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Online Insights on FIVEaa Sunday August 14 2011

This month on Online Insights we look at incredible printing technology, furniture planning software that allows you to order your design, troubleshooting bitter coffee and a fun poke at MySpace.

3D Printing

Dungeons and Dragon Dice (Image: 3dfuture.com.au)

Dungeons and Dragon Dice (Image: 3dfuture.com.au)

During a workshop in Murray Bridge recently for Regional Development Australia, I met Andy Ide, a man obsessed by the technology known as 3D printing.

When he mentioned it to me on the night I nodded cautiously, thinking I knew what he was talking about but it was when I walked through his website and watched a video of the process that my jaw dropped and I realised I was listening with a 20th Century mindset to 21st Century science!

In essence, 3D printing is when three dimensional plans are applied to a printer that can spew resins and different substances from its printing head, rather than just ink.

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Online Insights on FIVEaa Sunday March 06 2011

This month on Online Insights we take a kite’s eye perspective on hobbies with international appeal,

Let’s go fly a kite. Up to the highest height!

Kevin Saunders' soft, inflatable kites loosely based on road signs

Kevin Saunders' soft, inflatable kites loosely based on road signs

I had two very interesting South Australians take part in my Online Marketing workshops last year and their “hobby” of kite flying blew me away (is that the best term to use?).

Kevin and Linda Saunders know everything there is to know about making a flying kites and this passion has helped open up the world to them.

Who would have thought that designing and making kites would lead to invitations to appear at international festivals all over the world, or that international kite festivals even existed? I didn’t. They have been flying the flag for South Australia at:

  • “Jakarta International Kite Festival”
  • “Toronto International Kite Festival”
  • “Weifang International Kite festival” – China
  • “Smithsonian Kite Festival” – USA
  • “Cape Town International Kite Festival” – South Africa
  • “Colour The Sky” – Thailand Continue reading

Online Insights on FIVEaa Sunday December 13 2009

In this edition of Online Insights we get a stern talking to about our dietary habits, snoop through Social Media tools being used to fight crime, marvel at the joys of data, and relive some high resolution film memories of yesteryear. Remember, your suggestions are always welcome.

Go small and save the world yourself

Chips - the supermarket chains wash their hands and say "health food aisle"

Chips - the supermarket chains wash their hands and say "health food aisle"

A regular contributor to Online Insights, Kay Walker, left a stirring reply to last show’s links about Palm Oil and it focussed on a snack for children that we have talked about called Kidscare Potato Stix. As it turns out, Kay is a health blogger with a blog called Health for Humans. There is a full volume post there that I want to highlight in a moment but first, her comment is worth highlighting. She investigated these potato stix because she thought “the plain version (with rice)might be a good nibbly for me as I’m allergic to wheat, corn, and egg, plus react badly to lots of MSG (and lurvvvve potatoes)”. But as she investigated further, she was infuriated that such a concoction could be firstly marketed as food, secondly marketed to children and thirdly marketed as healthy. Here is why: “There’s  less fat- but the fat is BAD and it’s PALM OIL. Grrrr. There are also zillions of other ingredients, including wheat, which make this snack a very bad choice for parents of allergic kids.” So what does she recommend: “This product needs to be taken off the market as it is just a pile of fillers with a label that suggests health. I wish our food regulators would keep environmentally doubtful stuff out of the food chain and make sure food sold is actually full of stuff humans can metabolise safely.”

She then makes a suggestion that most adults would agree with, that food advertising needs to be kept out of sight of kids because they “haven’t learnt enough about life to be given the privilege of choosing.” Mind you, she doesn’t think that is enough and argues that “we should try to get rid of the things that are no good and bugger freedom of choice- we’re just dumb animals and always choose the soothing, greasy, carby, tasty warm stuff- and then we give it to our kids!”

Now that we are warmed up, her own blog post called Go small and save the world yourself, sees her ramp up her rhetoric to greater volumes. Here is an edited taste:

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Please note that all opinions expressed as part of the official voice of this site are mine, Steve Davis, and are not representative of any parties I represent, unless specifically noted. Furthermore, I encourage your feedback through the comments fields, whether or not you are taking a position with or against me, as long as the language is family-friendly and the discussion is constructive. I reserve the right to not publish any comments if I deem them to be unsuitable.