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Tribeca Disruptive Innovation Awards
Awards to highlight successful disruptive innovation in non-traditional, identity-based domains such as culture, education, healthcare, philanthropy, politics, religion and social entrepreneurship
Lifetime Achievement Awards will be given to Jack Dorsey, founder of Twitter and Square, and John Wood, founder of Room to Read. Wood has opened over 13,500 libraries around the world at a cost of $5,000 per library. The Book of the Year honor will go to Thinking, Fast and Slow by Nobel Laureate Daniel Kahneman. DARPA (Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency) will be returning this year with Agency Program Manager Dr. Gill Pratt showcasing the Hummingbird, DARPA's prototype nano-drone, as well as a new prototype making its debut from DARPA's M3 program-the Cheetah. The roster of other award winners is a colorful and eclectic group spanning several realms of culture and society, among them pop superstar Justin Bieber and manager Scooter Braun, honored for the historic discovery of Bieber on YouTube and his subsequent social media rise; producer Rick Rubin, for founding Def Jam Records 30 years ago in an NYU dorm room; and oncologist Steven A. Curley for his advances in cancer treatments.
After publishing his best-selling book The Innovators Dilemma in 1997, Christensen moved to center stage as one of the world's leading experts on innovation; the book presented his startling theory of disruptive innovation. It since has become one of the business world's most important theories, and explains why great companies fail: They are frequently decimated by "two guys in a garage" who develop a simpler, cheaper, more accessible product or service that is "good enough to get the job done." Forbes magazine recently hailed Christensen as "one of the world's most important business theorists of the past 50 years." This year Thinkers 50 recognized Christensen as the most influential business thinker in the world.
"Last year's awards shined a spotlight on fascinating exceptions to the original theory," Christensen said. "Theorists and practitioners alike must vigilantly hunt for anomalies, explanations, and narratives that help keep the theory fresh. I am thrilled to join Tribeca in celebrating this year's honorees, who are propelling us toward Disruptive Innovation 2.0." Honorees receive Disruptor Awards nicknamed Maslow's Silver Hammer, in honor of psychologist Abe Maslow, who created the famous hierarchy of human needs. One of Maslow's most famous quotes- "When your only tool is a hammer, every problem starts looking like a nail"-embodies the spirit of the Awards and symbolizes the need for new approaches to old problems. The Awards Ceremony, moderated by journalist and public health advocate Perri Peltz and Tribeca co-founder Craig Hatkoff and supported by Accenture, aims to showcase applications of and advancements in disruptive innovation theory that have spread far beyond the original technology and industrial realms. It is now being applied to vexing societal problems such as healthcare, education, philanthropy, politics, religion and spirituality. But its impact is nowhere more pronounced than in the fields of media, arts and entertainment. The original theory is undergoing its own evolution, impacted by the Internet and connection technologies, open-source business models, and platforms that democratize content creation and attract new audiences. Christensen will address the new insights and lenses in his opening remarks on Disruptive Innovation 2.0. "Since its inception, Tribeca has been a living laboratory for disruptive innovation, where technology, business, culture and storytelling collide," said TFF co-founder Craig Hatkoff. "This event, expanded for 2012, intends to shed light on the chaos of rapidly changing technologies and business models. We are beginning to see how identity-based goods, services and experiences create a powerful, yet predictable, array of resistances that change the dynamics of disruptive innovations."
"We are delighted to host the third annual Disruptive Innovation Awards at the Paulson Auditorium, at NYU Stern School of Business," said Peter Henry, Dean of NYU Stern School of Business. "At NYU Stern, we prize innovation and disruptive thinking for their power to create value. We are delighted that our students will share in this great learning experience." A luncheon will follow the Awards, with breakout sessions to follow until 4 p.m. A limited number of tickets will be made available. Visit tribecafilm.com/disruptive for more information about how to attend.
The 2012 Tribeca Disruptive Innovation Award honorees are as follows: Lifetime Achievement Award - John Wood, Founder and Board Co-Chair, Room to Read - Wood's organization focuses on improving literacy and gender equality in education in the developing world. Since 2000, they have established over 13,500 libraries, 1,600 schools and distributed over 10 million books, impacting over 6 million children in the developing world.
Cheetah, developed by DARPA's M3 (Maximum Mobility and Manipulation) program, Dr. Gill Pratt, Program Manager and Boston Dynamics, Dr. Marc Raibert, Project Manager -- Robots hold great promise for improving both the safety and productivity of human beings. But, compared to humans present day robots have poor mobility. The goal of the Cheetah prototype, which recently broke the speed record for legged robots, is to develop and test technologies that will enable future robots to assist humans in missions (e.g. scouting, search and rescue) where the robot must travel across rough terrain at high speed with high energentic efficiency.
Jason Kottke, Designer & Blogger, Kottke.org - A pioneering blogger since 1998, Kottke used crowd funding to keep his blog running and has created one of the most influential voices on the Internet through consistent yet eclectic curation.
Nigel Jacob & Chris Osgood, Co-Chair, Mayor's Office of New Urban Mechanics, Street Bump App - City of Boston's newest mobile phone app designed to help Boston residents improve their neighborhoods. Taking advantage of the sensors on smart phones, Street Bump will provide the City with a near-real time picture of Boston's road conditions and the location of its potholes.
L. Rafael Reif, Provost, MITx, (Eric Grimson, Chancellor of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, accepting on Reif's behalf) - Reif launched online learning initiative MITx, which makes more than 2,500 MIT courses available online, free to anyone in the world.
Donald S. Siegel, Dean and Professor, School of Business, University at Albany, SUNY, for the Small Enterprise Economic Development (SEED) Program - SEED links faculty, staff and graduate students from the UAlbany School of Social Welfare, the UAlbany School of Business and its Small Business Development Center (SBDC) to local entrepreneurs. It has $2.5 million in financial support from SEFCU and $96,700 from the Empire State Development Corporation. It is designed to stimulate the creation and growth of small businesses in New York's Capital Region. Stanford University Office of Technology Licensing (accepted on Stanford's behalf by Katharine Ku, Director, Technology Licensing & Luis Mejia, Senior Licensing Associate) - For more than 40 years, OTL's goal has been to successfully transfer Stanford cutting edge technology to industry via both start-ups and existing companies. Notable Stanford licenses include the exclusive license to Google and the 440 nonexclusive licenses to the basic gene-splicing patents. To date, OTL has received over 8,900 inventions that resulted in 3000 licenses and $1.4B in royalty revenue. James P. Steyer, Founder and CEO, Common Sense Media - Steyer created and runs Common Sense Media, the nation's leading advocacy organization for kids and media. He is also a founding board member of the Center for the Next Generation, a nonpartisan organization supporting programs and policies that benefit the next generation of young Americans, and author of Talking Back to Facebook Published this year by Scribner, the book is a timely look at how digital media is affecting our children's social, emotional and cognitive development. Thomas Suarez, Founder and Chief Engineer of CarrotCorp, Inc., App Creator, TEDx speaker - Suarez is hardly an average sixth-grader. The 12-year-old app developer has started a movement for app clubs for schools. Thomas' inspirational TEDx talk has attracted nearly 2 million online views.
Yvette J. Alberdingk Thijm, Executive Director, WITNESS - Co-founded in 1992 by advocate and musician Peter Gabriel, WITNESS was created in the aftermath of the Rodney King incident, in which a bystander recorded police brutality. Its founding vision sought to amplify grassroots voices through stories and transform them into powerful agents of change. Today-20 years later-WITNESS has partnered with more than 300 human rights groups in over 80 countries, trained over 3,000 human rights defenders and citizen activists, and supported the inclusion of video in over 100 campaigns, increasing their visibility and impact globally. With grassroots partners, it changes laws, reverses policies, holds perpetrators accountable, and improves the lives of the vulnerable and oppressed among us. WITNESS engages millions of ordinary citizens in the struggles for human rights taking place every day all over the world.
Book of the Year - Thinking, Fast and Slow by Daniel Kahnehman. Princeton University's Kahneman is a renowned psychologist who won the Nobel Prize for Economics. Our understanding of the world is formed by two modalities of thought: System 1 is the fast, intuitive, emotional, unconscious processing of data and information for decision making; System 2 is rational, deep thought, reflective and studied. Making good decisions consistently-micro or macro-cannot rely on solely on System 1 or System 2. Most people are prone to either System 1 or System 2 with different biases, strengths and weaknesses; understanding this insight will help shape the conversation how to merge these two styles into one brain and get the best of both worlds.
Join the conversation about the Disruptive Innovation Awards on Twitter at #TFFDISRUPT. 05.04.2012 | Tribeca Film Festival's blog Cat. : Abe Maslow Accenture actor Acumen Fund Adele advisor Advisor for Innovation advocate advocate and musician AeroVironment Africa Alec Ross ambassador America American Institute American Institute Artist Author Beastie Boys Board Member Boston Bre Pettis Business Business cancer treatment CarrotCorp Inc. Catchafire Inc cellular telephone CEO CEO & Co-Founder Chancellor Chief Engineer Children Helping Children/Concerts Chris Osgood Clay Christensen Clayton M. Christensen Co-Chair , Mayor Co-Director & Producer co-founder Co-Founder & CEO Co-Founder , CEO Co-Founder and Chairman Company Founded Company Technology composer Contact Details Craig Hatkoff Dan Strzempka Daniel Kahnehman Daniel Kahneman dean Dean and Professor Def Jam Records Department of State designer Director director , actor Donald S. Siegel Ed Burns Education Education Empire State Development Corporation Employment Relation Entertainment Entertainment Eric Grimson Executive Director Facebook Fonderie Fonderie 47 Forbes forward founder Gill Pratt Google guitarist Hanger Clinic Harvard Health Health healthcare Hillary Clinton Human Interest Human Interest Jack Dorsey Jacqueline Novogratz James P. Steyer Jason Kottke Jay-Z Jay-Z John Wood Johnny Cash Jourdan Urbach Journalist Justin Bieber Justin Bieber Katharine Ku Kevin Carroll Kottke.org L. Rafael Reif Labor Labor later-WITNESS Linda Manzer Luis Mejia Major MakerBot Industries manager Manager and Entrepreneur Marc Raibert Marci Harris Mark Johnson Massachusetts Massachusetts Institute of Technology Massachusetts Institute of Technology Matt Keennon mobile device Music New York's Capital Newlyweds Nigel Jacob NYU Pat Metheny Patricia Bath Peace Through Music Perri Peltz and Tribeca Person Attributes Person Career Peter Gabriel Peter Henry Peter Thum player Playing president Princeton University Princeton University printing Producer professor Program Manager Program Manager project manager psychologist Quotation Rachael Chong Religion Religion Rick Rubin Rodney King Scooter Braun Secretary of State smart phones Social Issues Social Issues speaker Square St. Louis Stanford University Steven A. Curley SUNY Technology Technology Technology Licensing & Luis TFF The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints the Tribeca Film Festival The Webby Awards Thomas Suarez Tiffany Shlain Twitter Twitter U.S. Department of State United Nations United States Vice President Walsh College of Accountancy and Business War War Whitney Kroenke WITNESS - Co World Wide Web Writer , Director Yale University YouTube Yvette J. Alberdingk Thijm AWARDS
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User imagesAbout Tribeca Film FestivalOnline Dailies Coverage of the Tribeca Film Festival, April 17-28, 2013
The Tribeca Film Festival brings together local, national, and international talent to provide the New York City, downtown community with five days of screenings, educational workshops, and various special events.
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