You can see the full range of ideas here. Some of the finalist ideas were:
- support efforts to increase young Africans' access to quality education by creating "cyber schools";
- create a fund to support social entrepreneurship by providing targeted capital and business training to help young entrepreneurs build viable businesses and sustained community change;
- coordinate a rapid-response tool for natural disasters; introduce an ecological VAT instead of income tax;
- create an advanced health monitoring system;
- encourage positive media depictions of engineers and scientists; and
- create a transportation system that enables electric cars to run on a rail-type system.
When so many ideas struggle just to see the light of day, it’s wonderful how the project has given people the opportunity to spread their ideas. The project has just finished voting and winners should be announced shortly, when the ideas go to work they will surely help transform the way people live.
Hi Andy,
ReplyDeleteAt Berkhamsted we're running some small scale trials with Google Apps. One of things I've found fascinating is the unexpected ways in which bringing ideas into the open can produce so many unpredictable positive results.
Google, for all that it's fast becoming the world's largest legal monopoly, should be applauded for fostering a sense of intellectual inquiry on a grand scale with their sponsorship.
Thanks for sharing the ideas!
Regards,
Sacha