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“The Capital of Empty Spaces”: Dealing with the Shrinking of the Great Baltic City | Deep Baltic. By Will Mawhood, RIGA It’s a dead-eyed building the colour of a paving slab, set back from the street outside at the end of a pockmarked driveway. Looming behind the roof like a figment of a bad dream is a colossal edifice, copper-coloured, precision-cut and cartoonish, a child’s conception of a skyscraper, chiselled out of the twilight sky. This is Riga, capital of Latvia, and here, we’re on the other side of the tracks – literally: the railway lines leading into the city centre cordon off the Old Town from Maskavas Forštate (the Moscow Suburb), usually referred to as Maskačka, the sprawling, chaotic and large ethnic Russian district associated locally with crime and unemployment. The hulking skyscraper beyond is Riga’s most visually inescapable legacy of the fifty-year Soviet occupation – constructed in 1956 in the Stalinist classical model, a scaled-down colonial cousin of similar edifices in Moscow and Warsaw.

The decline has happened in waves, and not all of it was avoidable. 10 Key Design Trends For 2016 (And How To Make The Most Of Them) Apps as we know them will disappear. Luxury will trickle down to the masses. VR will go mainstream. These are just a few of the major design and technology trends shaping the world in 2016. The trends we've identified focus on issues we—a firm with over 600 designers and developers—expect to tackle in the coming year. 1.

Today, someone is always listening. Each micromoment is an opportunity for brands to shape our habits. What to do Be first or be non-existent. Listen and learn. 2. Collecting personal data is nothing new. Act it out. Be real. Seams matter. Hire a Chief Security Officer. 3. Career paths are no longer linear journeys. Empower your people. Embrace the person in your professionals. Reward and recognize regularly. 4. The act of toggling between apps may disappear. The future of "app" design will be counterintuitive. Companies should invest in understanding what future "points of x" will be for users and design around them. Think outside the screen. 5. Look for the platform. Camps. How to make travelling the world and writing about it your full-time job. So you want to ditch your routine and travel the world for a living?

You want to join the travel blog community filled with explorers and writers who are actually making a profit from their posts? No worries, there is no need to aimlessly wander the Internet with time you could be using to plan your next adventure. I’ll take you through a step-by-step guide on how to create a travel blog that could eventually make a profit. Now, before we dive right in there are some disclaimers you should know about. Travel blogging is not easy and many go years without hitting any kind of true success. Also, travel blogging in most cases is not a huge money mine. Lastly, you’ll need to actually travel in order to have content to accurately write about.

Be prepared to work tirelessly for months, maybe even years, before your blog is recognized. Okay, now that you know the basics, lets get started with creating a blog. You may think this is already done; your audience is travellers, right? 10 Estonian Startups To Watch | StrategyEye. Skype, PlayTech and Transferwise are all examples of the impact Estonian talent has had on the global tech market. But those companies aren’t headquartered in the country today and until recently the country’s startup scene has remained relatively low profile on the global stage. That is beginning to change, however, with recent investments including mobile testing firm Testlio’s USD1m and agritech firm Vitalfields’ USD1.2m helping to put Estonia on the map.

With hack event organiser Garage 48, accelerator Startup Wise Guys and the pro-digital Estonian government all key players helping build out the region’s tech ecosystem, we can expect more noise coming out of the space this year. In the meantime, here are 10 of the country’s startups to watch. 1. What problem does SportID solve? Its model means that employers only pay if employees actually turn up at the sportsclub, meanwhile its ID tech means that only the employee can use the ticket – rather than giving it to a friend. Sportid.com. Purposely Marooned - 8 Westerners Go to Live Forever on a Desert Island? - Road Junky Guides. Forget The Beach or Lord of the Flies, these folks really do want to make life in Paradise happen. In June 2010, 8 Westerners will go to leave civilisation behind and go to live on a tropical island. 6 are American, one English and one Spanish. It’s not a stunt, a cult or a fund-raising event for charity – they simply want to go and live by themselves in paradise.

Focaliser, Daniel Nash, spoke to Road Junky about the motives and practicalities of the Purposely Marooned Project. RJ: Where and when are you going? Nash: We are due to depart end of May to the beginning of June. This is because of the wet and dry seasons, it’s far better to go in between than during. As far as where about let’s just keep it to inside the southern hemisphere.

RJ: Why would you want to maroon yourselves far from the modern world? Nash: In my opinion there is so much more than working towards a house and possessions that you cant take with you when you die, the world’s a beautiful place and our time on it is short. Crea una infografía que hará historia - Un curso online de Fernando Baptista de National Geographic. The Seasteading Institute | Opening humanity's next frontier. Joseph DeSimone: What if 3D printing was 100x faster? Abandoned Spanish villages, given away for free. For sale: hamlet in Spain. Needs work. Price: zero euros. Like thousands of abandoned villages in Spain, A Barca -- with its 12 crumbling stone homes covered in moss and ivy -- is seeking a new owner to bring it back to life. Local (Frankfurt: OTQ.F - news) officials in Spain's verdant northwestern region of Galicia hope to give away the hamlet, which is nestled in a hillside overlooking the Mino river near the Portuguese border. The successful applicant must present a development project for the village, which dates back to the 15th century, that will preserve all of its buildings.

Several proposals have already been made but Avelino Luis de Francisco Martinez, the mayor of Cortegada, the municipality that oversees A Barca, said he would prefer a tourism project. "Something that would provide work to villagers and local businesses," he said. The residents of A Barca left in the 1960s when a dam was built, which flooded their farmland. The task is sometimes difficult, even impossible. Inside the Spanish ghost villages you can buy for £50,000. Entire Spanish villages on sale for as little as £50,000 - £200,000 less than the average UK homeBuyers get a three-bedroom main house, five other buildings, a fresh-water spring, and 140,000sqft of farmlandOne village with six houses and 32,000sqft of land costs £75,000, the same as a Battersea parking spaceAccording to an estate agent there are around 2,900 deserted villages in rural SpainClusters of houses were left abandoned after families fled the countryside during Spain's recession By Chris Pleasance Published: 12:18 GMT, 9 March 2014 | Updated: 11:31 GMT, 10 March 2014 Rotting and abandoned, these ghostly Spanish villages were deserted during the recession as their owners fled the country to find jobs in the city.

But now they are being snapped up by foreigners, a third of them British, for knock-down prices and turned into idyllic retirement properties. The kitchen of one of four empty homes in an abandoned village close to Ortiguiera. Design+Code: Learn iOS design and Xcode. The hitchhiker presents The hitchhiker's guide to social change. The hitchhiker's guide to social change started with JūHū, a social enterprise with the aim of fighting stigmatization of people with disabilities by presenting them as the craftsmen of high quality design objects. A project created in collaboration with Elina Busmane. Throughout the process of designing JuHu, we realized there were many tools to develop projects when they are well defined, however we had to face a lack of tools and methodology fot the first critical steps of creating a social initiative.

During my master work in social design at the Design Academy Eindhoven in parallel to the creation of the JūHū project, I have been working on a creative methodology accessible by all to inspire and accompany projects leaders in developing their ideas. You can follow JūHū on facebook here Are you a changemaker ? For changemakers For creative entrepreneurs For social entrepreneurs For the ones who have a dream For people who want to start a project in their neighborhood Canada f.

Geography. 10 Top 3D Printing Stories from CES 2015. 3D Printing Industry - 3D Printer News, Reports, Directory and Videos. Startseite | Mundraub.org. What is a Digital Nomad, and How to Become One. Becoming a digital nomad has been a long time dream of mine that I have finally started to work on realizing.

A digital nomad, in short, is someone who earns their income entirely online, thus being able to work from anywhere: location independent. To most people this sounds like a hoax, or an impossible myth. To others, it is a whole new world. Work from your couch at home. Or from a café in Paris. No. What is a Digital Nomad To put it simply, a digital nomad works from their computer and sets their own schedule.

After a month or two, you want to experience something other than the big city.. What if the travel life is not for you? How to Become a Digital Nomad So let’s get to it – what are the jobs that allow for such freedom? Freelancer. Blogger. Youtuber. Producer of Digital Goods. Ebooks.WordPress themes.Stock photography.Design elements (fonts, buttons, icons, etc) You can get some more ideas of digital products at the Envato marketplaces or Creative Market. Consultant. Related. How to Make Money Online and Retire Early to a Tropical Island • Regev Elya.

The Smart Passive Income Blog — Smart Ways to Live a Passive Income Lifestyle On the Internet with SmartPassiveIncome.com. Communities by Country. Category:Ecovillages. Problems donating? | Other ways to give | Frequently asked questions | By donating, you are agreeing to our donor privacy policy.

The Wikimedia Foundation is a nonprofit, tax-exempt organization.By donating, you are agreeing to our donor privacy policy and to sharing your information with the Wikimedia Foundation and its service providers in the U.S. and elsewhere. The Wikimedia Foundation is a nonprofit, tax-exempt organization.By donating, you are agreeing to our donor privacy policy and to sharing your information with the Wikimedia Foundation and its service providers in the U.S. and elsewhere. *If you make a recurring donation, you will be debited by the Wikimedia Foundation until you notify us to stop. We'll send you an email receipt for each payment, which will include a link to easy cancellation instructions. If we all gave $3, the fundraiser would be over in an hour. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia The main article for this category is Ecovillage.

Subcategories. Centerpieces --- sculpture by George W. Hart. For a Museum of Mathematics fundraiser dinner, I created a series of mathematical table centerpieces. These are each eight inches in diameter and built on the hi-def color ZPrinter model 650 from 3DSystems. They vary in color and style, expressing different mathematical ideas in sculptural form. Some, like the above, convey an organic sensibility, while others are more geometric. This one has flower-like elements and stem-like arches on the interior within an overall organization based on the snub dodecahedron.

Here is a more geometric form, with nested copies of an arch-based structure. This is another one with a biological flavor. For those who prefer classic geometric designs, here is is one of my favorites, the compound of five regular tetrahedra. Here again are five regular tetrahedra in five colors, but now they float in the interior space without directly touching. These sensuous forms convey a delicate warmth on the interior and a starfish-like icosahedral outside.

CHANCE FOR A BETTER LIFE: New Zealand in demand of 50,000 workers | Live Travel Enjoy. In New Zealand, which is in full economic upswing and whose people show affection towards immigration to get to know new places, is in need of foreign workers. One of the participants in the upcoming Fair Employment in Sydney is New Zealand, it will present 1,200 vacancies, Belgian media reported. This country, with one of the highest living standards in the world, will need in the next two years at least 50,000 foreign workers. IT specialists, construction workers, engineers, and health workers are most scarce. The biggest advantage of this distant country is its quality of life. BARCELONA 3d printed UAV. 3D Printing Industry - 3D Printer News, Reports, Directory and Videos. HIGH COMPLEXITY NATURAL GEOMETRIES. Is Digital Knitting a form of 3D Printing? The Foodini 3D Food Printer Hits Kickstarter! Barcelona: Center of the Making World. RepRap Project. RepRap version 1.0 (Darwin) RepRap version 2.0 (Mendel) First part ever made by a Reprap to make a Reprap, fabricated by the Zaphod prototype, by Vik Olliver (2006/09/13) The RepRap project is a British initiative to develop a 3D printer that can print most of its own components.[1] RepRap (short for replicating rapid prototyper) uses an additive manufacturing technique called Fused filament fabrication (FFF) to lay down material in layers; a plastic filament or metal wire is unwound from a coil and supplies material to produce a part.

The project calls it Fused Filament Fabrication (FFF) to avoid trademark issues around the "fused deposition modeling" term. As an open design, all of the designs produced by the project are released under a free software license, the GNU General Public License.[2] History[edit] All of the plastic parts for the machine on the right were produced by the machine on the left.

Video of RepRap printing an object RepRap 0.1 building an object 23 March 2005 Summer 2005. Open design. RepRap general-purpose 3D printer that not only could be used to make structures and functional components for open-design projects but is an open-source project itself. Uzebox is an open-design video game console.[1] Zoybar open source guitar kit With 3-D printed body[4] Open design is the development of physical products, machines and systems through use of publicly shared design information. Open design involves the making of both free and open-source software (FOSS) as well as open-source hardware. History[edit] Sources of the open-design movement[edit] Sharing of manufacturing information can be traced back to the 18th and 19th century.[6][7] Aggressive patenting put an end to that period of extensive knowledge sharing.[8] More recently, principles of open design have been related to the free software and open source movements.[9] In 1997 Eric S. The idea of open design was taken up, either simultaneously or subsequently, by several other groups and individuals.

See also[edit] Fab lab. A fab lab (fabrication laboratory) is a small-scale workshop offering (personal) digital fabrication.[1][2] A fab lab is generally equipped with an array of flexible computer controlled tools that cover several different length scales and various materials, with the aim to make "almost anything".[3] This includes technology-enabled products generally perceived as limited to mass production. While fab labs have yet to compete with mass production and its associated economies of scale in fabricating widely distributed products, they have already shown the potential to empower individuals to create smart devices for themselves. These devices can be tailored to local or personal needs in ways that are not practical or economical using mass production. History[edit] Popular equipment and projects[edit] Flexible manufacturing equipment within a fab lab can include: FabFi[edit] List of labs[edit] MIT maintains a listing of all official Fab Labs, worldwide.

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