The Association for Unmanned Vehicle Systems International (AUVSI) has published an industry code
of conduct for unmanned aircraft system operations. It is based on
safety, professionalism, and respect. This is a significant document,
given the wave of safety-related so-called unmanned systems coming our
way. It is short (a good thing) with a reasonable set of principles.
A
good many domains start with a set of principles as the basis for
assurance or regulation. The hard bit comes with working out the
detail. I am sure that the AUVSI does not propose to re-invent the
safety management wheel, but a number of schemes that have been
expensive to implement, do not seem to be getting too much of a good
press these days, so it would pay them to consider the detailed working
before committing too heavily to a form of implementation.
Links with other groups such as say the robotics community and its events might make sense.
From
my own point of view, it would be a delight to see the unmanned
platform community adopt process standards as a form of leadership
(process ownership drives process improvement) and assurance. Relevant
standards include ISO/IEC 15288, ISO TS 18152, ISO 15504 Part 10.
Tuesday, 3 July 2012
Monday, 2 July 2012
Internet of Things - Glass Half-Full
Temporal linkages between Internet of Things developments sparked some thoughts.
The European Data Protection Supervisor (EDPS) said (pdf) that, while smart meters were potentially useful for controlling energy use, they will also "enable massive collection of personal data which can track what members of a household do within the privacy of their own homes". Good to see, but is it too little too late to prevent a) abuse or b) a backlash? Will the utilities become as popular as bankers? There isn't much of a gap now, I suspect.
A Pew report (pdf) on the future of smart homes includes this gem of realism:
"Most of the comments shared by survey participants were assertions that the Home of the Future will continue to be mostly a marketing mirage. The written responses were mostly negative and did not mirror the evenly split verdict when respondents made their scenario selection. Because the written elaborations are the meat of this research report and the vast majority of them poked holes in the ideal of smart systems being well-implemented by individuals in most connected homes by 2020, this report reflects the naysayers’ sense that there are difficult obstacles that are not likely to be overcome over the next few years."
You may have missed this website devoted to internet fridges. (Shame virtual fridge never took off - Alan Dix would have been much better than Mark Zuckerberg as the social media czar).
Samsung has launched a smartphone health app. Huge market for this sort of thing is developing. Next steps presumably include connecting to things (perhaps using the work at Glasgow University) and possibly some data-mining of healthcare providers (whathaveyougotonme.com or somesuch). Such a path would provide market based 'empowered patient' model, with a user centred approach a business survival requirement. A user-led mashup tool such as sen.se is likely to figure large.
The People Centred Design Group has distilled its work into a set of recommendations for the Internet of Things SIG. Still quite thing-centred e.g. "As the thing passes through its lifecycle, define the end users’ experience... ", and still no mention of HCD standards.
The IoT showcase presentations illustrate the glass half-full situation. I guess that is where we are just now.
The European Data Protection Supervisor (EDPS) said (pdf) that, while smart meters were potentially useful for controlling energy use, they will also "enable massive collection of personal data which can track what members of a household do within the privacy of their own homes". Good to see, but is it too little too late to prevent a) abuse or b) a backlash? Will the utilities become as popular as bankers? There isn't much of a gap now, I suspect.
A Pew report (pdf) on the future of smart homes includes this gem of realism:
"Most of the comments shared by survey participants were assertions that the Home of the Future will continue to be mostly a marketing mirage. The written responses were mostly negative and did not mirror the evenly split verdict when respondents made their scenario selection. Because the written elaborations are the meat of this research report and the vast majority of them poked holes in the ideal of smart systems being well-implemented by individuals in most connected homes by 2020, this report reflects the naysayers’ sense that there are difficult obstacles that are not likely to be overcome over the next few years."
You may have missed this website devoted to internet fridges. (Shame virtual fridge never took off - Alan Dix would have been much better than Mark Zuckerberg as the social media czar).
Samsung has launched a smartphone health app. Huge market for this sort of thing is developing. Next steps presumably include connecting to things (perhaps using the work at Glasgow University) and possibly some data-mining of healthcare providers (whathaveyougotonme.com or somesuch). Such a path would provide market based 'empowered patient' model, with a user centred approach a business survival requirement. A user-led mashup tool such as sen.se is likely to figure large.
The People Centred Design Group has distilled its work into a set of recommendations for the Internet of Things SIG. Still quite thing-centred e.g. "As the thing passes through its lifecycle, define the end users’ experience... ", and still no mention of HCD standards.
The IoT showcase presentations illustrate the glass half-full situation. I guess that is where we are just now.
Sunday, 10 June 2012
Some Resilient Community links
I
had a great discussion about resilience on Thursday night at the GSA
Degree
Show preview. Rather than send links by email, I'm posting them here
with a brief commentary. The links are not intended to be
comprehensive or even representative. My major concern is that good
intentions about Resilient Communities (RC) will do what good
intentions always do. With severe consequences. The 1970's movements of
alternative technology and appropriate technology had good intentions
but (so far as I can see) little impact in practice; forty years on,
people are still designing fuel-efficient stoves for Africa.
The Unreasonable Leaners Network is of considerable personal interest, and I'm hoping to give it the time it deserves.
IFF seems to be up to the right sort of things. Their book has some clear thinking and practical approaches (plus some politically correct nonsense about climate).
The Resilience Thinking book provides a level of hard analytical thought that we need much more of. The resilience alliance is here. Useful video intro here at Mark Robinson's site. Mark Robinson has a publication (pdf) combining the arts and resilience.
John Robb seems to have moved from plotting the coming war to helping create the peace. Nonetheless, his book is axiomatic to thinking about the future (along with Globalistan), and Global Guerillas has lost none of its relevance, alas. He is building two great resources; the RC site, and Miiu. He seems to have links with Open Source Ecology. His two backgrounds come together for resources such as darknet.
The info activists of tactical tech have resources that could be put to widespread use.
Club Orlov is based on a clear model of societal collapse but tries to be absolutely positive. In terms of legal infrastructure, it is linked with Seasteading. It recognizes the need for some sort of spiritual dimension.
Michel Bauwens and the P2P foundation has the potential to be a very powerful resource.
Falkvinge and the pirates are relevant in a number of ways, including their thoughts on swarming.
Paradigms for Progress seems to be on the right lines as well.
Wendy Brown is apocalyptic in title, but less so in tone. The survivalist movement seems active in the USA but either non-existent or completely stealth in the UK.
John Thackara is fundamental, of course. Wider economic material of relevance includes Gregor MacDonald, Umair Haque, Eric Beinhocker(pdf), Steve Keen etc..
My own posting on the topic includes posts on the long lead item of encouraging, supporting, spreading competence development. The IFF book has a nice slogan; "Ready for Anything without planning for everything" (whilst also discussing synchronous failure). My take on various approaches to readiness is here. I am unconvinced of the difference between localism = good and protectionism = bad. I did risk making a forecast, as much to test my own reasoning, as to broadcast it.
Update
The Simplicity Institute is worth a good look.
Scottish activity of interest
As regards 'mainstream' resilience activity, there is Transition Scotland. Permaculture Scotland is of course relevant, but not the whole answer. The aquaponics team at Stirling has the potential to be useful.The Unreasonable Leaners Network is of considerable personal interest, and I'm hoping to give it the time it deserves.
IFF seems to be up to the right sort of things. Their book has some clear thinking and practical approaches (plus some politically correct nonsense about climate).
UK activity
There is work on the difficult question of setting up appropriate organizational structures. This is vital for any sort of scaleability, and is a very long lead item. This post at Res Publica addresses the vital topic of legislation for co-ops, mutuals etc. The B4RN lot seem to have done the tedious homework of setting up an organization for community broadband. John Popham seems tied in to this area somehow.Wider activity of interest
Rob Paterson has a lot to offer. In the first place, he has a compelling personal narrative that is driving him to change. He is contributing to local RC development, and is curating a great health resource. In the background is a great deal of hard systems thinking.The Resilience Thinking book provides a level of hard analytical thought that we need much more of. The resilience alliance is here. Useful video intro here at Mark Robinson's site. Mark Robinson has a publication (pdf) combining the arts and resilience.
John Robb seems to have moved from plotting the coming war to helping create the peace. Nonetheless, his book is axiomatic to thinking about the future (along with Globalistan), and Global Guerillas has lost none of its relevance, alas. He is building two great resources; the RC site, and Miiu. He seems to have links with Open Source Ecology. His two backgrounds come together for resources such as darknet.
The info activists of tactical tech have resources that could be put to widespread use.
Club Orlov is based on a clear model of societal collapse but tries to be absolutely positive. In terms of legal infrastructure, it is linked with Seasteading. It recognizes the need for some sort of spiritual dimension.
Michel Bauwens and the P2P foundation has the potential to be a very powerful resource.
Falkvinge and the pirates are relevant in a number of ways, including their thoughts on swarming.
Paradigms for Progress seems to be on the right lines as well.
Wendy Brown is apocalyptic in title, but less so in tone. The survivalist movement seems active in the USA but either non-existent or completely stealth in the UK.
John Thackara is fundamental, of course. Wider economic material of relevance includes Gregor MacDonald, Umair Haque, Eric Beinhocker(pdf), Steve Keen etc..
My own posting on the topic includes posts on the long lead item of encouraging, supporting, spreading competence development. The IFF book has a nice slogan; "Ready for Anything without planning for everything" (whilst also discussing synchronous failure). My take on various approaches to readiness is here. I am unconvinced of the difference between localism = good and protectionism = bad. I did risk making a forecast, as much to test my own reasoning, as to broadcast it.
Update
The Simplicity Institute is worth a good look.
Monday, 28 May 2012
Normal service is being restored
If you had expected to hear from me, or had expected me to be doing
something for you, this note is for you. It is a lessons learned note
on some recent developments.
A year ago my parents were a resilient system contributing to the family and community. Now they are gone. My sister devoted the last year to their care - a year well-spent. I helped as best I could, with regular trips to Prescot. Work matters took a back seat. In addition, a good deal of work has been done on the house, with all the chaos that tradesmen bring with them.
There was a bit of a low point on my birthday, the last Sunday in April. My main task was to drive to Prescot for my mother's burial. As I started to pack up, my computer died. I decided to put off analyzing that till I came back, and went to set off. The car wouldn't start. After my return late Monday night, I contacted someone to help with the computer; Tuesday and Wednesday were high-stress diagnostic days. In the middle of Wednesday night, we called an ambulance to take Wilma to A&E (trapped sciatic nerve), where we seemed to have arrived in the Social Engineering Dept. rather than anywhere with clinical capability. Somewhere beyond fatigue at that point.
A good deal of the time since then has been devoted to getting my computer fixed, and data and applications in good order. No data loss, and things weren't too untidy given the events of the past year, but still time consuming. Wilma has responded to Bowen Therapy but is still on a slow and painful road to recovery (me, I'm just continuing with the sleep deprivation - not helped by the long Scottish summer days).
This note starts with simple technical lessons learned, and only briefly touches on more personal matters (more anon).
Applications I use that help with resilience are Chaos Intellect (email) that allows sync'ing, including a fully functioning email on a USB memory stick, and Powerdesk, where sync'ing, multi-pane file viewers and a size management utility help with recovery.
It is wrong to waste a good incident; improvements made include changing the laptop set up from a basic awayday arrangement to a more fully functioning set of applications and resources.
As regards my main desktop PC, the main lesson is that spending money on a high-quality well-specc'ed machine was a mistake. RAID 1 on a PC makes dealing with other failures much harder; RAID is for NAS. So, policy now is to buy basic "cheap as chips" machines (Zoostorm from eBuyer or somesuch), and have all the fancy bits external to the box. As regards the laptop, the Crucial SSD upgrade looks appealing. The TeraStation is still graunching away but the newer La Cie RAID boxes are tempting. A DLink print server enables me to print with a dead computer.
The Dutch saying "trust arrives on foot and departs on a horse" applies to all sources of technology.
The system dynamics (I use the term in its technical sense) are awful.
The financial uncertainty of care for the elderly in England is horrendous. The cash flow implications for care homes and nursing homes are massive, and doubtless add a big chunk to the bill.
The key issue seems to be managerialism, which has taken the NHS to the 'bureaucracy' stage of the Adizes life cycle. Hopefully this will be expanded into something less cryptic soon.
I may try to plot their loss of resilience as a system.
Buddy networks, are, or course, what work. Robin, a friend from Sussex University days trod this road some years back and offered useful words of immense comfort (not for the first time). Ron Donaldson has had a similar time to myself, which helped with the 'no man is an island' perspective. His post on his own Cynefin was helpful. I came to realize that the Scouser/Wollyback border is where I have my sense of belonging, but have much less reason to visit now. Coylton is extremely friendly, but I have still to grow deep roots here. Maybe Everton would like to move North. The world of my childhood in North Wales is now a lost world alas.
In their demise, my parents helped to restore wider family links. It would be a tragedy if we let these lapse again. There is some cycle of creative destruction going on here that I don't understand yet.
A year ago my parents were a resilient system contributing to the family and community. Now they are gone. My sister devoted the last year to their care - a year well-spent. I helped as best I could, with regular trips to Prescot. Work matters took a back seat. In addition, a good deal of work has been done on the house, with all the chaos that tradesmen bring with them.
There was a bit of a low point on my birthday, the last Sunday in April. My main task was to drive to Prescot for my mother's burial. As I started to pack up, my computer died. I decided to put off analyzing that till I came back, and went to set off. The car wouldn't start. After my return late Monday night, I contacted someone to help with the computer; Tuesday and Wednesday were high-stress diagnostic days. In the middle of Wednesday night, we called an ambulance to take Wilma to A&E (trapped sciatic nerve), where we seemed to have arrived in the Social Engineering Dept. rather than anywhere with clinical capability. Somewhere beyond fatigue at that point.
A good deal of the time since then has been devoted to getting my computer fixed, and data and applications in good order. No data loss, and things weren't too untidy given the events of the past year, but still time consuming. Wilma has responded to Bowen Therapy but is still on a slow and painful road to recovery (me, I'm just continuing with the sleep deprivation - not helped by the long Scottish summer days).
This note starts with simple technical lessons learned, and only briefly touches on more personal matters (more anon).
Co-creation with tradesmen
There are some tradesmen who can see the customer/home-owner situation, and some that can't. The difference is striking. The lack of awareness of someone who come in to ply his trade with no regard to interfacing with other trades, the impact of his activity on his customers and their neighbours is remarkable. Maybe they need to take their wives with them.Resilience of home office computer networks
I minimize my use of the cloud; 'the user as the product' is not a model I subscribe to more than I have to (though Blogger does a good job for me here). Bits of the cloud that helped provide resilience were google calendar and Opera Link (for bookmarks). Plusnet webmail worked; I normally leave mail on the server because 3 mobile and Plusnet don't talk to each other so far as email is concerned. Wuala, skydrive, and greater use of Amazon 'cloud' storage all need investigating sometime.Applications I use that help with resilience are Chaos Intellect (email) that allows sync'ing, including a fully functioning email on a USB memory stick, and Powerdesk, where sync'ing, multi-pane file viewers and a size management utility help with recovery.
It is wrong to waste a good incident; improvements made include changing the laptop set up from a basic awayday arrangement to a more fully functioning set of applications and resources.
As regards my main desktop PC, the main lesson is that spending money on a high-quality well-specc'ed machine was a mistake. RAID 1 on a PC makes dealing with other failures much harder; RAID is for NAS. So, policy now is to buy basic "cheap as chips" machines (Zoostorm from eBuyer or somesuch), and have all the fancy bits external to the box. As regards the laptop, the Crucial SSD upgrade looks appealing. The TeraStation is still graunching away but the newer La Cie RAID boxes are tempting. A DLink print server enables me to print with a dead computer.
Dependable road transport
I bought the Subaru because they are supposed to be bomb-proof. Reviewers consider their interior to be a bit old-fashioned, which appealed to me on the grounds that there would be less non-engine electronics to go wrong. These assumptions proved wrong, and were compounded by 'smart' charging (which means driving with your lights on to save energy, or somesuch). Two call-outs and two dockings later, I think my car will start. For the five years I had my Toyota, I knew my car would start. A big difference. The Subaru had real rust after three years (I mean Vauxhall Viva type rust, not a stone chip). Fixed now, but astonishingly, no analysis of the manufacturing defect. At a loss on the way ahead just now. Still too cross.The Dutch saying "trust arrives on foot and departs on a horse" applies to all sources of technology.
NHS
Over the past year, we have had more to do with the NHS than is healthy. Individual staff range from the excellent (raging against the system) to the truly atrocious. There was a high point where the GP said "yes, we are a pretty good team" - a doctor admitting to being part of a team - wonderful!The system dynamics (I use the term in its technical sense) are awful.
The financial uncertainty of care for the elderly in England is horrendous. The cash flow implications for care homes and nursing homes are massive, and doubtless add a big chunk to the bill.
The key issue seems to be managerialism, which has taken the NHS to the 'bureaucracy' stage of the Adizes life cycle. Hopefully this will be expanded into something less cryptic soon.
Family matters
With death, parents change from being someone you are connected to, and part of a mesh of relationships. You start to see them in a more isolated fashion, as they were themselves, gain new insights into them, your own similarities and differences, and a whole review of your own 'deep story' grinds away . Views of yourself that have been dormant for decades surface. The social obligations of the offspring to the deceased are considerable - particularly when the deceased was a significant figure in work or the local community.I may try to plot their loss of resilience as a system.
Buddy networks, are, or course, what work. Robin, a friend from Sussex University days trod this road some years back and offered useful words of immense comfort (not for the first time). Ron Donaldson has had a similar time to myself, which helped with the 'no man is an island' perspective. His post on his own Cynefin was helpful. I came to realize that the Scouser/Wollyback border is where I have my sense of belonging, but have much less reason to visit now. Coylton is extremely friendly, but I have still to grow deep roots here. Maybe Everton would like to move North. The world of my childhood in North Wales is now a lost world alas.
In their demise, my parents helped to restore wider family links. It would be a tragedy if we let these lapse again. There is some cycle of creative destruction going on here that I don't understand yet.
Thursday, 29 March 2012
Watching Dixie Dean
When my father was twelve, he was taken to watch Everton. This would be 1933, a year they won the FA Cup. Dixie Dean was playing, and was getting some abuse from someone in the crowd. Dixie Dean went up to the man and punched him. A policeman came along and said "Well done, sir" to Dixie.
Tuesday, 21 February 2012
21st Century Human Centred Design
It is clear that "things are going to be different" - hopefully with a move towards "betterness". How will ergonomics contribute to this change, and what will it look like?
Somewhere Steve Pheasant said that ergonomics usually begins with some sort of task analysis, and ends with some sort of a user trial. In 'Ergonomics- standards and guidelines for designers' he wrote:
" The bulk of the substantive content of the discipline revolves around two key issues—human adaptability and human variability, both of which are measurable and both of which are amenable to standardization at least with respect to their limits."
The principles of Human-Centred Design are:
- A clear and explicit understanding of users, tasks and environments.
- The involvement of users throughout design and development.
- Iteration.
- Designing for the user experience.
- User centred evaluation.
- Multi- disciplinary skills and perspectives.
Let us take the above to be fixed i.e. that the core of the discipline doesn't change, but that its application changes in response to a changing world (i.e. ergonomics practitioners will face a changing 'context of use'). If ergonomics can adapt to the changed context, the future is very promising. The shift in emphasis looks like the following:
Healthcare
From: Drug labelling, incident analysis, CHFG, MiniMe
To: Empowered patients, individual differences with 'quantified self', application of functional medicine, community tool design, wellness support, recognition of 'healthcare' limitations
Education
From: Classroom furniture
To: Personal Learning Environments
Hazardous industries
From: Safety management, alarms, control room design
To: Resilience, governance
Work design
From: Factory and workplace design
To: Enabling home and community resources e.g. hackerspaces (home office design, the dangers of sitting etc. will have been done by others)
Defence
From: Equipment design
To: Facilitating Open Source Warfare
Consumer goods, work equipment
From: Product design
To: Tools for co-creation; design, assessment, certification, of products/services (where the distinction has become unimportant). Input to open source design.
Suggestions welcome in the comments.
Healthcare
From: Drug labelling, incident analysis, CHFG, MiniMe
To: Empowered patients, individual differences with 'quantified self', application of functional medicine, community tool design, wellness support, recognition of 'healthcare' limitations
Education
From: Classroom furniture
To: Personal Learning Environments
Hazardous industries
From: Safety management, alarms, control room design
To: Resilience, governance
Work design
From: Factory and workplace design
To: Enabling home and community resources e.g. hackerspaces (home office design, the dangers of sitting etc. will have been done by others)
Defence
From: Equipment design
To: Facilitating Open Source Warfare
Consumer goods, work equipment
From: Product design
To: Tools for co-creation; design, assessment, certification, of products/services (where the distinction has become unimportant). Input to open source design.
Suggestions welcome in the comments.
Thursday, 16 February 2012
Skills and Manners for Resilient Communities
A post by John Robb on the skills gap used the famous quote by Robert Heinlein
"A human being should be able to change a diaper, plan an invasion, butcher a hog, conn a ship, design a building, write a sonnet, balance accounts, build a wall, set a bone, comfort the dying, take orders, give orders, cooperate, act alone, solve equations, analyze a new problem, pitch manure, program a computer, cook a tasty meal, fight efficiently, die gallantly. Specialization is for insects."
John Robb is right about the skills gap, and this post is my twopennorth on the topic.
The resilient community movement might sympathise with Henlein's bold statement of individual self-sufficiency - the Competent Man. (Presumably women are supposed to be pregnant in winter and barefoot in summer). The list has sparked a great many similar attempts, including this. However, it is clearly not practical as a universal prescription, up to date, or appropriate for all situations.
As a contribution to bridging the digital divide, I have attempted to expand it, update it where necessary, and use headings that merge digital and traditional skills. Bridging the digital divide will be an important factor at both individual and community levels (the list is an expansion of one developed in response to David Pogue's post on 'the basics').
To quite an extent, the specifics of the list aren't all that important. The skill requirements for a resilient community are likely to be an emergent property - skill development will need a number of safe-fail experiments (cf. Cynefin). What is important just now is to make an estimate of the size of the undertaking and have an initial plan of how to bootstrap ourselves, in this Resilient Communities may be lean startups - including customer development; "self sufficiency" might breed a dangerous introversion. Rob Paterson took the view that the first priority was to get fit, so that the other requirements could come more easily. This seems very sensible, but it may not be your priority.
One suggestion is that your priorities are driven by "what you are least worst at". Every community will need its own approach and idea of end-point, but it would be reasonable to be well on the way to using " five per cent of the energy throughputs that we are accustomed to now" (a must-read piece by John Thackara) by ‘the 2017 drop-off’ discussed in the 2009 BITRE report.
So, we need informed skill development at an individual level, driven by hard reality like Rob Paterson has done, rather than woolly idealism. Perhaps we need Personal Learning Environments. At a community level, there is the need to spot potential skill shortages (as John Robb has done in the post mentioned at the top of this piece). What obviously won't work are:
- Central planning
- Doing nothing
- State-funded institutions attempting to carry the load
- Individualised efforts.
Here's the list. Ones from the Heinlein list are *
Mind
Communicate
Make a phone call, VoIP call
Txt on a mobile phone, Send a picture on a mobile phone (taken on its camera)
Send an email, know 'netiquette'
Subscribe to an RSS feed
Buy online
Give a short talk e.g. welcome or thanks
Give a presentation without visual aids
Use powerpoint or equivalent sensibly (cf. Guy Kawasaki's Rule xxx)
Draw mindmaps or some other type of diagram
Read/produce engineering drawings
Self-organize
* Take orders
* Give orders
* Act alone
Run a personal kanban
Eat healthily
Organize
* Plan an invasion
* Balance accounts
Plan a menu
Do a household budget
Get kids to school on time and with the right gear
Set up a website
Plan or evolve the layout and planting of a garden
Organise a sports event
Prioritize risks and opportunities
Facilitate
* Co-operate
Run a workshop
Tend
* Pitch manure
Improve digital photos e.g. red eye removal, cropping
Prune plants
Care for pets
Clean the inside of a computer, displays, keyboards, mouse
Vacuum clean a house
Clean windows
Sew on buttons
Replace zips
Take up a hem
Change the wheel on a car
Check under the bonnet of a car (fluid levels, belts, battery etc.)
Secure people and assets
* Fight efficiently
Use a fire extinguisher or fire blanket
Have an escape plan
Set up and use internet security (firewall, anti-phishing, virus checking)
Wear a seatbelt
Avoid drinking and driving
Use strong passwords and not have them accessible
Test for counterfeit banknotes
Use a spam filter
Check a suspect email that has come through the filter
Check suspect visitors to the house
Stop junk mail
Locate
Know your post code/zip code
Know your IP address
Remember what you went upstairs for
Use search engines, desktop search
Use bookmarks/favourites for web pages
Have contact details for family and friends
Have contact details for emergency situations
Find useful people (plumber at the weekend)
Use a map and compass
Use a GPS device
File
Keep personal records organised
Keep account details organised e.g. bank, utiliities
File work documents in a system
Have a computer filing system for documents, images, music
Have a consistent filename convention
Body
Preserve
Make jam, pickle, chutney
Back up to CD, hard drive, web-based resource
Preserve with salt or drying, canning, freezing
Transfer digital photographs from camera to local and cloud storage
Take video, post to web
Program the video recorder or PVR
Share
Use a photo sharing service, P2P music or video sharing
Use a group, forum, chat room
Raise money for charity, project
Host a party, barbeque
Write, distribute a newsletter
Care
* Change a diaper
* Set a bone
Do CPR, resuscitation
Create
* Design a building
* Write a sonnet
* Program a computer
* Cook a tasty meal
* Butcher a hog
* Solve equations
* Analyze a new problem
Paint in watercolours
Sketch
Build a website
Use computer graphics
Grow plants from seed
Raise children
Construct
* Build a wall
Use a lathe or milling machine
Use computer 3D to create something
Build a drone, robot
Control
* Conn a ship
Drive a car, tractor & trailer
* Ride a bicycle, horse
Spirit
* Comfort the dying
* Die gallantly
Find inner peace
Survive hardship
Survive success
As an aside, the story of Heinlein and Lazarus Long is an interesting one.
Update: As regards digital literacy, the European Computer Driving Licence is obsolete. Resources that look potentially useful include the Digital Survival Guide and Digital Citizens Basics.
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