Random insights on technology, culture and the irrational. What kind of music do you play? — the master was asked. What we play is life. — he replied.-->

The Author

    Argentine born entrepreneur, passionate about technology and robots in particular. Pioneered the game development scene in Buenos Aires. Currently leading Popego, an innovative software company that's building meaning with code and guts.

Proud Of

  • Popego
    Founder & CEO - Building meaning with bytes in the semantic web.
  • Meaningtool
    Popego's flagship semantic engine for the masses and the businesses.
  • The Whuffie Bank
    Co-Founder - Changing money forever with optimal reputation algorithms.
  • Three Melons
    Former Creative Director - Crafted games that made brands engaging.
  • Game Developers Association
    Co-Founder - Explaining mothers in Argentina how games are art.
  • Palermo Valley
    Co-Founder - The entrepreneurial neighbourhood of Buenos Aires.
  • Evoluxion
    Founder - Made games for the football conoisseur.

Good Stuff

  • Strange Knot
    Emiliano Kargieman - Technologist and Venture Capitalist pursuing true change in this world.
  • Cosas Que Te Pasan Si Estás Vivo
    Liniers - My brother, responsible for most of my cultural background and world famous comic artist.
  • Riesgo & Recompensa
    Santiago Bilinkis - Great entrepreneur with a clear and sharp style for sharing experiences.
  • Denken Uber
    Mariano Amartino - Simple and elegant blog that covers the buzz of the tech scene.
  • Ariel Arrieta
    An authority in online marketing and advertising, making sense of all the wandering bits of the net.
  • Psico Geek
    Ismael Briasco - A very open and outspoken entrepreneur always sharing good tips from his experience.

Great Ideas in The Internet Age

Written 2 years ago

The web is still a disruptive force that’s steadily changing the reality of entire industries and shaping the mindset of new generations.

Among the most interesting effects of this movement is the rise of Non-Profit organizations that have a clear understanding of how the web can evolve and elevate societies.

  • One Laptop Per Child
    An inspiring project to gap the digital breach in developing nations. As Nicholas Negroponte put it: “it’s not about the laptop, but about education”. The device is just an instrument that will help children around the world get access to the vast oceans of knowledge the web provides. There are some important hurdles to overcome in this mission: corrupt governments, teachers who lack the skills to use the web as an educational resource, and some absurd PR moves from companies that seek to place their brand by competing with this project. Nonetheless, the OLPC has already changed many things in techland (being the netbooks its most noticeable side-effect), and I’m quite positive this is a project that needs strong support from the tech scene in order to achieve its almost utopian goal.
  • Creative Commons
    The absurdity of copyright law in an age were all the culture-producing-distributing-devices (that is: computers) copy information in the same way we humans breathe air has reached its climax the day Napster was closed. That’s when an organization like CC emerges seeking to impose a new contractual relation between men and their ideas in order to keep the beauty of culture, remixability and freedom of speech alive. It’s all about flexibility: the authors get to choose what can and can’t be done to their work. In my personal opinion, I regard the writings of CC’s founder Lawrence Lessig as a modern equivalent to those of Voltaire and Rousseau in the times when the word Republic was an uncomfortable one to pronounce.
  • TED
    I could define it as the pandora’s box of the web. The mission of TED is sharp and too well executed: “Ideas Worth Spreading”. Anyone who has discovered this organization knows about the joy of learning something new every single week. Something exciting and different that gets shared by the most interesting and brilliant minds in the world. I could easily describe TED as an inspiration engine, and it was thanks to its curator Chris Anderson, who was able to see farther than any other tech conference out there, that opened the access to every single talk and enabled an open conversation with the rest of the world.

    I should mention that TEDx Buenos Aires is going to be held in 2010 and I’m quite excited about that!
  • Wikipedia
    I seriously think Jimmy Wales deserves a Nobel Prize. Although he isn’t stopping wars (although wikipedia might’ve stopped plenty of heated discussions), his role as an enabler letting the whole world access all the knowledge that’s available out there in any language in a simple and fast way, deserves my admiration. Wikipedia is an amazing tool for progress. Knowledge empowers people like no other thing. And this great encyclopedia is ours to enjoy, build and support.

This is only the beginning. As our generation gets more political control, more organizations like these will emerge, helping us to rethink humanity in new ways.

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