Tinderbox Meetup, Sun. 01JUN25 (Video): 5Cs Collection and List Parsing with Split Operator
Level | Intermediate |
Published Date | 6/1/25 |
Type | Meetup |
Tags | Economic Indicators, Ecosystem Mapping, Industry Evaluation Frameworks, Industry Lifecycle, PESTLE, Porter’s Five Forces, Regulatory Landscape, SWOT, Scenario PlanningvBecker’s CTRIP Framework, Split, Technology Hype Cycle, Technology S-Curve, Value Chain Analysis, 5CKM, 5Cs of Knowledge Management, Eastgate, Identity Praxis, Inc., Mark Berstein, Michael Becker, Tinderbox |
Video Length | 01:28:06 |
Video URL | https://youtu.be/zHk2HglVq4Y |
Example File | TBXMeetUp 1JUN25.tbx (297.6 KB) |
Chat File | [TBXMeetUp 1JUN25Chat.txt |
TBX Version | 10 |
Instructor | Michael Becker |
In the Tinderbox meetup, before the recording, we discussed the importance of community and how developing and maintaining human connections may contribute to happiness (see supporting research. One the recording started, we discussed 1) the role/purpose adn use case of variables, 2) the use of ChatGPT to collect data in the forms of lists and the parsing of these lists (@satikusala ran a demo that looked a macro-economy research frameworks), and 3) the mutual benefit of using Obsidian and Tinderbox (i.e., we live in a world of “ands” not “ors”).
Resources
- Thinking with Tinderbox [Book]
- Origin of the term Ostracize Has Greek Roots [Definition], In ancient Greece, citizens whose power or influence threatened the stability of the state could be exiled by a practice called ostracism. Voters would elect to banish another citizen by writing that citizen’s name down on a potsherd. Those receiving enough votes would then be subject to temporary exile from the state. Ostracize originated with the meaning “to exile by the ancient method of ostracism,” but these days it usually refers to the general exclusion of a person from a group at the agreement of its members.\— Merriam Webster
- Variables [aTbRef]
- SED Command
- Dominus, S. (2025, May 1). How Nearly a Century of Happiness Research Led to One Big Finding. The New York Times. [Article]
- “There is no such things as fish.” [Quote]
- Dreaming in Code [Book]