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My title for Wired is Senior Maverick, a magazine I helped co-found 29 years ago. I write one article for Wired per year now. My most recent article concerns the rapidly emerging world of AI image generators, and what they will mean for us. As I detail in my article Picture Limitless Creativity, they are truly creative.
Video is the future of learning. Future of X is a series of 36 lectures on the future that I produced on YouTube for China Mobile, where X equals anything from flying cars to genetic engineering.
I write in order to think. I often begin thinking with a post written on my blog, The Technium. I cover technology and conceptual news, and I also post a weekly summary of the interesting things I read that week.
Five years ago I started a free weekly newsletter, called Recomendo, which delivers 6 very short recommendations each week on Sunday morning. Over 53,000 subscribers get recommendations of great tools, fabulous apps, cool stuff we are watching or listening to, and amazing tips. It has one of the highest open rates of any newsletter in the world.
For the past 12 months I gave myself the assignment to create one piece of art per day. I mostly draw on an iPad, but also sometimes make sculptures, collages, or other physical artifacts. I post everything I make on Instagram, Twitter, or these archives.
For a long while I posted my own reviews of the best documentaries I watched. Although I have not updated the site in a while, my previous picks of the best non-fiction films to watch are gathered on my site True Films. I also made a book of the best reviews.
For a while I ran a blog, Street Use, about the ingenuity of people in repurposing technology and ways they made DIY tech. I also collected a long series of graphs forecasting the future for different industries and subjects. Extrapolations was assembled to assist me in making a larger forecast of a desirable future, a project-in-process called Protopia. I was infatuated with digital publishing about 10 years ago when such information was scarce, so I published a blog called Screen Publishing as a clearing house for best practices in e-publishing. It is inactive now, although the info might still be useful.
This page provides at-a-glance summaries and maps of the work the City has delivered with Measure KK funding. It also compiles the detailed accountability reporting on Measure KK fund expenditures, including reports made to the Public Oversight Committee and to City Council. Lastly, it provides an overview of projects that received Measure KK funding in all three of the categories specified in the ballot measure, which are:
For decades prior to Measure KK, the City's available paving funding was sufficient only to prioritize a handful of major streets for repaving. With the influx of funding from Measure KK and the improvement of guaranteed gas tax revenues (Senate Bill 1), the City has increased paving on neighborhood streets while still keeping major streets in good condition.
Paving in Oakland is based on adopted multi-year paving plans. The most recent previous plan was adopted in 2019. Following policy direction from City Council and guiding values named within Measure KK itself, the 2019 plan incorporated equity, street condition, and safety to prioritize repaving and encompasses activities between July 2019 and June 2022. A new 5-year paving plan took effect July 1, 2022. A map of Measure KK-funded paving in Oakland is provided above. To view an interactive paving map, click here.
Measure KK has also supported additional OakDOT programs including the Complete Streets Capital Projects, the ADA Curb Ramps and City Sidewalk Repairs programs and the Safe Routes to Schools program. Further information on the Paving Program and other Measure KK-funded OakDOT programs can be found at the links below:
Like many cities, Oakland has a variety of aging facilities such as police and fire stations, recreation centers, libraries, and parks that need to be rehabilitated or replaced. The City of Oakland puts infrastructure dollars to work by implementing capital projects through its Capital Improvement Program, or CIP, which the City Council adopts every two years as part of the budget process. Capital projects can range from restoring aging public buildings, to creating or improving our parks, to improving streets and sidewalks, as described in further detail above.
The table below shows select Facilities projects managed by Oakland Public Works that received Measure KK funding, as reported to City Council by the Finance Department in February of 2022. Community-initiated projects are marked with an asterisk (*). These are highlighted examples from a list of more than 40 projects receiving funding from the measure. To see a full list of Measure KK-funded facilities projects, click here. To read the Finance Department report in its entirety, click here.
Approximately $73,199,525 has been spent and $26,800,475 is encumbered, which together totals 100% of the total funds allocated. As of January 30, 2022, HCD has committed and partially expended Measure KK funds towards the acquisition, new construction and/or rehabilitation of approximately 1,600 units. Out of these, 665 units, or over 40 percent, are for extremely low-income households (0-30 percent of Area Median Income). This number of units will increase as the remaining Measure KK funds are allocated to additional projects in future Notices of Funding Availability (NOFAs) in 2022 and 2023.
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K.K. Slider is a traveling musician who has performed songs with his guitar in every version of Animal Crossing; he is a special, non-playable character who makes his return in Animal Crossing: New Horizons.
Unlike previous games, K.K. Slider will not appear in your town automatically in New Horizons. Instead you will need to raise the popularity and rating of your island, and help out Tom Nook with a variety of tasks to attract his attention.
Once you have fulfilled all of Tom Nook's requests, and achieve a Town Evaluation of 3 Stars, K.K. Slider will begin appearing at your town's plaza every Saturday (or Friday if there is already an event planned for Saturday).
K.K. Slider will set up an area full of chairs for villagers to sit and listen to him sing random songs - but he will not take requests for a specific song until 6PM or after. During this time, a player can request that he play a specific song, a song to fit a certain mood, or a song at random.
If a song is requested specifically, and is spelled correctly, K.K. Slider will give you a copy of the song to place in your record players. If the song is not spelled correctly, he will instead play a random song and apologize after its conclusion, and you will need to wait a week before you can request a song again.
These songs can be requested of K.K. directly, however if you incorrectly request a song (such as through a spelling error), K.K. will sing one of the three instead. These songs are included in the checklist above.
His career as a writer, editor and publisher has coincided with a time of unprecedented technological growth. And Kevin has been associated with many ground-breaking publications and organizations in that time. In 01984 he moved to California to edit CoEvolution Quarterly, which Stewart Brand had founded as a spin-off of the Whole Earth Catalog. The Quarterly soon was renamed as Whole Earth Review and Kevin served as its editor for the next 6 years. He also edited and published the Whole Earth Catalog for several of its later editions.
I traveled solo most of the time I was shooting. I had lots of time and no money. I generally spent at least 2 months in a country; some like India and Taiwan I visited many times. I would be gone for years at a stretch. I would leave the US with 500 rolls of film in my backpack.
Listing the equipment and methods he used is far from an afterthought. Kevin is always looking for reliable and innovative tools, and he likes to share what he finds. In 02000 he started an email list to post tool recommendations for his friends. That grew into the Cool Tools website, a public resource that continues to thrive. Last year Kevin self-published Cool Tools: A Catalog of Possibilities as a book; it includes info on more than a thousand recommended tools from the site, all submitted by users.
The technium is the sphere of visible technology and intangible organizations that form what we think of as modern culture. It is the current accumulation of all that humans have created. For the last 1,000 years, this techosphere has grown about 1.5% per year. It marks the difference between our lives now, verses 10,000 years ago. Our society is as dependent on this technological system as nature itself. Yet, like all systems it has its own agenda. Like all organisms the technium also wants. 2b1af7f3a8