Future Now
The IFTF Blog
Infotech has been giving to biotech for a long time. Now biotech may be giving something back....
Gregory Clark, an economic historian at the University of California, Davis, has a forthcoming book, A Farewell to Alms, that argues that "the...
Assignment Zero, an experimental collaboration between Wired and the new media incubator NewAssignment.net, has reported back on what went right and...
IFTF friends area/code, a pervasive game design consultancy based in Manhattan launched Sharkrunners earlier this week on the Discovery Channel's...
A couple of weeks ago, I made some crack about lycopene and ketchup (here). On the American Cancer Society website today, I noticed the headline,...
This past weekend, the American Cancer Society held its third annual Relay For Life® in the Second Life virtual world. For those of you who don't...
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iHealthBeat reports on a survey of doctors regarding the use of Electronic Health Records (EHR). Thirty-five percent of physicians surveyed by...
According to Intel chairman Craig Barrett, the health care industry has been slow to adopt existing technology to achieve reform. Healthcare IT News...
Wireless Healthcare, an analyst group in the United Kingdom, has offered an opinion about Google and Microsoft's attempts to build a presence in the...
We often seem to have food on our minds around here at the Institute. All that thinking and creativity makes for hungry folks. And within the Health...
Today's entry comes from my colleague, Jason Tester, at IFTF. He shares a news story from The Guardian about eco-diets and food miles. ...
Via Epicenter, this new forward-looking video, "Prometeus: The Media Revolution."
IFTF Affiliate Richard Adler has pointed me to "Drug Companies Lag in Adopting Social Media To Communicate With Consumers," at iHealthBeat. Echoing a...
As we've noted before, competition between nations with territory around the North Pole-- the United States, Canada, Norway, Denmark, and Russia--...
Slate reports on some fairly serious rumors that scientists working using the Fermilab Tevatron have found the Higgs boson, right where the standard...
Following on the work we did in the 2007 Ten Year Forecast on the end of science: this week's New Scientist has an article on evolutionary algorithms...
One of the distinctive features of Web 2.0, I've felt, is an understanding that humans are very good at certain things, computers are really good at...
Contrast the glittery language of Biopolis or Phase Z.Ro with Oxford's science park, Begbroke....
Gregory Clark, an economic historian at the University of California, Davis, has a forthcoming book, A Farewell to Alms, that argues that "the...
Three years ago, Gregg Zachary wrote an essay arguing-- indeed, lamenting-- that the war on terror hadn't had much impact on Silicon Valley. In...
The receding of the Arctic ice is bringing a new territorial competition to claim the North Pole. In 2004, Danish scientists began to survey the area...
New York Times Magazine has a long article by Julian Dibbell on Chinese gold farming, people who play online games (mainly World of Warcraft) for a...
The Pharma Marketing blog had an interesting piece the other day on "Rejiggering the Marketing Mix a la Merck." ...