Thinker, doer, iconoclast, professional loudmouth.
Also organisational comms guy, design thinker, user experience and service designer, collaborator, sketchnoter. Open government advocate. TEDizen. Husband. Dad. WoW player. INTP. Crossfitter. Rugby tragic.
This site collects links, books, stories, media and other things I consider interesting for some reason. It's neither work-focussed or personal but happily blurs the two.
See http://about.me/trib/ for greater detail and links to other things.
Loading Tweet...
I’ve been following the Chris Brown story a bit more than I would normally follow an issue like this. Basically the guy is a violent...
We made a mistake. Over the last couple of days users brought to light an issue concerning how we handle your personal information on...
Friedman drives me crazy. His newest nonsense is Average Is Over:
Thomas Friedman, ...
MICHAEL.
FASSBENDER.
NUDE.
SCENES.
MOM, THIS IS GREG. HE IS MY NEW BOYFRIEND AND WE ARE IN LOVE. SAY HI, GREG.
…
HONEY, IS THIS ABOUT HOW NOBODY ASKED YOU TO THE WINTER FORMAL?
...
SERIOUSLY? YOU CALL THAT A SUICIDE NOTE? IT IS RIFE WITH TYPOGRAPHICAL ERRORS, NOT TO MENTION IT HAS THE EMOTIONAL RESONANCE OF AN AXE BODY SPRAY...
h/t @dobes
(Alternate title: The New Work Ethic)
I wrote this email to a friend a few weeks ago, and then the topic came up...
3 posts tagged betterness
“Here’s how it works. Flexible Purpose Corporations can write one or more special missions into their articles of incorporation. They can be as ambitious as fighting climate change or as modest as maintaining a park near the company’s office. The law instructs directors to consider the special aims in their decision-making, even when it could mean lower returns for investors. To make the appeal as broad as possible, the law’s authors avoided setting a minimum standard for what a “special purpose” could be.”
Patagonia Road Tests New Sustainability Legal Status - Bloomberg
We need similar laws in Australia, I believe.
Loading posts...