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Organizational Continuity Long-term Building in Japan It is striking that this part of Japan houses two sets of structures, both of nearly equal age, and both made of largely ephemeral materials that have lasted over 14 centuries through totally different mechanisms and religions. By Alexander Rose @zander Sep 10, 02019 When I started working with Stewart Brand over two decades ago, he told me abo
Long-term Thinking Do you have a moment... for pure genius? By Alexander Rose @zander May 17, 02011 Somehow I missed this story when it came out (even though it won a Pulitzer), but today I came across it at random on of all places Jeff Bridges website who wrote a fantastic synopsis. But as they say, the Dude abides: Washington, DC Metro Station on a cold January morning in 2007. The man with a
Membership: Dashboard Membership Dashboard Members get a snapshot view of new Long Now content with easy access to all their member benefits. Newsletters Membership Newsletters Published monthly, the member newsletter gives in-depth and behind the scenes updates on Long Now's projects. Clock Blog Clock Blog for Members Special updates on the 10,000 Year Clock project are posted on the members only
Long Now friend and supporter Ken Wilson sends in this awesome concept for the Stockholm Library. This design seems like it would lend itself well to a 10,000 year library… The image above is a rendering by a team of students at the Architecture School of Paris La Seine. You can see the un-textured model below and read how the design was generated over at CG Society.
Economics Iqbal Quadir, "Technology Empowers the Poorest" By Kevin Kelly May 23, 02008 Making money WITH the poor When Iqbal Quadir applied to US colleges from his home town in Bangladesh he was surprised to discover that not all American universities were found in Washington, DC. That’s how it was in Bangladesh, where everything of importance was centralized in the capital city, Dacca. He later r
A monument scale mechanical clock, built inside a mountain, designed to keep accurate time for the next ten millennia. The Clock is hundreds of feet tall, engineered to require minimal maintenance, and powered by mechanical energy harvested from sunlight as well as the people that visit it. The winding platform, viewed from above The Clock will mark time with astronomic and calendric displays and
We hope to help each other be good ancestors. We hope to preserve possibilities for the future. TOP: Bristlecone pines are among the longest-lived of any life forms on Earth / Janine Sprout, CC BY-SA BOTTOM: Ise's inner shrine has been rebuilt every 20 years since 00004 BCE / Jean-Pierre Dalbéra, CC-BY Our work began with The Clock of the Long Now an immense mechanical monument, installed in a mou
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