Beverly Hills, CA -- (SBWIRE) -- 12/09/2013 -- The creators of Project Unspell, a revolutionary software program that is currently being developed to help people learn to read and write English, are pleased to announce that they have launched a fundraising campaign on Indiegogo.com. Project Unspell
offers an exciting new approach to circumventing the complexities of
English spelling by providing a platform that allows people to learn
proper pronunciation, read English text phonetically, and then easily
convert it back into standard spelling.
Monday, December 09, 2013
Press Release—Project Unspell
Saturday, December 07, 2013
Adbusters Magazine Issue #186: Countdown to Catastrophe
The culture-jammers are at it again.
The latest issue, on the newsstands now (if you happen to live some
place progressive and/or liberal), is titled “The Big Ideas of
2047.” Spoiler alert! Here are the big ideas of 2047:
- Neoliberal economics is dead; growth is no longer God
- Progress is now a spiritual rather than a materialistic question
- Products are priced based on ecological payoff
- Usury (lending at interest) is taboo
- Individual rights are gone, replaced by individual responsibilities
This is the shape of the reborn,
post-collapse world presented at the end of the issue.
Tuesday, December 03, 2013
A Home in Harmony with Nature? Why, that's illegal!
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| Pete Ryan |
[This week's guest post is by Scott Erickson,
author of The
Diary of Amy, the 14-Year-Old Girl Who Saved
the Earth, a fun little book
to share with friends and family. It works, in a way that many other
books don't. It tells the truth, in a way that's hard to ignore. And
it gets away with it, because it is firmly in the category of
humor/satire. This, it turns out, is necessary, because it turns out
that any attempt to tell the truth without making it into a joke is
automatically tagged as undemocratic, unpatriotic, elitist, sanctimonious, moralizing and
overly negative...
Tuesday, November 26, 2013
The Story of “Er”
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| marriedtothesea.com |
[The Unspell Crowdfunding Campaign is in its second week. Over $5k has already been raised, but at this rate it seems unlikely to hit its target of $50k, so please help spread the word.]
[sbm KqT nLuS for YgS Ru ar lDnhN bnspEl: YEd hS nx vn bnspEl font vnT b Mc tu LuS ht on Yb MeP. stc tLunT for TItclS.]
Once upon a time Western Europe was a land of clear consonants and pure vowels. People would fill their lungs and shout to each other over great distances—across rivers and valleys—and understand every word. But then, just as one Western European nation after another was embarking on an empire-building campaign, something very strange happened. You see, they had to distinguish themselves somehow, to confuse and frighten each other, but the European Parliament hadn't been invented yet, and so they couldn't exercise their precious ethnic differences simply by talking a great deal of nonsense. They had to achieve the same effect through more traditional means: by distinguishing themselves in manners, attire and speech. In the case of manners and attire their approach was quite traditional as well: they cultivated a pompous and arrogant demeanor, and they sported crazy hats and lots of frills and embroidery. But in the matter of speech the way they chose to distinguish themselves was decidedly strange. I call it the Battle of Speech Impediments.
[sbm KqT nLuS for YgS Ru ar lDnhN bnspEl: YEd hS nx vn bnspEl font vnT b Mc tu LuS ht on Yb MeP. stc tLunT for TItclS.]
Once upon a time Western Europe was a land of clear consonants and pure vowels. People would fill their lungs and shout to each other over great distances—across rivers and valleys—and understand every word. But then, just as one Western European nation after another was embarking on an empire-building campaign, something very strange happened. You see, they had to distinguish themselves somehow, to confuse and frighten each other, but the European Parliament hadn't been invented yet, and so they couldn't exercise their precious ethnic differences simply by talking a great deal of nonsense. They had to achieve the same effect through more traditional means: by distinguishing themselves in manners, attire and speech. In the case of manners and attire their approach was quite traditional as well: they cultivated a pompous and arrogant demeanor, and they sported crazy hats and lots of frills and embroidery. But in the matter of speech the way they chose to distinguish themselves was decidedly strange. I call it the Battle of Speech Impediments.
Tuesday, November 19, 2013
I Need Your Help
I
have been writing and speaking on the subject of collapse for the past
seven years. Many people have found what I had to say interesting and
significant. Some people have even made major changes in their lives,
based in part on insights they were able to glean from my writings. But
now I am ready for a major change myself. I feel that I have already
said everything I could possibly say on the subject of collapse. My
books remain in print, and this blog will stay online, available to
anyone who wants to use these resources as collapse unfolds. But I need
to take a break.
About a year ago, while
overwintering back in St. Petersburg, Russia and helping take care of our
newborn son, I conceived a scheme for making written English easier to
learn and more accessible to everyone from special needs students and
dyslexics to home-schooled children to just about everyone who has ever
struggled with the horribly irregular English spelling. This scheme,
which I called "Unspell," uses a dialect-neutral phonemic representation
of spoken English. I invented a special set of symbols for this
purpose. A year of work went into perfecting a system that captures all
the significant phonological distinctions of English and that is easy to
read, easy to write and easy to learn. Two pieces of software—called “unspell” and “respell”—will convert from English text to this
representation and back in a process that is largely automatic, allowing
people who have good command of spoken English to read and write
perfect English without having to so much as look at English spelling!


While
I was writing and speaking on the subject of collapse I was often asked
what my qualifications are for doing so. Am I an economist, a
historian, an anthropologist, a sociologist? Alas, I am none of the
above, and that makes me an amateur. But as far as Unspell is concerned,
I have all of the requisite qualifications: I have an advanced degree
in applied linguistics, a degree in computer engineering, and well over a
decade of experience working as a software engineer, engineering
manager and systems architect in a variety of high-tech start-up
companies.
I have been able to complete
the design for Unspell in my spare time working together with a few
volunteers. But now that it is time to develop and deliver software,
this model will no longer suffice. I have to register and organize a
company, buy software licenses, lease servers, pay contractors and so
on. The first step is to raise some seed money, which will be used to
put together a demo that can be shown to prospective investors. I hope
to raise the seed money this month and to complete the demo during the
first quarter of 2014.
And this is
where I need your help. Writing and talking on the subject of collapse
was interesting and perhaps useful. It was also very time-consuming, and
definitely nonrenumerative. I hope that, in recognition of my efforts,
you will consider helping me raise the seed money I need to launch this
venture, either directly, by donating yourself, or by spreading word of
Unspell among people you know. In return, I promise to do my utmost to
give you the satisfaction of having helped create a major public good.
To find out more about Unspell, please visit http://unspell.it.
To donate, please go to the Unspell crowdfunding campaign at Indiegogo.com.
Thank you!
Tuesday, November 12, 2013
Collapsing Consciously
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| Pawel Kuczyński |
Carolyn Baker's CollapsingConsciously: Transformative Truths for Turbulent Times is perhaps
the most approachable book on collapse you are likely to find.
Compared to Jarred Diamond's Collapse, which weighs in at just
over 600 pages, Baker's is well under 200. And yet in these few pages
Baker manages to tackle a topic which Diamond studiously avoids:
Whatever shall we do about the fact that collapse is happening all
around us right now?
Tuesday, November 05, 2013
From the Mouths of Babes
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| Gottfried Helnwein |
A 14-YEAR-OLD GIRL EXPLAINS HOW WE CAN STOP THE ADDICTION TO ECONOMIC GROWTH THAT’S DESTROYING THE EARTH
Hi! I’m Amy Johnson-Martinez, the 14-year-old girl who’s saving the earth from environmental destruction. A lot of people don’t understand how the destruction of the earth is connected to our addiction to economic growth. Actually, a lot of people don’t even realize that we’re addicted!
Personally speaking, I think it’s kind of weird that economists don’t tell us about this. So I guess it takes a 14-year-old girl to tell you about it!
Monday, October 28, 2013
Tuesday, October 22, 2013
The Sixth Stage of Collapse
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| Joel Robison |
[In italiano]
I admit it: in my last book, The Five Stages of Collapse, I viewed collapse through rose-colored glasses. But I feel that I should be forgiven for this; it is human nature to try to be optimistic no matter what. Also, as an engineer, I am always looking for solutions to problems. And so I almost subconsciously crafted a scenario where industrial civilization fades away quickly enough to save what's left of the natural realm, allowing some remnant of humanity to make a fresh start.
I admit it: in my last book, The Five Stages of Collapse, I viewed collapse through rose-colored glasses. But I feel that I should be forgiven for this; it is human nature to try to be optimistic no matter what. Also, as an engineer, I am always looking for solutions to problems. And so I almost subconsciously crafted a scenario where industrial civilization fades away quickly enough to save what's left of the natural realm, allowing some remnant of humanity to make a fresh start.
Tuesday, October 15, 2013
Boat Bits
Sometimes collapse starts to feel like too tiresome a subject (more and more so as time goes on), and sometimes I wish to instead channel RLM of BoatBits and write about boaty stuff instead. We just got back from a week-long sailing vacation, of sorts, aboard our new boat. It was supposed to be a lot longer; the original “plan” (the word makes me laugh) was to sail to South Carolina and spend the cold months there, then sail back to Boston in the spring. But the new boat did not inspire confidence with its mechanics, or please me with its sailing ability, so we headed back.










