Somleng (<a href="https://www.somleng.org/case_studies.html" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://www.somleng.org/case_studies.html</a>) is my Open Source project which is helping to save lives and improve the lives of children around the world. It's being used to power Early Warning Systems as well as improve maternal health.
An operating system with a new security/distribution model based upon direct connections via sockets. Be social online without third party servers. No walled gardens or content restrictions and it’s really challenging to violate your own privacy. Imagine a world where your online expression is unlimited and web servers are obsolete.
Humans are the only species with a concept of waste.<p>We're on a mission to end landfills, by providing a new moment for brands to connect with customers.<p><a href="https://replenysh.com/blog-posts/an-opportunity-to-evolve" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://replenysh.com/blog-posts/an-opportunity-to-evolve</a>
I’m (slowly) working on a everyone-can-develop type of a project. Instead of being low/no code, it focuses on development accessibility for regular people who think like humans, not developers. The goal is to generally push the bar down. Three key features. Accessible business-level interfaces. Every function call is a self-documenting gui wizard. Little to no distinction between saved and shipped. Idk about the world, but I’m doing it for multiple people I’ve met before who would benefit from being able to program, but not from becoming “a developer”.
I'm starting a regenerative agriculture focused farm. I don't believe a technology can save us but fundamental shifts on how we produce our food. I'm not going to change the world myself but I want to be part of that revolution while providing my family and local people nutrition rich food.
I wrote a short essay about using a little known economic system to combat black ball technologies in Nick Bostrom's sense.<p>I keep it online now, even though I have since developed some private criticisms of it, because of the wide variety of ideas it has sparked from others.<p>[url-redacted]
Shepherd.com, shift soft culture toward a respect of complexity and advocacy for science, democracy, and other key attributes for civilization and well being.