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    Knowledge Rules

    The top 5 things I learned while getting high at the Up Experience

    Joel Luks
    Oct 30, 2013 | 12:35 pm

    I got high at the Up Experience. Not from sniffing smelly markers or from imbibing purple drank, but from a barrage of nonstop are-you-serious intel that blows your mind and reframes how you view the world.

    The yearly, daylong conference, held at the Stafford Centre, hosts some dozen speakers of global repute who share their latest research in fields ranging from education, medicine, technology, philanthropy and current events. These influentials are the innovators of today — among them are authors, doctors, inventors, researchers, business leaders and entrepreneurs — who collectively have the pulse on current trends that predict the future.

    It's an impossible task to capture every detail, thought and statistic that was shared in each 20-minute presentation. Instead, below find my top five things that will surely remain ingrained in my gray matter — for better or for worse.

    Cyber Blackmail

    Why do criminals rob banks? Simply put, because of economies of scale, as in more loot in one hit.

    It's the rationale for infamous train robberies of yesteryear, and it's the impetus behind the growth of global Internet no-nos. Criminologist and author Marc Goodman estimates that 600,000 people are cyber hacked every day.

    If you control the code, you control the world. More connections equals more vulnerability.

    Take the Chinese government, for example, which employs more than 3,000 tech geeks to infiltrate firewalls. Blackmail and extortion is big business. In Japan, users of child pornography platforms were threatened with revealing their identities if they didn't fork over large sums of cash. Nevertheless, Goodman warns against attributing virtual misdeeds to international espionage activities.

    Let's not forget why Julian Paul Assange and Edward Snowden gained notoriety in the first place.

    Lesson learned? If you control the code, you control the world. More connections equals more vulnerability. The solution, Goodman proposes, is crowdsourced security, because public safety is too important to leave it only to the professionals.

    The doctor will see you know, her name is Siri

    The modern version of a practicing physician is a dying vocation, posits Dr. Eric Topol. Whereas the general practice of medicine has concentrated on creating protocols that affect the masses, a revolution that has increased the use bio sensors attached to personal mobile devises has the potential to focus on the individual.

    Cars have more than 400 sensors, cellphones have more than 10. Imagine what can happen if personal objects like necklaces, gloves and socks had sensors that could measure vital signs? Diagnose an ear infection via apps? Even predict a heart attack days in advance?

    The future is now. Mobile phone imaging capabilities are in use. Topol predicts that science data analysts will rule the medical industry of tomorrow.

    Your body cannot lie

    There's no fooling former CIA agent, body language expert and author Janine Driver, who can read body language to uncover the hidden stories behind casual, matter of fact statements. Driver, however, advises not to assume that gestures such as shoulder shrugs and half smiles or smirks indicate that a lie has just been told. Instead, automatic responses disclose that there's information withheld. Don't settle for the first response. Ask follow-up questions.

    Driver's tip to look secure and powerful: Adopt the Steve Jobs pose, make a fist and rest it below your chin.

    Charity Paradox

    "We have a visceral reaction to the idea that anyone would make very much money helping other people," Dan Pallotta says. "Interesting that we don't have a visceral reaction to the notion that people would make a lot of money not helping other people."

    Pallotta speaks of what nonprofit organizations label as "overhead," the ratio of administrative costs in comparison to dollars that directly benefit a cause. Two percent of country's gross domestic product is donated to charity, a number that hasn't increased since it began being measured in 1970.

    How can the nonprofit sector grow if it isn't "allowed" to compensate their leaders competitively, if advertising dollars are limited and if risk-taking is frowned upon? If you prohibit failure, you kill innovation — something that's true in any endeavor.

    Leave children alone and they will learn

    Sugata Mitra, professor of educational technology at Newcastle University in the United Kingdom, studied how children interact with unknown objects when left unattended. When a computer was installed in a public space in a rural village in India, his research shows that in nine months children's computer literacy grew to the same level as a typical secretary in more developed societies.

    Mitra says that groups of children can learn most things on their own, something that's readily evident in wunderkindJack Andraka, who at age 15 devised a test for the early detection of pancreatic, ovarian and lung cancer.

    Andraka, now 16, inspired by the loss of a close family friend, began his journey with Google searches and Wikipedia articles, but found difficulty in accessing information guarded by pay walls that inhibit the free flow of information, particularly scientific journals. If institutions such as Harvard University can't afford the cost of publishing journals, the price is steep for curious minds who have the ability to change the world.

    And what have you done lately, may I ask?

    Jack Andraka

     
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    economic news

    Texas slides down the list of best U.S. state economies for 2025

    Amber Heckler
    Jun 9, 2025 | 2:15 pm
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    After riding high among the top five best state economies in 2024, Texas' robust economy may be showing some cracks. Texas now ranks as the state with the eighth best economy, four spots lower than last year's ranking, according to a new WalletHub report.

    WalletHub's experts ranked all 50 states and the District of Columbia across 28 metrics to measure each state's economic activity and health and its "innovation potential."

    Massachusetts moved up two spots from last year to claim the No. 1 best state economy title for 2025, followed by Utah (No. 2) and Washington (No. 3). Texas was surpassed by No. 4-ranking California, as well as New Hampshire (No. 5), North Carolina (No. 6), and Idaho (No. 7).

    This is how Texas fared across the three major categories in the study:

    • No. 4 – Economic activity (down from No. 2)
    • No. 11 – Economic health (down from No. 7)
    • No. 24 – Innovation potential (unchanged)
    Texas ranked No. 1 with the most exports per capita in a three-way tie with Louisiana and Kentucky, the report found.
    The Lone Star State prides itself on its business-friendliness, and cities like Houston boast some of the most innovative companies in the nation. Texas also ranked 13th in WalletHub's separate study of the most and least innovative states for 2025.

    WalletHub analyst Chip Lupo says the states that have the best economies are often those that invest in new businesses, technology, and more. The report also suggests low unemployment rates and high wages are among the many factors that can help Texas residents be successful while also boosting the state economy.

    "A strong state economy doesn’t guarantee success for the state’s residents, but it certainly makes financial success more attainable," Lupo said.

    The states with the worst economies in 2025, according to WalletHub, are Hawaii (No. 49), West Virginia (No. 50), and Iowa (No. 51).

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