Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Talk: The Democratization of Innovation, A Conversation with Ray Kurzweil, October 14, 2009

Group Name Enterprise Forum of Cambridge, MA
Event Name Innovation Series October 2009
Event Description Networking and Registration: 5:30 - 6:15 p.m. Program: 6:15 - 8:00 p.m. Post-Event Reception: 8:00-9:00 p.m.
Event Contact Trish Fleming
Contact Phone 6172538240
Contact Email trishf@mit.edu
Date Wednesday, October 14, 2009
Time 6:00 PM until 9:00 PM
Address MIT Stata Center
Kirsch Auditorium, 32-123
32 Vassar Street
Cambridge
MA
Forum Members: $25
Non-Members: $40
MIT Staff (with valid ID): $25
Students from all universities are FREE with valid ID. Pre-registration encouraged.

REGISTER

Keynote presentation by one of the most prolific and diverse technology innovators followed by a deep conversation led by Sim Simeonov of FastIgnite

Impervious to the roller-coaster ride of the financial markets, the past decade has brought about an unprecedented acceleration in technology development and adoption combined with a rapid decline in the cost of anything touched by IT. Open-source, software-as-a-service, cloud computing, user-generated content, freemium and viral distribution models share one thing in common: they lower the cost of experimentation and make it cheaper and easier to create new things while at the same time destroying existing business models.

The democratization of innovation is a turbulent process. Rapid creation and violent destruction. Many winners and many losers, both big and small. Are there patterns of success in the chaos? Ray Kurzweil definitely thinks so. He has been on the bleeding edge of innovation for decades and his track record is something to admire. Ray was the principal developer of the first CCD flat-bed scanner, the first omni-font optical character recognition, the first print-to-speech reading machine for the blind, the first text-to-speech synthesizer, the first music synthesizer capable of recreating the grand piano and other orchestral instruments, and the first commercially marketed large-vocabulary speech recognition.

Following Ray’s keynote presentation, we will go deep with Ray on topics ranging from forecasting technology shifts and timing markets to practical techniques for fostering market-focused innovation to understanding the different roles of the individual entrepreneur vs. the team in venture creation. Iconic entrepreneur and angel investor Bill Warner, founder of Avid Technology, Wildfire Communications, and Warner Research will join the conversation.

Keynote:

Ray Kurzweil, prolific inventor, entrepreneur, author and futurist
Conversation with:
Bill Warner, serial entrepreneur and investor
Moderator:
Simeon Simeonov, serial entrepreneur and investor

Program Organizers: David E. Brook, Hamilton, Brook, Smith & Reynolds, P.C., Kristen Collins, KMC Partners, Pearl Freier, Cambridge BioPartners, Simeon Simeonov, FastIgnite, Inc

Theater: BU Fringe Festival "Diventare," October 14

BU Fringe Festival [theater] presents: "Diventare"
Wednesday, October 14
7:30pm, free

Information: http://www.BostonTheatreScene.com

Part of the Fringe Festival, "Willful Women: Worlds Apart." A play by Jenny
Rachel Weiner (CFA'09) and directed by Ellie Heyman (CFA'11). When Linda's
life fractures, she escapes to an imaginary underwater kingdom. As a
hurricane once again approaches, Linda must choose to retreat further or
face the storm. CFA's 2010 Kennedy Center American College Theatre Festival
entry, "diventare" will be featured in this spring's InCite Arts Festival in
New York City. A production of the BU New Play Initiative. No reservations
necessary for this free event. Open to the public. Attend at CFA Theatre
Lab @ 855 Commonwealth Avenue.

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Interview Possibility: New Law Protects College Students' Medical Insurance Coverage While Attending School, Oct 08-09

This week a new federal law will go into effect that
guarantees that college students across the country 
will no longer have to worry about whether they will be 
kicked off their parent’s health insurance plan if they 
need to take a medical leave of absence. Until now, 
insurers have been ableto limit or eliminate coverage if 
students dropped below full time status. This is just 
what the Morse family faced when their daughter, Michelle, 
was diagnosed with cancer. *

* *

*The new law, Michelle’s Law, takes effect this Friday, 
October 9th, oneyear after it was enacted. The law is 
named for Michelle Morse, who was a student at Plymouth 
State University in New Hampshire. After being diagnosed 
with colon cancer in 2004, she was forced to remain a 
full-time student while undergoing debilitating chemotherapy 
in order to stay on her family’s insurance. She ultimately 
lost her battle to the disease. *

* *

*On Thursday, October 8, from 3pm-6pm ET, and Friday, October 9, 
6am-10amET, AnnMarie Morse, mother, advocate and author of this 
Federal Law, and Daniel Smith, President of the American Cancer 
Action Network, are available for live interviews to discuss 
the following: 
 
  • How this law affects students and families across 
    
  • the country 
    
  • The importance of advocating change in the broader health care
    system to eliminate the many other gaps and cracks that cancer patients fall
    through, as did the Morse’s daughter 
  • How AnnMarie Morse changed the law
  • Why health care reform matters in the fight against cancer
  • *Please let us know if we can put you on the schedule for this important message for your listeners. * *Thank you!* *Carole Bennett* *703-671-0054*

Lecture: The Short American Century, 1941-2008: Contrasting Views of the Era of American Dominance, October 22

Summary The Short American Century, 1941-2008: Contrasting Views of the Era of American Dominance
Description The International History Institute hosts Professor Eugene McCarraher, Villanova University. This is the 3rd in a series of eight lectures.
Starts 6:00pm on Thursday, October 22nd 2009
Location The Castle, 225 Bay State Road
Topics Lecture
Running Time 90 minutes
Admission Free and open to the public
Email IHI@bu.edu
Phone 617-353-1165
Directions http://www.bu.edu/castle/introduction/directions/index.shtml

Event: Market of the Living Dead, October 25

Market of the Living Dead

Sunday, Oct 25 10:00a to 4:00p
at SOWA Open Market, Boston, MA
Price: Free
Phone: (800) 403-8305
Age Suitability: All Ages
As another successful season of the Sowa Open Market draws to a close, we will be holding our 6th annual "Market of the Living Dead" on October 25h, 2009. In keeping with tradition, we will hold our Vendor / Customer Costume Contest and the Pumpkin Carving Contest, as well as fun games, live music, and lots of great prizes being given out during the market.
The market will have over hundred vendors from the Boston area selling handmade designs and crafts, along with the return of the NYC handmade group {the New New}.
The Costume Contest is now in it's fifth year, and we will be keeping up our reputation as being the most horrifying zombies / artisans on Harrison Ave. We highly encourage shoppers to come dressed up - because if you don't come as a zombie, we guarantee you'll leave as one.
Costume Contest Prizes
1st Prize - 250.00
2nd Prize - 150.00
3rd Prize - 75.00
As always, the market will offer the usual ever-changing group of artisans, free admission, a hip convenient location and plenty of parking. We give Boston a unique center to network while shopping for healthy edibles, fragrant blooms, DIY crafts and designer wares from established artisans including jewelry, handbags, accessories, sculpture, and clothing along with affordable mid-century modern furniture, antiques and collectibles It's definitely a trip worth making before we close for the season.

Concert: Playing for the Planet - World Music to fight global climate change, October 24

Playing for the Planet - World Music to fight global climate change 
 
Saturday, Oct 24 6:30p to 10:30p
at First Church in Cambridge, Cambridge, MA
Price: $20 regular, $15 students/seniors
Phone: (781) 396-0734
Age Suitability: All Ages
Six performers of international music and dance: Balkan and European music (members of Libana); contemporary Indian dance (Aparna Sindhoor Dance Theater); Japanese music for koto and shakuhachi (Ayakano Cathleen Read & Elizabeth Reian Bennett); Hindustani vocals (Warren Senders); middle-Eastern music (Beth Bahia Cohen); drumming and dance of Ghana (The Agbekor Drum & Dance Society). Proceeds to benefit the environmental organization 350.org. Part of International Climate Change Awareness Day.

Concert: Quiet Music II, October 09



Q U I E T   M U S I C   II


New England Phonographer’s Union
das kleine Field Recordings Festival – in conjunction with the festival in Berlin


Rick Breault, Michael Bullock, Derek Hoffend, Ernst Karel, Jed Speare, Asher Thal-Nir 



Friday, October 9, 2009
8pm
suggested donation $5-$10


at Thompson Design Group
35 Channel Center St., corner


The New England Phonographers Union is a fluid congregation of sound artists and field recordists who work with untreated and unprocessed recordings of the rich and varied sounds around them. Through the exploration and documentation of urban and rural public spaces, sound objects and events, the Union captures auditory phenomena otherwise lost, and re-interpret the particularity of individual places as a newly idealized sonic environment. Within a focused listening environment the members present their recordings, both individually and as collaborative improvisations. The project is modeled after the Seattle Phonographers Union, which was founded in 2002 and has spawned like-minded groups in New York, Chicago, London, and Montreal. http://nephonography.wordpress.com
Tonight’s performance takes place in parallel with the das kleine Field Recordings Festival in Berlin. Its website is http://dkfrf.wordpress.com/about/