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Category Archives: Futurist

Lost treasures of Liverpool now confined to history – Liverpool Echo

Posted: February 22, 2021 at 2:22 pm

In a city as steeped in history as Liverpool, it's easy to find fascinating reminders of the past on nearly every street.

But there are some iconic landmarks that we've loved and lost along the way, as the city evolves and changes.

From The Futurist Cinema in Lime Street to the hustle and bustle of Stanley Dock Market, these lost treasures were loved by locals but have now sadly been confined to history.

We decided to reminisce about this by taking a look back in our archives at some of the places we wish we could bring back.

This list includes facilities that have either gone completely, or which people would struggle to recognise today.

If there is anything you think should have been included in this list or you would like to share your memories then please let us know in the comments below.

The Futurist Cinema

The cinema first opened under the name of the Lime Street Picture House in 1912 and was the city centre's first purpose-built cinema.

It boasted a full orchestra for silent films as well as seats for 1029 customers

When another cinema opened in Clayton Square named 'Liverpool Picture House,' the Lime Street Picture House changed its name to City Picture House.

But this name didn't last long either and in October 1920 the cinema was renamed The Futurist by its new owners.

The building suffered bomb damage during the Second World War but it was quickly rebuilt and the cinema began showing films again that year.

The Futurist closed on July 17, 1982, and stood derelict for decades.

It was demolished in 2016 to make way for a 39m redevelopment including a hotel, student accommodation and a Lidl store.

Designed by artist Anthony Brown, the facade of the building tells the story of the history of the street, from the Futurist to the Yankee Bar, the National Milk Bar and even Marks & Spencer.

Liverpool Castle

Liverpool once had a medieval castle that stood on the site now occupied by Derby Square and Liverpool Crown Court.

The Castle of Liverpool was built as a result of King John issuing a Letters Patents, popularly known as the Royal Charter, to Liverpool on August 28, 1207.

It is believed to have been constructed around 1235, although some records suggest it could have been as early as 1208.

The castle was located at the top of what is now Lord Street, offering the highest point in the city overlooking "the Pool".

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It had a hall, chapel, brewhouse and bakehouse, as well as a moat running around the outside.

An act was passed to demolish the castle in 1715 and build a church in its place, with St George's church built on the old site. Another church was later built in its place but this was demolished in 1899.

A plaque dedicated to the castle can be found today on the Victoria Monument in Derby Square.

Liverpool Fruit Exchange

Often passed by without a second glance on Victoria Street, the old Fruit Exchange in Liverpool city centre was once a hive of activity.

The building was originally built in 1888 as a railway goods depot for the London and North Western Railway, to serve Exchange Station on Tithebarn Street.

It was later converted into a fruit exchange in 1923 by James B. Hutchins and soon became the main trading point for fruit within the city.

Hundreds of people would gather in the exchange halls and bid for fruit which had just arrived in Liverpool from all around the world

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Towards the end of the last century, the warehouses were converted into pubs, with parts of the former marketplace still serving as licensed bars, like Rubber Soul.

What's left of the property that isn't involved in Liverpool's nightlife is now classed as a Grade II listed building.

Today the old auction rooms now sadly lie empty and covered in dust.

Theatre Royal

Situated on the north side of Williamson Square in the city centre was the now demolished Theatre Royal.

First opening its doors on June 5, 1772, the Theatre Royal was later rebuilt in 1802 with a striking curved facade designed by John Foster.

It hosted readings by Charles Dickens, appearances by comedian and clowning pioneer Joseph Grimaldi, and performances by Hungarian composer Franz Liszt and virtuoso violinist Niccol Paganini.

But by the early 20th century the theatre had been stripped out and was used as a cold store.

Its facade survived until 1971 - inspiring the curved Playhouse extension next door but it was flattened for road improvements.

Stanley Dock Market

Stanley Dock Market sadly closed in December 2011 after being based in the same building for thirty years.

It came after plans were approved to redevelopment the Grade II-listed Tobacco Warehouse at Stanley Dock.

The iconic building has since been restored and converted into a 130m residential development after laying derelict for decades.

Photos from our archives show the hustle and bustle of Stanley Dock Market back in its hey day.

Overhead Railway

The Liverpool Overhead Railway opened in 1893 and was the first electrically-operated elevated railway in the world.

Known as the "railway in the sky" helped to ease congestion on the docks and served as a stunning architectural backdrop to our busy and bustling industrial city and port.

It ceased operation on December 30, 1956 and by 1958 it had been demolished.

Today the only reminder of it is a display inside the Museum of Liverpool.

Liverpool's lost football stadium

Back in the Victorian era, Liverpool Caledonians FC was one of the leading clubs in the city.

Despite the part they played in Liverpool's sporting heritage, relatively little is known about the club and where they played.

While records show that Woodcroft Park, a 30,000- capacity stadium in Wavertree, was the home of Liverpool Caledonians FC, the exact location of the stadium remains a mystery.

It's a puzzle historians from the Wavertree Society have been trying to solve for years

Liverpool's Wellington Rooms

Liverpool's Wellington Rooms, also known as Liverpool Irish Centre, has not been in regular use since 1997.

The Neo-Classical building on Mount Pleasant, was designed by Edmund Aikin and built between 1815 and 1816.

Originally built to be an assembly room, it was first used by high society for assemblies, dance balls and parties.

The building officially opened as Liverpool Irish Centre on 1 February 1965 hosting music and drama performances as well as serving as a base for clubs and societies.

Today the building sadly lies empty and unused, over two years after urgent work was carried out to slow the decay of the landmark.

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Bill Gates Says That Going to Mars Is Silly – Futurism

Posted: at 2:22 pm

He also had something to say about fellow billionaire Elon Musk.Mars Person

When it comes to securing humanitys survival in the face of climate change, billionaire Microsoft founder Bill Gates would rather save Earth than flee from it.

Escaping to Mars, a dream goal for SpaceX CEO Elon Musk and other techno-utopian thinkers, just isnt for him, Gates said on The New York Times podcast Sway. Instead, he argues that theres more important work to be done here on Earth, like investing in decarbonizing various industries or developing and distributing vaccines. Compared to all that, Gates simply doesnt see the appeal of traveling or escaping to the Red Planet.

To be fair, Gates also took time to commend Musk on the podcast, saying that what he accomplished with his electric vehicle company Tesla is one of the greatest contributions to climate change anyones ever made.

But he also said that tackling electric vehicles is easy compared to the work it will take to clean up other industries, and investing in rockets or Mars journeys instead of focusing on those other problems is a missed opportunity.

Were basically not doing enough on the hard stuff: steel, cement, meat, Gates said. And sadly, the things people think about the electricity, passenger cars are a third of the problem. So we have to work on the two-thirds.

When it comes to rockets, and especially rockets to Mars, Gates says hed rather spend his money on things like vaccines or other measures to help people on Earth.

No, Im not a Mars person, Gates said on Sway. I know a lot of Mars people. But, you know, Im not subject to that.

When it comes to that cost-benefit analysis, in other words, the vaccines will win every time and Bill Gates is a practical guy.

READ MORE: Innovation, Not Trees. How Bill Gates Plans to Save the Planet. [The New York Times]

More on Mars: NASA Report Recommends Aggressive Funding for Nuclear-Powered Mars Mission

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Coronavirus Cases Around the World Are Finally Dropping – Futurism

Posted: at 2:22 pm

Image by LionFive via Pixabay / Futurism

The number of new coronavirus cases decreased in 44 US states this past week an improvement thats mirrored by much of the rest of the world.

On average, there were about 82,000 new confirmed COVID-19 infections per day throughout the United States over the last week, according to Axios. Case numbers in a handful of states are still on the rise, but the numbers represent a 24 percent drop in overall coronavirus infections, nation-wide, below the previous week. Around the world, similar reductions in coronavirus cases are happening too: The World Health Organization announced Wednesday that theres been a 16 percent drop in new cases over the past week, according to Deutsche Welle.

Thats great news, and it will make things much easier on healthcare systems around the world. But, to be absolutely clear, the pandemic is far from over, and everyone has to stay vigilant if we ever want it to be.

Theres no single, outstanding reason why cases are on the decline. Instead, its likely a combination of factors including the accelerating vaccine rollout, policy changes with the presidential transition, and shifts in personal behavior, University of Florida biostatistician Natalie Dean suggested on Twitter.

In addition, the holiday season is finally over. So the spike in cases linked to peoples increased travel and, as Dean put it, our temporarily expanded social networks might have finally receded, returning us to a sort of baseline level of new infections.

Theres another, perhaps less-robust observation: Infections in the US hit their peak and started to decline right when Donald Trump was banned from Twitter.

Many of those explanations are US-centric, of course, but DW reports that the WHO credits lockdowns and increased vaccinations as major factors in the global decrease in new COVID-19 infections.

We may not know what the exact, specific factors that made the biggest difference were until well after the fact, when epidemiologists and other experts have time to pore over and make sense of all the data.

But in the meantime, the obvious recommendation is to keep on staying put, wear your masks, wash your hands, and get a vaccine as soon as you can.

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Cities Are So Heavy That They’re Sinking Into the Earth – Futurism

Posted: at 2:22 pm

Cities are so heavy that they're bending the Earth's crust.Sinking Cities

Cities are literally starting to sink under their own weight even as climate change is causing sea levels to rise, ScienceAlert [one word] reports.

In a study published in the journal AGU Advances, Tom Parsons, a geophysicist at the United States Geological Survey (USGS) agency, found that cities such as San Francisco may have sunk up to 80 millimeters, or just over three inches, in its history.

It may even be a lot more than that, as Parsons calculations dont even account for infrastructure, vehicles, or people.

Its a bad predicament, in other words, for the Bay Area and likely other metropolises. At the same time that risk is growing from rising sea levels, the cities themselves are sinking down toward the ocean.

Parsons found that subsidence, the gradual downward settling of the grounds surface, was not insignificant in built-up metropolitan regions.

As global populations move disproportionately toward the coasts, this additional subsidence in combination with expected sea level rise may exacerbate risk associated with inundation, Parsons writes in his paper.

Cities have built up so much that the city of San Francisco could weigh as much as 1.6 trillion kilograms, enough to literally bend the rocky outermost shell of the Earth, otherwise known as the lithosphere.

Such an immense weight could even end up changing levels of our planets fault blocks, large masses of rock created by tectonic stresses in the Earths crust.

In his paper, Parsons argues that satellite or air photos could be used to make more detailed analyses in likely flood zones as sea levels continue rising. Flooding is the greatest hazard associated with subsidence, as Parsons explains in his paper.

As the effects of climate change come into focus, coastal cities are under the threat of literally going under. And that risk will only grow if theyre simultaneously sinking into the Earth.

READ MORE: The Colossal Weight of Cities Is Making Them Sink, Even as Sea Levels Are Rising [Science Alert]

More on geology: Geologists Say a New Ocean Is Opening up in Africa

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Texans Are Sleeping In Their Teslas to Survive Freezing Cold – Futurism

Posted: at 2:22 pm

"So my wife my dog and my newborn daughter slept in the garage in our Model 3 all nice and cozy."Heat Seeker

Texas was gripped by a deep freeze this week, bringing the second largest state in the United States to its knees. Millions are still without power, while many more continue to lack access to clean water or even water at all.

Amid rolling blackouts, Texans are having to get creative to stay warm, as homes predominantly use electricity as a heat source in the state.

But Tesla owners had an ace up their sleeve. Thanks to their vehicles hefty batteries, some opted to sleep in their cars with the heater running without running the risk of dying from carbon monoxide poisoning, as The New York Post reports.

So my wife my dog and my newborn daughter slept in the garage in our Model 3 all nice and cozy, one user on the subreddit TeslaMotors wrote, as quoted by the Post. If I didnt have this car, it would have been a very rough night.

Thanks to a two-way vehicle-to-grid feature included in Teslas PowerWall, the companys home battery solution, some users were able to power their homes using the batteries in their Tesla vehicles, VICE reports.

Others were able to weather the storm by drawing backup power from their PowerWalls. Some who opted to install solar panels on their roofs were also able to store enough energy in their PowerWall systems to use during blackouts.

Using electric vehicles as a form of survival isnt exactly a long term solution to Texas power grid woes but at least it can offer a hand while political leaders face off with electric grid operators to get the state back on its feet.

READ MORE: Elon Musk slams Texas power grid operator for being unreliable [New York Post]

More on Texas: Elon Musk, Who Moved to TX For Less Regulation, Is Furious That the Power Went Down

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Floyd Mayweather Throws Wild 44th Bday Bash for Himself, Gives Logan Paul Update – TMZ

Posted: at 2:22 pm

Diamonds, Bugattis, sushi ... and scantily clad butts.

That's what surrounded Floyd Mayweather at his 44th birthday bash on Thursday night -- a wild "futuristic" event in Florida.

The boxing superstar rolled up to "The Venue" in Fort Lauderdale for a massive bash dubbed, "Floyd's Futuristic 44th Birthday Extravaganza."

He arrived in one of his $2 million Bugatti supercars -- dripping in millions of dollars worth of diamond chains.

On the way in, he was asked for an update on his recently postponed exhibition boxing match with Logan Paul -- is it still going to happen?

"I know it's going to happen," Floyd said ... "We just want make sure everything is right and everything is where it should be."

Inside, the party was wild -- tons of food, live music, booze, and hot ladies on rollerskates to entertain the crowd.

The venue is called "The Venue" -- it's a massive 32,000 square foot event space "outfitted with the most advanced technology in sound and lighting, special effects including laser capability and 3D Projection Mapping," according to its website.

In other words, it's super high tech.

Celeb guests included Rick Ross, Larsa Pippen, Jacquees (who performed) and President Joe Biden's brother, Frank Biden.

Floyd's cake was pretty cool too, complete with money and a private jet ... he shared the party with friend Jas 'Limitless' Mathur who plunked down $700k for the bash. We're told there was $200k worth of champagne, ice sculptures and dancers to complete the vibe.

We're told there was a COVID protocol in place -- people were screened at the door, temperature checks and an emphasis on social distancing.

That said, Floyd did not appear to be wearing a mask at any point of the evening.

Mayweather doesn't actually turn 44 until Feb. 24th -- but he clearly wanted to get the party started early.

More photos and videos to come shortly ...

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Europe Invites People With Disabilities to Become Astronauts – Futurism

Posted: at 2:22 pm

"Representing all parts of our society is a concern that we take very seriously."Recruitment Drive

The European Space Agency (ESA) is about to hold its first astronaut recruitment drive in 11 years, and its hoping to make the future of space exploration more representative.

The new drive is focused on making crewed space missions more diverse, according to The Associated Press. That means the ESA wants to send more women into space 495 of the 560 people to ever leave Earth have been men. And, in a world first, the ESA announced that the time has come to open the astronaut application process to those with physical disabilities a huge step toward better inclusivity and representation in space programs.

The entire recruitment process will take 18 months, after which the ESA will choose a new cohort of astronauts from the pool. For the entire history of Earths space programs, people with physical disabilities have been excluded from the process due to physical requirements meant to prepare crewmembers for the rigors of life in space. But the ESA is now opening those doors, through what its calling the Parastronaut Feasibility Project.

Representing all parts of our society is a concern that we take very seriously, ESA Human and Robotic Exploration Director David Parker told the AP. Diversity at ESA should not only address the origin, age, background or gender of our astronauts, but also perhaps physical disabilities.

The ESAs push for a more inclusive space program isnt just important from a symbolic standpoint. It could also lead to the development of new tools that make space travel simpler and safer. Not only for the people who need specific equipment or considerations, but for everyone else who would benefit from the new avenue of research as well.

We are looking towards the Moon and Mars, ESA director general Jan Worner told the AP. We need very excellent astronauts for the future. To go farther than we ever have before, we need to look wider than we ever have before.

READ MORE: European Space Agency seeks diversity in new astronaut drive [The Associated Press]

More on astronaut selection: Breaking: NASA Announces Its Moon Landing Astronauts

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Bill Gates Says All Wealthy Nations Should Switch to Synthetic Beef – Futurism

Posted: at 2:22 pm

"I do think all rich countries should move to 100 percent synthetic beef."Got Beef

During the 1990s, Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates picked up a bad boy reputation for taking a hard line in the companys antitrust spat with the United States government.

But for decades since stepping away from the software giant, Gates has rebranded as a philanthropist and policy advocate for humanitarian and policy issues including public health, climate change, and hunger.

Now, in an electrifying interview with MIT Tech Review that touches on all those initiatives and more, Gates is coming down hard in favor of fake meats and even recommending that every single rich country on Earth move away from real beef as soon as possible.

Gates said that what he called the 80 poorest countries will still be eating actual cows for a while. But hes optimistic about the developed worlds path to fake meat.

I do think all rich countries should move to 100 percent synthetic beef, the billionaire told MIT Tech. You can get used to the taste difference, and the claim is theyre going to make it taste even better over time.

Interestingly, Gates said hes optimistic that plant-based beef replacements can replace meat from actual cattle without lab-grown meat taking over the market. To underscore the point, he slammed Memphis Meats a lab meat company that he has himself invested in and praised a pair of plant-based competitors with which he also has had financial relationships.

Now the people like Memphis Meats who do it at a cellular level I dont know that that will ever be economical, he said in theMIT Tech interview. But Impossible and Beyond have a road map, a quality road map and a cost road map, that makes them totally competitive.

Of course, Gates is an influential thinker and policy shaper but take it all with a grain of salt. After all, this is the guy who thought Internet Explorer was going to dominate the browser market.

READ MORE: Bill Gates: Rich nations should shift entirely to synthetic beef [MIT Tech]

More on Bill Gates: Bill Gates Says the Next Horrible Virus Could Be Engineered by Terrorists

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Reading Thelin’s ‘A History of American Higher Education’ as an Amateur Futurist | Learning Innovation – Inside Higher Ed

Posted: February 4, 2021 at 6:56 pm

A History of American Higher Education by John R. Thelin

Published in April 2019 (third edition)

Why is most thinking about higher education's future mostly mediocre?

Lots of reasons. Uncritical acceptance of applying (mostly discredited) business theories to academia. (Hello, disruptive innovation.) An inability to see beyond one's privileges. Anchoring on the belief that nothing ever changes in higher education. An unshakable faith that the market is either the answer to all of higher education's challenges or the root of all its problems.

However, the most profound cause of middling thinking about the future (or futures) of higher education is too little knowledge about higher education's past. Knowing the contours and causes of prior changes in academia is likely necessary, if not sufficient, for saying smart things about what will come next.

This brings us to Thelin's A History of American Higher Education. The third edition came out in 2019, bringing the story more or less up to the present. (Before COVID maybe changed everything).

Thelin should probably be required reading for anyone who wants to offer any utterance, no matter how small, about where higher ed might be going. Would it be unrealistic to ask Educause, UPCEA, OLI, ASU+GSV, WCET, ACE, AAC&U, FETC, ELI, AAU, CHEA, NAICU, AAUP and all the rest to send copies of A History American Higher Education to all their members?

Reading the Thelin book (as it always seems to be called), I was struck by a couple of things. First, it is interesting to me (as someone who works at a center for teaching and learning) how little a role teaching and learning plays in this history of higher education. Zimmerman's The Amateur Hour is an essential companion to Thelin.

Online education's growth gets some space in Thelin's history, but not all that much. There is some stuff on the role that for-profits played in the online learning story, and nonprofit distance learning and MOOCs make an appearance in the newest chapter on the 2010-2018 period. But Thelin covers very little about the impact of the development of CTLs, or the role that nonfaculty educators play in the instructional enterprise.

Nor does the history of educational technologies -- academic or administrative -- figure much into A History of American Higher Education. A historical and holistic account of the introduction and impact of technologies into the university has not been written yet (to my knowledge), a volume that may also make an attractive companion (and perhaps balance) to Thelin.

Despite what I see as shortcomings (not enough about teaching and learning, not enough about online education and nonfaculty educators, not enough about technology), it is undeniable that A History of American Higher Education represents a singular contribution. Thelin has given us a deeply researched and highly readable single-volume account of U.S. higher education, from 1636 (the year of Harvard's founding) to (almost) today.

The collective time spent on almost any higher ed conference, gathering or convening about the future of higher education would probably be better spent by everyone reading Thelin. However, the reality is that the communities of those who study higher ed's past and those who talk about higher ed's future seldom seem to converge. Why is this?

Part of the reason may be a mismatch between academic disciplines and professional organizations. Academics tend not to go to higher ed professional meetings, and higher ed professionals (nonfaculty) don't usually attend academic conferences on the history of higher education. Perhaps we should swap conferences?

There is so much to learn, so much to know, about the history of higher education. The task is daunting. A History of American Higher Education is the best place to start.

What are you reading?

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Food futurist Jack Bobo tells how sustainability will shape the future of food – Baking Business

Posted: at 6:56 pm

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Even in the wake of the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, consumers and food companies still care about sustainability. It may have taken a backseat to food safety and health, but it hasnt gone away. In fact, as the pandemic wanes, consumers may be looking at sustainability differently.

Sustainability remains a priority, but how consumer define sustainability is likely to change, said Jack Bobo, food futurist and chief executive officer of Futurity, a food foresight company that helps brands get ahead of trends. When you ask consumers what sustainability means, you end up getting some strange answers. Consumers want fewer insecticides on their food, but they also want to increase yields. They want food to be long-lasting, but they dont want preservatives. Thats the challenge.

In this premier episode of season five of Since Sliced Bread, Mr. Bobo gives a tour of how consumers and food companies sustainability priorities sometimes misalign. To address that gap, companies need to tune into the nuances of what consumers are asking for and educate them on what they actually need.

Listen to this episode to hear what the baking industry is doing right and where companies can grow to not only better serve the consumer but also still improve the environment.

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