Today, I decided that I am going to start recording my life experiences - the things that are worth telling and remembering, the ones not worth letting go, but learning from. I'm compiling for that one day, and reading chronologically, to look back and smile. Today, I begin writing about today, and step into tomorrow cramming posts about yesterday, so as to one day be able to compile it all.
Thursday, December 8, 2011
The most watched videos on Youtube!
Tuesday, November 29, 2011
A post in Italian to restart my engines...
Today, or oggi as one would say in Italian, I want to share a thought in that new language- one I've been learning for the past two years. Italian is my fifth language, and surprisingly the one I've been using the most in random occasions when I travel. If there's one thing I could convince any one of you to pursue, it would be the learning of new languages.
Avete mai pensato a quanto diverso sarebbe il mondo se tutti gli imprenditori avessero un impatto sociale positivo? Viviamo in un mondo con molti problemi. Ogni giorno nascono più persone, e il motivo per cui gli altri muoiono anche aumenta. I ricchi diventano più ricchi, e i poveri continuano a essere poveri.
Voglio cambiare il mondo in cui viviamo. Voglio cambiare il corso della civiltà. Voglio che le imprese facciano bene. Voglio vedere l'imprenditorialità sociale. Voglio che la gente voglia quello che voglio, e anche di più.
E’ un cambiamento che non accadrà da solo. Abbiamo bisogno di un cambiamento di mentalità. La gente deve "lasciarsi andare". I politici devono riconfigurare i loro circuiti. Il popolo, Noi, dobbiamo iniziare a diffondere la parola.
Wednesday, June 8, 2011
RISE-Pak in the news!
Here is the article by Ethan Casey in Dawn:
http://www.dawn.com/2011/06/07/rising-to-the-challenge.html
Tuesday, May 10, 2011
Crunching the numbers: How many people have ever lived?
What percentage of people who have ever lived are alive today? We know that sometime this year the world population will tick past 7 billion [1]. We know that there are a whole billion more of us than there were in 1999, as if a new China has appeared out of nowhere. The UN forecasts that the world population is expected to rise further, and further, to a whopping 10.1 billion in 2100 [2]. But what about the past? How many humans have walked on this beautiful planet of ours? And what fraction of people who have ever lived are alive today?
So what happened? Why did the world’s population start growing so quickly, so suddenly?
The world population is driven not only by more people having more children, but also the fact that we’re living longer. In fact, despite the fact that birth rates have been falling in recent decades, the population has continued to rise as those already on the planet lead longer, healthier lives, thanks to modern medicine and improved nutrition introduced in the centuries following 1800. World population growth is essentially birth rate minus death rate - thus, as life expectancy rises, death rates decrease, and the population will continue to rise.
So back to our original question. To estimate the number of people who have ever lived, we examined the average life span throughout human history in conjunction with world population levels. Until very recently life expectancy at birth hovered between 20 and 35 years, but in the past century it has risen to 67 years (it is highest in Monaco, at about 89 years, and lowest in Angola, where people live on average to be just 39 years old) [6].
Footnotes
1. http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/jan/14/population-explosion-seven-billion
2. http://www.nytimes.com/2011/05/04/world/04population.html
3. Smithsonian [http://humanorigins.si.edu/evidence/human-evolution-timeline-interactive]
4. For an amazing 3D experience of this check out the new Werner Hertzog movie "Cave of Forgotten Dreams"
5. We use the UN Department of Social and Economic Affairs numbers where available, otherwise from McEvedy & Jones (1978). For a full set of world population estimates see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_population_estimates
6. https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/rankorder/2102rank.html
7. Data from 1950 on from Population Division of the Department of Economic and Social Affairs of the United Nations Secretariat, 2007. Earlier data is sourced from wikipedia and “Medics, monarchs and mortality, 1600-1800: Origins of the knowledge-driven health transition in Europe” by S. Ryan Johansson. Neolithic assumption is that one quarter of humans lived to 40, one quarter to 20 and one half died as infants.
Monday, May 2, 2011
14th World Business Dialogue in Cologne, Germany
The Forum dealt with complexity as its main topic, yet it touched upon all fields, regions and issues.
Exciting was not the conference on its own, but the diversity of its attendees, the excitement of a new city and its culture, and the development of our careers from that point-on.
At the Dialogue, I made lasting friendships, promoted www.rise-pak.com, met Ricardo Amador with whom I later won Third Place at the Loyola Business Case Competition pitching an idea about housing in Rio de Janeiro based on recycled paper, and culminated with a memorable road trip.
Santiago Lizaso, Pedro Sanchez de Lozada and I rented a car and drove through Belgium, Netherlands and Germany for the following week, experiencing everything from Moules Frittes to the Berlin Wall.
We must grasp the opportunities life puts in front of us. They shape us then, and much more later on as we reflect on our learnings, relationships, failures and achievement. L'chaim!
Monday, March 7, 2011
Paris
De profundos y eternos amores.
Capital mundial de la gastronomiía,
Punto G de cualquier panadería.
Tierra de exquisitos sabores,
De comidas con eternos sabores.
Reina de la arquitectura,
Coronada por su grandeza que perdura.
Wednesday, March 2, 2011
Counting on friends, when distance is a factor
Wednesday, February 2, 2011
Economia 101: Circulación del Dinero
Es agosto, en una pequeña ciudad de la costa, en plena temporada; cae una lluvia torrencial y hace varios días que la ciudad parece desierta.
Hace rato que la crisis viene azotando este lugar, todos tienen deudas y viven a base de créditos.
Por fortuna, llega un ruso mafioso forrado de guita y entra en el único pequeño hotel del lugar. Pide una habitación. Pone un billete de 100 dólares en la mesa de la recepcionista y se va a ver las habitaciones.
El jefe del hotel agarra el billete y sale corriendo a pagar sus deudas con el carnicero.
Éste toma el billete y corre a pagar su deuda con el criador de cerdos.
A su turno éste sale corriendo para pagar lo que le debe al molino proveedor de alimentos para animales.
El dueño del molino toma el billete al vuelo y corre a liquidar su deuda con María, la prostituta a la que hace tiempo que no le paga. En tiempos de crisis, hasta ella ofrece servicios a crédito.
La prostituta con el billete en mano sale para el pequeño hotel donde había traído a sus clientes las últimas veces y que todavía no había pagado y le entrega el billete al dueño del hotel.
En este momento baja el ruso, que acaba de echar un vistazo a las habitaciones, dice que no le convence ninguna, toma el billete y se va.
Nadie ha ganado un centavo, pero ahora toda la ciudad vive sin deudas y mira el futuro con confianza!
MORALEJA: ¡¡¡SI EL DINERO CIRCULA SE ACABA LA CRISIS!!!
Thursday, January 27, 2011
The Road to Innovative Social Entrepreneurship International Competition!
The humble roots of the RISE competition can be traced back to a shared desire to assist Pakistani flood relief efforts in an attempt to lessen the immediate and long-term devastations of one of the largest natural disasters in recent history.
I was introduced to Aliya Bagewadi by a mutual friend who was aware that we both had a joint desire to take action to not only bring light to the tragic aftermath of the Pakistani floods, but to give the young social entrepreneurs and leaders of tomorrow, found on college campuses around the world, an opportunity to help be part of the recovery process in the region.
My experience with social entrepreneurship and philanthropic efforts coupled with Aliya’s intense involvement in social justice initiatives and humanitarian efforts made for an ideal partnership to help making our idea-- an annual social entrepreneurship competition- a reality. After our initial meeting, we decided we would give the competition a go.
After meeting with several professors, entrepreneurs, NGO personnel in Pakistan and recruiting a passionate Executive Board consisting of University of Chicago undergraduates, we managed to organize a unique and comprehensive annual competition which we named the Road to Innovative Social Entrepreneurship- or, RISE. The board is made up of some of the greatest, most outstanding and dedicated individuals on our campus today... more info on the stars will be posted on our site later this week.
RISE operates under the overarching belief that every college student has the tremendous potential to use his/her skills and knowledge to benefit the greater good. It is only a matter of rising to the challenge.
We hear humanity calling. Will you help us answer it?
REGISTER YOUR TEAM NOW TO RECEIVE MORE INFORMATION at http://rise-pak.com/apply/
VISIT THE COMPETITION'S WEBSITE AT http://rise-pak.com
If you have any questions regarding the competition, contact me at david@akinin.com
Tuesday, January 25, 2011
Facebook, Twitter: tools for Social Revolutions.
Amid growing social and political turmoil in African countries like Algeria and Yemen, 85,000 people pledged on Facebook to attend a nationwide anti-government protest in Egypt today, January 25. The protest is obviously running on the “spirit” of the recent events in neighboring nation Tunisia. Activists from the 6th of April Youth Movement and Egypt’s Kifaya movement are behind this and other Facebook and Twitter invites.
Ironically, today’s protests will coincide with a national holiday that honors the police forces — instrumental in having kept President Muhammad Mubarak in office since 1981.
According to independent Egyptian newspaper Al-Masry Al-Youm, Egyptian activists are demanding, among many issues, the dismissal of the Minister of Interior, who is blamed for a myriad of human rights violations, and the limitation of presidency up to two terms.
For today’s protests in Egypt, the main Facebook page explicitly points to four meeting places around Cairo. Egyptian activist Khaled Kamel worries that this might have been a mistake: “Because of that, security is going to be prepared,” he told Time magazine. Moreover, mass demonstrations without prior authorization are banned in Egypt; anyone protesting today could be arrested.
Organizing social movements through Facebook makes it too easy for certain governments to track down protests, and thus be better prepared. And yet, it seems that if this protest happens at all, it will already be a huge success for the people of Egypt, and perhaps a wake-up call for authoritarian governments everywhere; social media can help give oppressed people a voice and a tool to come together.
What do you think is going to happen in Egypt? Will people show up? How instrumental do you think Facebook is in helping out with social protests?
Follow the updates on twitter!
--Credit for news: selftest.com
Sunday, January 2, 2011
Studying in Paris for the Quarter!
Je suis arrivé hier, et ne peut pas obtenir assez de votre air, vos sites, vos gens.
Nous avons trois mois pour connaître l'un à l'autre et tomber amoureux.
J'espère que vous êtes prêt, parce que je viens de finir le déballage.