City as a Grid: Difference between revisions

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#[[Why Peer to Peer Currencies will Grow]]
#[[Why Peer to Peer Currencies will Grow]]
#[[Relocalization]]
#[[Relocalization]]
#[[Open Hardware]]
#[http://www.p2pfoundation.net/Category:Education Education category]
#[http://www.p2pfoundation.net/Category:Education Education category]


= Related resources =
= Related resources =
#Kim Stanley Robinson's [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mars_trilogy Mars Trilogy] envisions a composite (both manufacturial and culturally) society
#Kim Stanley Robinson's [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mars_trilogy Mars Trilogy] envisions a composite (both manufacturial and culturally) society

Revision as of 02:29, 6 May 2008

Introduction

This place is intended as a placeholder for resources linked to a City-as-a-grid model, where primal needs generation and distribution (food, energy, chores, computing, essential jobs...) as well as commonly needed dispenses (tools sharing, maintenance fees, ...) would be distributed in a geographical way.

Notions such as a part-time chore concept (citizen participation), peer to peer learning, alternative money or the implications of 3D replication/printing technologies or of immersive telepresence (enabling telework) will be studied keys.

Notions

  • Cell: atomic entity representing the smallest, partially autonomous system, that might represent a common savoir-faire in a cooperative way
  • Progressive bootstrapping : every new home should be bringing enough resources to counter-balance it's consumption at the cell scale. This can be seen as a community giving
  • Interconnected Energy Network
  • Distributed network infrastructure (decentralized routing)

Related topics

  1. Geography category
  2. Distributed Power Generation
  3. Community_Water-Management_Systems
  4. P2P Energy Grid
  5. Green Grid
  6. Co-Creation
  7. Open Farm Tech
  8. 3D Printing
  9. Cooperatives
  10. Peer_Property
  11. Why Peer to Peer Currencies will Grow
  12. Relocalization
  13. Open Hardware
  14. Education category

Related resources

  1. Kim Stanley Robinson's Mars Trilogy envisions a composite (both manufacturial and culturally) society