Stephen Judd

- farm worker, McDonald's, pharm. lab work, ASPCA kennel worker, soldier, marina, farm manager - now: geek

Stephen Judd

The community of practice identity test - http://bit.ly/2bfNJWf - "I am a..."

Stephen Judd

Disconnected, fragmented, or united? a trans-disciplinary review of network science | Applied Network Science | Full Text

During decades the study of networks has been divided between the efforts of social scientists and natural scientists, two groups of scholars who often do not see eye to eye. In this review I present an effort to mutually translate the work conducted by scholars from both of these academic fronts hoping to continue to unify what has become a diverging body of literature. I argue that social and natural scientists fail to see eye to eye because they have diverging academic goals. Social scientists focus on explaining how context specific social and economic mechanisms drive the structure of networks and on how networks shape social and economic outcomes. By contrast, natural scientists focus primarily on modeling network characteristics that are independent of context, since their focus is to identify universal characteristics of systems

Stephen Judd

Fishing

7/27/16 - New Boston

Stephen Judd

Stephen Judd

Sunset

7/18/2016 - New Boston

Stephen Judd

Cloudspotting

7/7/16 - New Boston, NH

Stephen Judd

More than a logo

1 min read

Brand Is Experience in the Digital Age

Brand is a tool for influencing choice. Brand is not made of visuals or words alone — it’s not a logo or a slogan. Nor is it a figurehead, such as Steve Jobs. Those things are simply ways to communicate the brand. Although a figurehead such as Elon Musk or a logo such as McDonald’s golden arches can and do serve to effectively deliver the brand message, ultimately, a brand is formulated through a larger set of experiences. Flipping the flow of information from one-way to two-way (as discussed above) results in flipping brand from being a message to being an experience.

Stephen Judd

Will the networks emerge?

1 min read

End of nations: Is there an alternative to countries? | New Scientist

Ian Goldin, head of the Oxford Martin School at the University of Oxford, which analyses global problems, thinks such networks must emerge. He believes existing institutions such as UN agencies and the World Bank are structurally unable to deal with problems that emerge from global interrelatedness, such as economic instability, pandemics, climate change and cybersecurity – partly because they are hierarchies of member states which themselves cannot deal with these global problems. He quotes Slaughter: “Networked problems require a networked response.”

via @ndcollaborative

Stephen Judd

Great conference activity

1 min read

Using Events to Close Triangles - New Directions Collaborative

We placed forms to enter the drawing in registration packets. The forms required the name of the connector and the two connected people – and prompted people to name what made the connection meaningful.