
  • Upload documents for other members to read
  • Read documents shared by other members
  • Ask questions and get answers
  • Stay informed about relevant events
  • Check member’s profiles to see who else is working in the field
  • Consult a fully-catalogued library of OM resources

Monday, October 21, 2013

Edible park just keeps on giving | Mountain Xpress | Asheville, NC

Edible park just keeps on giving | Mountain Xpress | Asheville, NC: "A for apple and Z for Ziziphus": More than 40 varieties of fruit and nut trees grow in George Washington Carver Park, Asheville's first urban orchard. Photos by Jonathan Welch



Boasting more than 40 varieties of fruit and nut trees, the park serves as both a peaceful place to relax and a city farm providing the community with nutritious, locally produced food. "We have everything from A to Z growing there," notes permaculture guru "T. Bud Barkslip" (aka Bill Whipple). "A for apple and Z for Ziziphus (also called jujube fruit or Chinese date)."

Barkslip learned of the orchard five years ago while looking for a good place to view the Fourth of July fireworks. Realizing that he was surrounded by fruit trees, he also saw that they needed attention. "Many people are intimidated by [maintaining] fruit trees, since they need lots of cutting and care." Barkslip now helps provide that care, along with a cadre of volunteers from the Bountiful Cities Project.

The April 3 tour will start at the Stephens-Lee Recreation Center. The suggested donation is $10 per person; all proceeds will be used to buy additional fruit and nut trees for the park. For details, visit http://transitionasheville.ning.com.

To learn more about volunteer opportunities at local edible park projects, go to http://bountifulcitiesproject.org (for Carver Park) or http://ashevillegreenworks.org (for Magnolia Avenue, West Asheville Park and Hall Fletcher Elementary).

Participants are also encouraged to join The Buncombe Fruit Nuts, a club that meets monthly at the West Asheville Library. Info: whipplebill@hotmail.com. They'll meet Wednesday, March 31, from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Chuck Marsh will discuss "The Big World of Small Fruits."

Sunday, October 6, 2013

URBAN FOOD POLICY

URBAN FOOD POLICY




I'm an Assistant Professor of Environmental Studies at The New School, where I teach courses in urban food systems. My current research focuses on urban food policy, particularly innovative planning strategies to support urban agriculture. I have a Ph.D. in Urban Planning from Rutgers University, a Masters in City and Regional Planning from Berkeley, and a BA from Cornell.

Monday, September 16, 2013

Detroit Hospital Takes a REAL Step toward Healing, Builds First Organic Hospital Greenhouse | REALfarmacy.com | Healthy News and Information

The greenhouse features strawberries, tomatoes, microgreens, and much more.

Detroit Hospital Takes a REAL Step toward Healing, Builds First Organic Hospital Greenhouse | REALfarmacy.com | Healthy News and Information

Urban agriculture is becoming the new hot subject I think more people are embracing this whole concept of reconnecting with local food systems and how fresher food is better for you. How do we make these changes? I guess policy, there are aspects about how we handle food in all areas of food service contracts.


Friday, August 30, 2013

Fw: Kids Get It - Do You?

Subject: Kids Get It - Do You?

Clean Water Action
Dear Eric,
A drawing collected by our Canvass - even kids know it's time to end power plant water pollution - join them with a gift now!
Kids understand that we can't let power plants pollute our water any longer. Every day our organizers get drawings from kids who want to protect our water. But kids need us to do something about it. With less than a month to flood the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) with comments supporting the strongest protections, we need you now more than ever! Make a special donation today to stop the 5.5 billion pounds of toxic wastewater that power plants dump into our water every year!  Tens of thousands of members like you have already had their say – will you join them with a gift of $50 today?
The fight to make sure EPA revokes power plants' free pass to pollute is one of the biggest Clean Water Action has ever taken on. Because there is so much at stake – power plants contribute more than 50% of the toxic pollution in our water, dumping billions of pounds of chemicals like mercury, arsenic, selenium, and others directly into our drinking water – we've mobilized every resource we have. And now we need you for the final push – please make a gift today and learn more here.
We're up against the massive influence of the power plant and coal industries and they have already had their say - the industry convinced the White House to force EPA to include two "do-nothing" options in the proposal. If you make a gift today you can make sure that the White House knows that this disappointing and unprecedented step to disregard the experts at EPA won't stand. Don't let EPA cave to pressure - make a donation today to support the strongest and most commonsense proposed safeguards for our water.
Learn more here and join our campaign today!
We have until September 20th to get this done. The industry wants to maintain the status quo despite the fact that controlling this toxic mess is affordable. Help us make sure EPA knows that you expect them to stand up to the industry and protect clean water with the strongest possible rule. Make a gift today!
For Clean Water,
Andrea Herrmann, Development Director
Like Us on Facebook! Follow Us on Twitter! Watch Us on YouTube! Spread the Word! Support Clean Water Action While You Shop with WeCare.com! Donate for Clean Water!
National Office
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Monday, August 12, 2013

Saturday, August 10, 2013

Home · instructure/canvas-lms Wiki · GitHub

Home · instructure/canvas-lms Wiki · GitHub:


If you'd like to use Canvas in your own course, or you just want try Canvas out, there is no need to do all the work of installing it yourself. Canvas Cloud is Free for Teachers to use, just sign up to get started.
If at a later time you do want to migrate from your own install to Canvas Cloud, or vice versa, you can use the course export and import features to migrate all your content.

Getting Help

Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Eric Rafael Weaver Special Offering

Good Day!
Here is an outline of the new sample workshops I can do for you.  I am employed at the Patel College of Global Sustainability where I have helped with their new core courses and authored these other works: http://youtu.be/7AzL3Tg2Mzk.  Please consider hiring me to teach these workshops for the coming term, either online or in-class: http://www.starsusa.org/teach/

I have had over 150 students in an online course.  Together we can learn how to step this up.  In the same light, below is a list of my skills and experiences to support this.  My thought is to enhance our collaborations through transparency.
My Skills are:
  1. Technology including web sites, videos, and computer software
  2. Patent innovation, prototyping, and entrepreneurship
  3. Organizing knowledge, skills, and collaboration = Team Building
Started business websites:
Classes as TA, author and/or instructor:
Stormwater modeling: Professional
4631 Critical Issues in Public Hlth
Patent development: Patents
6102 Principles of Hlth Pol and Mgmt
Education services: Philanthropy
6147 Managing Quality in Hlth Care
USF Graduate Student: Personal
6421 Public Health Law and Ethics
Personal Passions:
The Social Entrepreneur Presented
MBA Student Patent Project
Social Entrepreneurship as Urban Ag Proposed
Public Health Complexity Group
Sustainability Lectures Outlined
Research IWRM Blog
Assessment LEED Innovations
Social Media
Youtube videos
Linkedin business links
Timebank local services

I retired from engineering consulting in 2004 to return to teach.  My daughter graduated from USF with honors and now teaches elementary school, while my son is excelling in the Architecture program.  Now free to pursue my own passions, I inspire collaboration to enhance opportunities.  I welcome developing new projects and knowledge sharing.  I will continue to develop and learn how to better share my passions, and welcome your thoughts.

Have a wonderful Day
Eric

Eric R. Weaver, MBA, MSMS
Research Associate, Patel College of Global Sustainability
Mail: CGS0101 || Office Location: CGS0210
(813) 974-8337 || (813) 974-2522 fax

Monday, July 29, 2013

La Via Campesina : International Peasant Movement

La Via Campesina : International Peasant Movement

A movement born in 1993

A group of farmers’ representatives – women and men- from the four continents founded La Via Campesina in 1993 in Mons, Belgium. At that time, agricultural policies and the agribusiness were becoming globalized and small farmers needed to develop and struggle for a common vision. Small-scale farmers’ organizations also wanted to have their voice heard and to participate directly in the decisions that were affecting their lives.

La Via Campesina is now recognised as a main actor in the food and agricultural debates. It is heard by institutions such as the FAO and the UN Human Rights Council, and is broadly recognized among other social movements from local to global level.

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Steve Jobs

Steve Jobs: Stay Hungry & Stay Foolish




Steve Jobs' 2005 Stanford Commencement Address: Sometimes life hits you with a brick, don't lose faith => love what you do, but don't settle!!! Keep Looking Don't Settle: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UF8uR6Z6KLc&feature=share&list=TLAICu6dyjOzY

"Again, you can't connect the dots looking forward; you can only connect them looking backwards. So you have to trust that the dots will somehow connect in your future. You have to trust in something — your gut, destiny, life, karma, whatever. This approach has never let me down, and it has made all the difference in my life"

Man is a tool Maker to amplify their skills:



Teams make is - - with 60 Minutes: Starting Pixar



Thomas Edison of Our times: Game Changer


"Don't let the noise of others' opinions drown out your own inner voice. And most important, have the courage to follow your heart and intuition. They somehow already know what you truly want to become. Everything else is secondary." Stanford Report, June 14, 2005

Friday, July 19, 2013

Over 1 million Vietnamese farmers benefits from SRI

Over 1 million Vietnamese farmers benefits from SRI - People’s Army Newspaper Online
find more here: http://sri.ciifad.cornell.edu/
QĐND - Tuesday, October 18, 2011, 20:48 (GMT+7)
PANO - Vietnam celebrated over a million small-scale farmers who are embracing a technique that grows more rice with less seeds, fertilizer, water, and pesticides in an event at Thai Nguyen University of Thai Nguyen province on October 18th
The technique is called ‘system of rice intensification’ or SRI for short, which is a package of good agricultural techniques for hand-planted rice that helps farmers reduce their costs while increasing their production.

Saturday, July 13, 2013

Kitchen Nano Garden | Industrial Designers Society of America - IDSA

Kitchen Nano Garden | Industrial Designers Society of America - IDSA

Kitchen Nano Garden

Nano Garden is a vegetable garden for the apartment kitchen, using hydroponics, so you don't need to worry about pesticides or fertilizers. Instead of the sunlight, Nano Garden has lighting which promotes the growth of plants. The amount of light, water and nutrient supply is also controllable, so you can decide the growth speed. It lets you know when to provide water or nutrients to the plants, which makes it easier to grow them. Moreover, Nano Garden functions as a natural air purifier, eliminating unpleasant smells.
Contact: Seul Ki Park: sorokii@hdec.co.kr
Credit: Hyunjung Lee, Jaeyong Park, Changjin Shon and Seulki Park of Hyundai Engineering & Construction (South Korea) and Ill-woong Kwon of Gromo (South Korea)

another: http://www.urbancultivator.net/kitchen-cultivator/

Urban Cultivator Residential

The Urban Cultivator Residential is an all in one indoor home garden. You get 365 days of perfect growing conditions for all of your favorite herbs and veggies. No more soggy super market herbs going bad in your fridge... just fresh crisp herbs from your very own garden.Urban Cultivator Residential Image

Publications | Ontario Healthy Communities Coalition

Publications | Ontario Healthy Communities Coalition
OHCC produces a number of educational publications to assist community groups and coalitions in their efforts to improve the well-being of their communities. Many of our resources have been updated recently, reflecting changes in conditions and trends within Ontario and, in some respects, nationally and globally.
To order our publications in print format please contact us.

Monday, July 8, 2013

Sedgwick, Maine is first town to declare total food sovereignty, opposing state and federal laws

Sedgwick, Maine is first town to declare total food sovereignty, opposing state and federal laws

According to the website FoodRenegade.com Sedgwick is the first city in the U.S. to free itself from the constraints of federal and state food regulation. Published reports say the town has passed an ordinance that gives its citizens the right "to produce, sell, purchase, and consume local foods of their choosing," regulations be damned. The ordinance includes raw milk, meats that are slaughtered locally, all produce and just about anything else you might imagine.

And what's more, three additional towns in Maine are expected to take up similar ordinances soon, said the FoodRenegade.com.

Learn more: http://www.naturalnews.com/039633_Sedgwick_food_freedom_federal_laws.html#ixzz2YSi6ZQ00

Sunday, July 7, 2013

Food and Fertilizer Technology Center

Food and Fertilizer Technology Center

Although many valuable technologies have been developed by research institutes, they are often too expensive for small-scale farmers to adopt. The Center feels that labor-saving farming methods using locally available low-cost inputs are often better suited to small farms. This book is based on a survey carried out in 1997 on low-cost indigenous technology for livestock in Asia. The 75 items were collected from four Asian countries namely, Korea, the Philippines, Taiwan ROC, and Thailand. It is the concern of the Center to disseminate such technologies so that farmers in other parts of the region can benefit from them

Recorded Lectures Given by Alan Chadwick

Recorded Lectures Given by Alan Chadwick

Lecture 1 (The Vision of Biodynamic and Organic Gardening, Cultivation)

Part 1.1 (Quotes by Lindsey Robb and Robert Graves; Agriculture and Horticulture; Long term vision of the garden and orchard is necessary; Gradual development of soils, both in the wild and in the garden; Recovery back from destructive elements in the world through the moral attitude of the gardener; the Cornucopia; Cleansing the air through the developing life of the garden.) 10:13

A World of Hope! with John Jeavons

A World of Hope! with John Jeavons
How fortunate we all are that we have farmable soil.

Soil, so easily taken for granted, is truly amazing when we realize how long it takes to "grow" soil in nature—and how fast we use it up growing food. Six inches of farmable soil is needed to grow food and other crops. In Nature, soil genesis takes an average of 500 years on the Earth to grow one inch of this wonderful element. This means it takes 3,000 years to grow six inches. In California, where I live, it takes four times longer due to the original geologic material and our climate—or 2,000 years for one inch and 12,000 years for six inches! We need to learn patience!

Just imagine—a significant part of the soil providing the World's nourishment was first developing about 1,000 B.C. when the Romans had primitive chariots, and a key part of the soil that a thriving Californian agriculture possible was beginning to grow about 10,000 B.C. during the Stone Age! This—in one way— slender foundation is what makes it possible to fly in jet planes while we are using laptop computers.

French Intensive Gardening

French Intensive Gardening

As the name suggests, French intensive gardening was developed in France from where it spread to other parts of Europe and the world. This method is also known as biodynamic agriculture, Marais system and square-foot gardening. The main objective behind this method is to generate maximum yield in least possible space. Although this method defies certain preconceived notions about agriculture and farming, it is highly effective.

What is French Intensive Gardening?

It is a method invented to maximum possible yield with the help of particular changes in the garden layout and using biodynamic agricultural techniques. Apart from being productive, through this method a huge variety of crops can be produced within the limited space. Planning is extremely important here as the type of crop and method of planting need to be carefully determined well in advance.

A unique aspect of French intensive gardening is the use of raised beds. The gardening beds are huge which allows people to walk through the entire area in order to maintain the garden. The garden beds are dug up twice which means that the soil below is loose and worked up. Due to this, light and fluffy soil is generated which is them improved by addition of humus and compost, leading to a respectable plant growth with wide and deep roots.

Instead of flattened garden beds, this gardening style advocates mounded beds which increase the surface area and thereby facilitate more planting. Establishing these kinds of beds takes a lot of effort but people feel it is worth it, as the yield is excellent. To maintain the garden bed, it has to be watered lightly everyday along with regularly adding compost and fertilizers.

Plant spacing is another important feature here. Plants are grown in proximity to each other which ensures the soil staying moist and prevents unwanted weed growth.

French Intensive Gardening Methods

Catch Cropping
As per the climatic conditions, normally it takes a lot of months to harvest a crop in the same place where a crop was previously harvested. During this period, quick maturing or fast growing crops like radish, onions or lettuce can be grown to utilize the idle space.

Inter-cropping
In this method, to utilize all available space in the best possible manner, a fast-maturing crop is planted between rows of crops which grow slowly. Quick maturing crops like onions, lettuce or radish can be planted between (or within) rows of slow maturing plants like cabbage, tomatoes or broccoli.

Succession Planting
This method involves planting the same quick-maturing crop over a period of 1 to 4 weeks. Plant one row each of lettuce, radish and spinach and leave some space around the planting which can be used later. After a week, plant one more row each of all the plants and do the same one week later as well. Subsequently, when one row is harvested, the second will be ready and so on. This will ensure a consistent supply of fast maturing vegetables all through the season.

Relay Planting
In relay planting, an altogether different crop is planted in the same space where a crop is just about to mature. This means that as and when the new crop is prepared for harvesting, the crop planted later has got an early beginning advantage. Thus more crops can be planted in the same space all through the year.

Wide Row Planting
A variation of the inter-cropping method, wide row planting involves planting of plants in groups or rows about 1 to 4 feet wide. Although walking space between the rows reduces, this method facilitates economic use of fertilizers and water. Also, it is tougher for weeds to grow in this kind of an arrangement. Make grids so that it becomes easier for marking out sections and enables proper utilization of space.

It should be noted that French intensive gardening is not for people who pursue gardening as a hobby. Rather only those people who are hardworking and dedicated towards gardening should start it. It involves hard work, especially in the bed preparation and maintenance stage, so only committed gardeners should try this method.
By Suketu Mehta
Last Updated: 9/28/2011
Read more at Buzzle: http://www.buzzle.com/articles/french-intensive-gardening.html

Dashboard - Geneseo Wiki

Thursday, July 4, 2013

Organic School Project

Organic School Project

Organic School Project reconnects our children to their food source through school and community organic gardens. Through that reconnection, we help children eat smarter, make healthy lifestyle choices and nurture our planet as a whole.
Organic School Project has encouraged healthy lifestyles for over 3,500 kids and thousands of families since our founding in 2005. Our mission is to combat childhood obesity and related health epidemics through the Grow Teach Feed model, laying the foundation for urban youth to build sustainable lifestyles.

What Is the Grow Teach Feed Model?

Grow: We reconnect kids to their food source by growing organic gardens with schools and community members. Besides being a science lab where we learn about nature and ecosystems, the garden is a lovely place to get exercise and sunshine, to sit and think, to socialize, and to observe what it takes for living things to be healthy.
Teach: We teach kids and families about nutrition, cooking, and caring for our planet one to four days per week, depending on the partner school’s needs. Our lessons get kids and adults interacting with nutrition through cooking and learning about healthy foods and where they come from.
Feed: We feed kids More Positive Foods as after-school snacks and ingredients in cooking lessons. More Positive Foods are wholesome, less processed, over 70% organic, and sourced locally when seasonally available—as often as possible, directly from the school’s own garden!

Monday, July 1, 2013

P2P Foundation

P2P Foundation: Welcome to the P2P Foundation

Welcome to the P2P Foundation

The P2P Foundation is an international organization focused in studying, researching, documenting and promoting peer to peer practices in a very broad sense. This website is our knowledge commons and it's collaboratively build by our community.   



Learn more...
Towards an Open and Autonomous Internet
Campesino a Campesino - P2P Foundation: By Eric Holt-Giménez:

" Latin America’s thirty-year farmer-led movement for sustainable agriculture. El Movimiento Campesino a Campesino, the Farmer to Farmer Movement, is made up of hundreds of thousands of peasant-technicians farming and working in over a dozen countries.

Campesino a Campesino began with a series of rural projects among the indigenous smallholders of the ecologically fragile hillsides of the Guatemalan Highlands in the early 1970s. Sponsored by progressive NGOs, Mayan peasants developed a method for agricultural improvement using relatively simple methods of small-scale experimentation combined with farmer-led workshops to share their discoveries. Because they were producing at relatively low levels, they concentrated on overcoming the most commonly limiting factors of production in peasant agriculture, i.e., soil and water. By adding organic matter to soils, and by implementing soil and water conservation techniques, they frequently obtained yield increases of 100-400 percent. Rapid, recognizable results helped build enthusiasm among farmers and led to the realization that they could improve their own agriculture — without running the risks, causing the environmental damage, or developing the financial dependency associated with the Green Revolution. Initial methods of composting, soil and water conservation, and seed selection soon developed into a sophisticated “basket” of sustainable technologies and agroecological management approaches that included green manures, crop diversification, integrated pest management, biological weed control, reforestation, and agrobiodiversity management at farm and watershed scales.


Sunday, June 23, 2013

permaculture Unplugged

Culture Unplugged...

Dear friend,

I have found an interesting documentary Anima Mundi on Culture Unplugged and want to share with you.

http://www.cultureunplugged.com/documentary/watch-online/play/11753

Director: Peter Charles Downey | Producer: Peter Charles Downey
Genre: Documentary | Produced In: 2011 | Country: AU

Synopsis: When I first began researching for the Anima Mundi documentary (2011) I had assumed permaculture was about growing fruit and vegetables and that was pretty much it, but I was to learn that permaculture encompassed so much more including sustainable housing, self-employment, complimentary healthcare, education, economics and energy, especially embodied energy.

Embodied energy is the energy required to extract energy like oil or gas or solar, and the energy required to manufacture something. This embodied energy element was something I felt drastically missing from environmental and sustainability debates where supposed "Eco-friendly& quot; products when looked at from the embodied energy perspective were not as Eco-friendly as advertised. I learned that humanity is artificially sustaining 7 bi...

Hope you Enjoy!
promote films. promote consciousness.
Culture Unplugged

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

platformbreathe video production

Home: we are always looking for concepts and scripts that support our mission.  if you wish to reach our community by making movies with uplifitng messages and you have experience as a writer, art director, producer, director, composer, editor, graphic artist, animator, film crew member or production assistant, we need you.

platformbreathe depends on the generosity of the people and companies that make our films.

all contributions to platformbreathe are tax deductable.

contact:
contact@platformbreathe.org


about:
platformbreathe was started in autumn 2007 by Andy Jennison, Kenny Pedini and Michael Schwartz as a way to use the collective experience of the board members and supporters to give something back to the community and industry on which we depend and cherish.

Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Global Coastal Cities Summit II - May 1-3 in St. Petersburg, FL



Mission/Philosophy/Goal: LOVE – higher vibration, field of unknowing (short and long term goals), social justice.

Short and Long Term Goals: Education, Social Justice, Environmental Sustainability, Feed Spirit (spiritual fulfillment) Can take from Awakening the Dreamer

Strategy: 

Allow for synergy beyond sustainability
  1. Green economy
  2. Resilient/ regenerativity
  3. Make government work
  4. Heart-centered processes

Tactics:

  • Think tank
  • Time bank
  • Finance
  • Permaculture
  • Citizen budget process
  • Renewables
  • Elections

12 Rules Of Success:

12 tips to make it:
 

Apples CEO Steve Jobs Shares His 12 Rules Of Success:

By on May 12, 2011
steve jobs

Do what you love to do.
Find your true passion. Do what you love to do and make a difference! The only way to  do great work is to love what you do.
Be different.   Think different. “Better be a pirate than to join the navy.”
Do your best. Do your best at every job. No sleep! Success generates more success. So be hungry for it. Hire good people with passion for excellence.
Make SWOT analysis. As soon as you join/start a company, make a list of strengths and weaknesses of yourself and your company on a piece of paper. Don’t hesitate in throwing bad apples out of the company.
Be entrepreneurial. Look for the next big thing. Find a set of ideas that need to be quickly and decisively acted upon and jump through that window. Sometimes the first step is the hardest one. Just take it! Have the courage to follow your heart and intuition.
Start small, think big. Don’t worry about too many things at once. Take a handful of simple things to begin with, and then progress to more complex ones. Think about not just tomorrow, but the future. “I want to put a ding in the universe,” reveal Steve Jobs his dream.
Strive to become a market leader. Own and control the primary technology in everything you do. If there’s a better technology available, use it no matter if anyone else is not using it. Be the first, and make it an industry standard.
Focus on the outcome. People judge you by your performance, so focus on the outcome. Be a yardstick of quality. Some people aren’t used to an environment where excellence is expected. Advertise. If they don’t know it, they won’t buy your product. Pay attention to design. “We made the buttons on the screen look so good you’ll want to lick them.” “Design is not just what it looks like and feels like. Design is how it works.”
Ask for feedback. Ask for feedback from people with diverse backgrounds. Each one will tell you one useful thing. If you’re at the top of the chain, sometimes people won’t give you honest feedback because they’re afraid. In this case, disguise yourself, or get feedback from other sources. Focus on those who will use your product – listen to your customers first.
Innovate. Innovation distinguishes a leader from a follower. Delegate, let other top executives do 50% of your routine work to be able to spend 50% your time on the new stuff. Say no to 1,000 things to make sure you don’t get on the wrong track or try to do too much. Concentrate on really important creations and radical innovation. Hire people who want to make the best things in the world. You need a very product-oriented culture, even in a technology company. Lots of companies have tons of great engineers and smart people. But ultimately, there needs to be some gravitational force that pulls it all together.
Learn from failures. Sometimes when you innovate, you make mistakes. It is best to admit them quickly, and get on with improving your other innovations.
Learn continually. There’s always “one more thing” to learn! Cross-pollinate ideas with others both within and outside your company. Learn from customers, competitors and partners. If you partner with someone whom you don’t like, learn to like them – praise them and benefit from them. Learn to criticize your enemies openly, but honestly.

Thursday, May 23, 2013

40 Organizations That Are Shaking Up the Food System | Food Tank

40 Organizations That Are Shaking Up the Food System | Food Tank
The 40 organizations we're highlighting today are doing invaluable work to change the way we eat, grow, cook, buy, and sell food. Our hope is that the more people know about the work that these groups are doing, the more people can be inspired to make their own change in the food system. 
We realize many, many organizations are missing from this list. Who would you add? We will publish additional suggestions from you on the Food Tank website next week. 
Please share this list with 40 of your friends and family members--and on Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, and Pinterest--so that we can all take one step closer to our goal of a more sustainable, healthy, and socially just world!
1. Ashoka Innovators for the Public (United States/International) – Ashoka supports a network of 3,000 social entrepreneurs across the world. By providing financing and start-up capital, Ashoka has been transforming the landscape of social innovation since 1980. It is encouraging fundamental transformation of the food chain to full nutrition with an initiative linking human wellbeing, agriculture, and the environment.
2. Australian International Food Security Centre (AIFSC) (Australia) – The AIFSC is a non-profit organization that works to promote agricultural innovation and attract investment to agricultural development projects. Aiming to build capacity for farming initiatives worldwide, AIFSC focuses on achieving specific goals like improving nutrition, connecting researchers with industry, and enhancing supply chain systems to allow farmers to bring their products to market. 
3. Barilla Center for Food & Nutrition (BCFN) (Italy) – The Barilla Center for Food & Nutrition works to promote science and research for combating hunger and malnutrition worldwide. Using knowledge gleaned from research projects around the world, BCFN seeks to take innovative ideas for tackling food insecurity and translate them into effective policy recommendations for governments around the world. Since their inception, they have released original research on a wide range of topics including global obesity and sustainable agriculture.
4. Bioversity International (International) – Bioversity International is a research and development organization aimed at supporting smallholder farmers in the developing world through sustainable agriculture and conservation. Bioversity International focuses on rain-fed farming systems, managed by smallholder farmers, in communities where large scale agriculture is not possible.
5. Calacea Farm, Not For Sale (NFS) (Romania) - NFS is an organization working to fight modern-day slavery around the world. In Romania, NFS works with their partnerMariana, operating an organic farm, which accommodates survivors of human trafficking. Just outside Timi?oara, the farm offers individuals in recovery opportunities for health care, education, life skill training and new employment, to restore dignity and help re-build their future. Last year, NFS helped construct a building to house up to 50 additional farm workers, a workshop space to make jam, milk, and cheese, and two greenhouses to produce fruits and vegetables.
6. Center for Food Safety (United States) - The Center for Food Safety is a non-profit advocacy organization that promotes food systems that are safe, sustainable, and environmentally sound. Using a legal team, original research on agriculture, and grassroots organizing, CFS’ mission is to protect human health and the environment, achieved through careful monitoring of the agricultural industry for violations of food safety and environmental laws.
7. The Center for Studies and Development of Cambodian Agriculture (CEDAC)(Cambodia) - In partnership with Farmer and Nature Net (FNN), CEDAC has worked to promote the System of Rice Intensification (SRI), which has been shown to increase yields and improve soil fertility while reducing the use of chemicals and maintaining local ownership of seeds. CEDAC supports several other agricultural innovations and techniques including Ecological Chicken Raising (ECR), pig raising, home gardening, aquaculture, composting, and multi-purpose farming.
8. Chicago Council on Global Affairs Global Agricultural Development Initiative (United States/International) - The Global Agricultural Development Initiative seeks to inform the development of U.S. policy on global agricultural development and food security by raising awareness and providing resources, information, and policy analysis to the U.S. Administration, Congress, and interested experts and organizations. 
9. Christensen Fund (United States) – The Christensen Fund is a philanthropic organization dedicated to promoting biological and cultural diversity, making grants to organizations that work in fields like conservation science, visual arts, and education. The Fund is particularly noted for its work on agrobiodiversity and food sovereignty, in which it provides resources for indigenous and local farming communities to protect and enhance local food systems. 
10. Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR) (International) - The Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research is a network of research organizations that are looking to promote and support global food security. With 15 centers around the globe, CGIAR helps to share knowledge and advance research on rural poverty, health and nutrition, and management of natural resources.
11. EARTH University (Costa Rica) – EARTH University is an international non-profit undergraduate institution based in Costa Rica focused on agricultural sciences and natural resource management. EARTH’s mission is to “prepare leaders with ethical values to contribute to the sustainable development of the tropics and to construct a prosperous and just society.”
12. Ecoagriculture Partners (United States/International) – Ecoagriculture Partners supports agricultural communities in managing their landscapes by using ecoagriculture in order to enhance rural livelihoods, conserve biodiversity, and produce food and fiber in environmentally sustainable ways.
13. ECOVA MALI (Mali) – Founded by former Peace Corps volunteers, Cynthia Hellmann and Gregory Flatt, ECOVA MALI works with Malian farmers to teach other farmers about  sustainable agriculture methods. They also offer micro-financing and small-scale grants so that farmers can invest in the sustainability, both social and environmental, of their operations.
14. Farm Labor Organizing Committee (United States) – Founded in 1967, FLOC was initially organized by Baldemar Velasquez, a migrant worker who sought to improve the working conditions of others like him by creating a mobile organizing base that could move along with workers as the seasons changed. Now, FLOC has over 20,000 members and works in both the United States and Mexico.
15. Feeding the 5000 (United Kingdom/International) – Tristram Stuart’s initiative is organizing the world to prevent "wonky" fruits, vegetables, and other food from being wasted. Feeding the 5000 encourages farmers to participate in the “gleaning movement” – where volunteers collect unattractive produce that would otherwise be wasted for consumption.
16. Food & Water Watch (United States) - Founded on the belief that people have a fundamental right to trust the safety of the products they eat and drink, Food and Water Watch is a nonprofit organization that works to make food and water resources accessible and sustainable. They work to monitor food production and clean water systems, track the environmental quality of oceans, keep watch over U.S. corporate influence on public policy, and hold policymakers accountable for policies that pollute.
17. Food First: The Institute for Food and Development Policy (United States/International) - Food First is a research and advocacy organization that seeks to eliminate the injustices that cause hunger worldwide, working with social movements to amplify their voices and boost their efforts toward food justice and sovereignty. Believing that change happens from the ground up, Food First supports an agricultural approach that moves away from transnational agri-food industry to one focused primarily on farmers and communities.
18. Food Mythbusters (United States) – Food Mythbusters is a campaign of the Real Food Media Project that seeks to dispel misconceptions about food production and promote reforms in industrial agriculture, unfair labor practices, and food advertising, among other issues. In order to tell “the real story of our food,” Food Mythbusters utilizes video series, grassroots events, and interactive digital content.
19. Global Partnerships for Afghanistan (GPFA) (Afghanistan) – GFPA launched the Women Working Together collaborative initiative in 2005 in order to increase the quality of life of women in Afghanistan. GPFA focuses on programming that enhances female-run farms and orchards, teaching food preservation, greenhouse operation, and other practices.
20. GoodPlanet Foundation (France) – The GoodPlanet Foundation seeks to educate the public about the importance of environmental protection. The organization utilizes the power of photographs, posters, websites, films, and other visual media to spread information. For example, GoodPlanet has lead successful campaigns on the awareness of ocean and forest conservation, respectively.
21. Growing Power (United States) – Growing Power, Inc. is an American non-profit organization and land trust that seeks “to grow food, minds, and community” through a network of farms, training sites, and community food systems that provide access to food for all people. Growing Power also runs a number of youth programs and collaborates with various organizations, including Michelle Obama’s “Let’s Move!” campaign. This year, Growing Power celebrates its 20th anniversary.
22. Heifer International (United States/International) - Heifer International is a non-profit organization that seeks to end hunger and poverty by providing communities in need with livestock and other animals that help them to build local, self-sufficient agricultural systems. It also offers a variety of resources that help impoverished farmers create sustainable sources of income, providing them with research on effective grazing methods, optimal animal well-being, and the creation of local networks that farmers can use to share resources with one another.
23. Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy (IATP) (United States/International) – IATP is a research and advocacy organization working to promote fair and sustainable food, farm, and trade systems around the world. Created in response to the American family farm crisis, IATP initially sought to document the failed policies that had led to prices dropping below the cost of production, and put many family farmers out of business. Now, IATP works with organizations worldwide to analyze the impact of global trade agreements, develop clean energy models, and stop the excessive use of antibiotics in agriculture and aquaculture.
24. International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) (International) – This United Nations-supported financial institution is on a mission to eradicate rural poverty in developing countries. IFAD helps empower the rural poor by providing them with the resources they need to invest in themselves and increase their incomes.
25. L.I.F.E. (Lasting Impact for Ethiopia) (Ethiopia) – This nonprofit organization is educating and empowering Ethiopian youth. In January 2012, a school for Ethiopian youth was established in the village of Nazerate, with a curriculum emphasizing literacy, agriculture, health, and sustainability.
26. Latin American and Caribbean Center for Rural Women (Enlac) (Latin American and Caribbean Regions) – The Latin American and Caribbean Center for Rural Women (Enlac in Spanish) serves as an organizing voice for marginalized, rural women. Enlac calls for policies that give Latin American and Caribbean women equal access to land rights, raise awareness about violence against female agriculture workers, boost access to clean water, and conserve native seeds. 
27. Millennium Institute (MI) (United States/International) – Millennium Institute is an independent nonprofit with the goal of promoting systems literacy and dynamic modeling tools in order to achieve sustainable development globally. MI works to achieve awareness through public education and strategic partnerships centered around interdependence and sustainability.  
28. One Acre Fund (United States/Sub-Saharan Africa) – The One Acre Fund provides farmers in sub-Saharan Africa with the tools they need to successfully operate their plots, such as seeds and fertilizers, credit, access to markets, and educational programs on farming techniques. These services are provided at a fee to the farmers who participate.
29. ONE Campaign (International) – The ONE Campaign is an international advocacy group aimed at alleviating extreme poverty and preventable disease through public awareness.
30. Oxfam International (International) – Through a wide variety of approaches – ranging from long-term campaigns, such as their Behind the Brands Campaign to secure labor rights for employees in the cocoa industry, to immediate emergency support – Oxfam has taken measures to bring an end to global poverty.
31. Restaurant Opportunities Centers United (ROC-United) (United States) –ROC-United is a labor advocacy organization that focuses specifically on the American restaurant workforce. Founded by restaurant workers who survived the 9/11 attacks to help other displaced workers, ROC-United primarily advocates for better wages and working conditions, seeking to act as a champion for members of an industry that is less than one percent unionized.
32. The Savory Institute (United States/International) – This organization, lead by Allan Savory, the “father of holistic management,” uses livestock in sustainable ways to restore grasslands. The Savory Institute teams up with private investors to purchase ranch real estate for restoration.
33. Slow Food International (Italy/International) - Slow Food International is an international non-profit organization with supporters in 150 countries that emphasizes the importance of good food and the factors that make it possible, including biodiversity, culture, and knowledge. Created to respond to an increasingly “fast food” world, Slow Food seeks to preserve local traditions, enhance people’s understanding of food and where it comes from, and comprehend the impact that our food choices make on the world.
34. Soil Association (United Kingdom) – The Soil Association is a U.K.-based charity that campaigns for humane and healthful food through sustainable farming and land use. Founded in 1946, Soil Association was an early player in the movement to identify links between farming practices and the health of humans, plants, animals, and ecosystems. Now, the organization works closely with communities to create and inspire trust in organic farming methods and the food that they produce.
35. Songtaab-Yalgré Association (SYA) (Burkina Faso) - SYA brings together women from across Burkina Faso to produce shea nuts, using the collective to simultaneously improve their literacy and their working conditions. As a locally-sourced crop, shea nuts were chosen for their potential to allow the women harvesting them to achieve a higher level of economic self-sufficiency, and empower them to become independent in their society. Workers at SYA distribute profits equally and set aside a percentage to fund community development projects as well.
36. Stone Barns Center for Food and Agriculture (United States) – The Stone Barns Center is a non-profit organization that aims to create a food system that is healthy, sustainable, and which benefits all people. On an 80-acre farm just outside of New York City, the Center offers cooking classes for all ages, organizes a seasonal market, and operates two food venues. All profits support farm operations and community education programs, and the Center encourages anyone to visit and see the benefits of a sustainable farm.
37. U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) (International) – The Food and Agriculture Organization is the United Nations’ international agency overseeing global food security and agriculture. Among their many research areas, FAO’s main activities include knowledge-sharing among member nations, making information about food and agriculture available for all people, supporting policies to reduce malnutrition and other illnesses worldwide, rallying the international community to promote effective strategies for agricultural development, and conducting research to better understand the complex issues that face the global food system.
38. WinRock (United States/International) – WinRock works with marginalized people all over the world to provide them with the skills and resources they need to bring themselves out of poverty. WinRock’s projects include, among others, empowering women and youth, and teaching environmentally responsible farming methods.
39. World Food Programme (WFP) (International) – The World Food Programme is an international anti-hunger organization within the United Nations that collects and distributes food assistance to populations in need. As the world’s largest organization working to combat hunger, WFP distributes food to over 90 million people annually, mainly delivering assistance to children, refugees, people in emergency situations (such as the 2010 earthquake in Haiti) and the rural poor.
40. World Vegetable Center (AVRDC) (Taiwan/International) – AVRDC is an international non-profit organization dedicated to reducing poverty and malnutrition in the developing world by increasing agricultural production and access to a variety of vegetables, providing essential micronutrients for populations in need. The Center works with both private and public sector partners to strike an effective balance between necessary research for new technologies and development to employ those technologies effectively.

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