October is buy nothing new month…

I’ve just discovered that October is officially “Buy Nothing New Month.”

No longer devoted to simple beer drinking or mega rock concerts, and consistent with my budget bottom line at the moment, it’s not so much a celebration, as a question of what can you do? ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

Quite a lot as it turns out.

As always, these hacks are free, but you do need to register and you should only do that if you really are going.

Instead of Oktoberfest, you could try Winefulness. You heard correctly. Learn about wine from a VinoMofo expert and kill two birds with one stone. 3 October, 6PM. It’s free wine and mindfulness.

Friday 12 October Portable, our friends in Collingwood have another of their super cool catered ‘introduction to’ sessions this one on empathy in human centred design and what it means.

Can’t give up your fashion habit? Into upcycling? Take a squizz at the North Fitzroy Clothing Swap

Frock up for free film as part of the national seniors festival. Melbourne Libraries is hosting ‘Iris‘ the Albert Maysles’ documentary about New York fashion doyenne and art collector Iris Apfel.

On October 30 there’s also lunch with an entrepreneur discussing ‘the truth about early stage tech startup investing.’

All this and more in the Tech and the City Calendar.

 

 

 

To Boldly Go! Wednesday Q&A with astronaut Steve Swanson

Space cadets it’s your time to shine.

No relation to Ron Swanson, Steve is a bona fide astronaut. This Wednesday a real life astronaut is in Melbourne answering your questions!

Register here.

The Art of Minimalism: how to live meaningfully with less stress, less clutter and less debt.

Yarra libraries. October 27. Register here

 

 

PsychTalks: is everything we’ve been told about happiness, wrong? 8 November

My theory that everything you wanted to know will eventually be offered as a free event in Melbourne is proving true. You *could* go to The School of Life, and splash a bit of cash, or, you can sign up and meet the researchers at Unimelb.

Register here

eHealth A real-world look at how to implement digital workflows into clinical practice – 18 September 2018

One for the health practitioners,  the health administrators and the moderately curious about the future of healthcare. Centres on dentistry, but the principles of transformation are the same. Sales have ended, but fun fact: fifty per cent of sign ups to free events in Melbourne are no shows. If this floats your boat then contact organisers or just turn up and try your luck.

Details here

Digital Coaching@ Yarra Libraries Scanning Photos 1 October 2:40pm

Get help scanning your photos and documents

Want some one-on-one help with scanning your old photos into digital files you can store or share online? Book a librarian for a twenty minute appointment and we’ll help you save your photos to a USB stick. Please bring a USB stick of your own for saving the images.

Bookings essential.

(You do not need to bring a physical ticket with you to this event.)

Free, friendly tax office advice this week at City of Melbourne libraries

It’s not every day that the ATO and its officers are described as “friendly” but here we have it, in print. Several dates and locations in Melbourne when you can go and ask the ATO any questions you like without waiting on hold or making an appointment, as long as they pertain to its online offerings.

The ATO staff can:

  • Assist and support the lodgement of tax returns using MyGov, (N.B. the staff will be unable to lodge a tax return on your behalf.)
  • Demonstrate the use of their digital products and services, and show you how to use the ATO app.
  • Assist with your tax and super questions.

Brochures and support materials will be available.

Sessions will be held at the following locations and times:

  • Southbank Library: Monday 17 September, 12pm to 2pm
  • Kathleen Syme Library: Tuesday 18 September, 12pm to 2pm
  • East Melbourne Library: Tuesday 18 September, 5pm to 7pm
  • City Library: Wednesday 19 September, 12pm to 2pm
  • Library at The Dock: Thursday 20 September, 12pm to 2pm
  • North Melbourne Library: Friday 21 September, 12pm to 2pm

No bookings required, just pop in.

With thanks to the copy writers at City of Melbourne

 

“Will Robots Eat Our Jobs?”

Happy 136th Birthday RMIT!

With a subject as enticing as “will robots eat our jobs?” I found myself mid-morning at RMIT’s green-slimed Storey Hall, expecting a bit of a lecture.

What I got was more.

A whole lot more.

Not only was it the University of Technology’s 136th birthday party, but there was molecular gastronomy on offer.

My goodnesss. It was eye-opening and mouth watering.

From the cater waiters dressed as Pris from ‘Blade Runner‘ to a thirty minute roller skating extravaganza that was part ‘Xanadu‘ and part ‘Starlight Express’, to a panel discussion involving the most animated university Vice Chancellor put on this green earth (Martin Bean) introducing a whole new word to the lexicon.

Meet “micro-credentialing”.

In a world in which you have multiple careers, a freelance economy, and ever evolving technology and capability, it’s exactly what the blog is aiming to wean you onto. Constant short bursts of self development.

Since introducing the concept, RMIT has delivered over 8,000 of the blighters, with the aim of creating a ‘pick and mix’ option for students and return-to-study types, but if you’re not sure you want to commit to these just yet, you can access the blog calendar, or sit at home and try some online offerings like Coursera or the number one educator in the world which I am surprised to learn is ‘YouTube.’ (I mean I get it but I’m not sure that I’d put it in that category.)

This week alone I’ve attended a webinar on programming chat bots with Microsoft UK; a seminar on how to edit Wikimedia and Wikipedia with Andy Mabbet at ACMIT X; learned about the policy ecosystem in Australasia at UniMelb and the Modern workplace at Microsoft HQ, discovering that Australian and state governements are disconnected and seem not to have invested in ways to share knowledge and colloborate on policy, and a business in regional Australia is using Microsoft 365 (the way of the future for shared services) and purely mobile solutions to deliver healthcare to seniors in rural, regional and remote areas of New South Wales.

PHEW.

Telehealth being a pet subject, I’ll be following up on Integrated Living and recommending it to my policy connections in health, tech and gov.

I also visited WanChain at Stone and Chalk who seem to be a middle ware interface or exchange type entity allowing trade between different types of cryptocurrency.

I asked them tricky questions about privacy and health data and we are going to continue the conversation.

Last but not least, I also made a new connection.  The Chief Strategist at Deloitte Australasia Robert Hiliard whose career trajectory includes an interest in letting go of the ‘digital’ descriptor in the transformation space and a short story involving a thirteen year old, a Commodore 64 and an early inventory and accounts management system created from scratch for a furniture retailer in country Victoria.

Disconcertingly, 2 per cent of Chief Executives in Australia think that technology has the capacity to seriously disrupt their businesses.

An alarming 71 per cent think that someone somewhere in the business is (probably) looking into the issue of disruption and the implications of new technologies. (Specifically “that guy with the red hair” to give an example of one of the answers supplied to researchers in response to my exact question, aka ‘who?).

This is really bad news. For so long we have promoted people to the top because of their ability to cut through, or as I prefer to see it, pay no attention to the detail. Speaking as someone who loves complexity and systems design, this has always meant my own career was never going to hit the heights but geez I’ve seen some really incompetent people rise up the ranks.

If these stats are real, Australia is headed for some nasty shocks.

Mr Hiliard is the first person to confirm my previously quietly held concerns that blockchain is “ugly” by which he means there are other  better options in the market that do the same thing better and I mean it seems to be attended by a yuge amount of hype and not a lot of information as to how it is actually better than other options.

(Example: you need US dollars to float an ICO. In laymans’ terms that means you make your digital currency out of existing currency… Why would anyone do that?)

Then there are the calls to regulate and apply the rule of law to these speculative creations, which is fine, except it doesn’t gel with my understanding of these currencies as having been created to avoid “gummint control” and tax, and allow the black market to flourish with some certainty.

So there’s that.

Finally, on the question of whether robots will eat our jobs the consensus seems to be no. They won’t.

At least twice this week the poster child for the future of humans and robots has been cited as two teams of chess players currently kicking goals on the world chess circuit (OMG. Why do you do this to yourselves, technologists?) in which the yuman and the off-the-shelf bot are working collaboratively. The machine doing the routine and predictable behavioural bits, and the creative tactics coming from the higher cognitive reasoning bits of the human’s imagination and brain. I can see how this would help risk management. Specifically my ability to reign in executives making rash decisions. However, I also note that behavioural interviewing (which is a pet hate, because it literally looks backwards, and assumes that we will only ever do what we have only ever done, which is precisely the type of work that machines will eat alive) isn’t interested in the ability of the human to have several careers and be creative. It vitiates against it. It may be what we need, but it’s not how we’re recruiting….

It begs the question whether the guy with the red hair who’s supposedly dealing with the threat of disruption actually exists or is he a figment of our irrationally positive imagination?

oznor

 

 

 

New and improved: Tech and the city calendar

I created a Tech and the City Calendar for digital nomads and corporates wanting to know what’s on in Melbourne.

If you’ve ever wanted to a quick, easy introduction to AI, blockchain, bots, UX, UI, lean start ups, Agile, accelerators, brain science, digital ethics, design thinking, public policy debates, future of work stuff, maker spaces and how to do things like make a web site, be a photographer, record music, scan your photos, print 3D objects, program computers, how the law works, or some kind of one to one digital coaching, these are all freely available to you in Melbourne.

Don’t believe me? The stats don’t lie, and the calendar is updated daily.

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Start ups: 12 months free at CreativeCubes.Co

Space: the final frontier.

Startup Victoria are sponsoring TWENTY lucky entrepreneurs for a YEAR at Creative Cubes co-working. Start ups looking for space to work and collaborate with like-minds can pitch for space at two locations on two different dates.

Monday September 17 Richmond or Tuesday October 2 Hawthorn

you’d be mad to miss it. (assuming you’re a start up and you like free rent…)

 

 

Thunderstorm Asthma & The Art of Science

Brought to you by the VCA (Victorian College of the Arts( UniMelb Biomedical Sciences present The Art of Science series.

Lecture one, ‘Storm’, coincides with the beginning of Melbourne’s asthma season which is not the point of the lecture, although it rates a mention…. the panel “focus on the romantic and scientific phenomena relating to storm, including the very dangerous and problematic public health issue of Thunderstorm Asthma.”

Enjoy!

Click here to view

Weekend Workshop in Melbourne: How to be a Photographer

Sunday 9 September

Midday til 3 pm

United Pop presents a free workshop on how to be a photographer. The site’s a bit low on detail but for two hours and no money down what are you waiting for?

Register here

(As with most of these events, you’d have to assume that they are a sales feed or else why would people run them? Be prepared to be asked to sign up for something more.)