Profs and Pints presents: Insights on Innovation, a look at the
innovative process and the history of advances that changed the world,
with Lawrence Husick, lecturer at Johns Hopkins Universitys Whiting
Graduate School of Engineering, chemist, patent attorney, hacker and
entrepreneur. Innovation is a hot commodity, with seemingly every
company, elected official, employee, and organization out there either
striving to be innovative or proclaiming their worthiness of the
label. The problem is that few can answer basic questions about
innovation such as: What, exactly, is it? How to you recognize it? How
do you do it? Why is it worth doing? Although we apply the term
innovation to some new thing that someone has developedthe latest
better mousetrapinnovation is much more than gizmos. It's also a
process, a way to bring about change by introducing valuable new
methods, ideas, or products. Its coming up with different ways of
thinking and doing. Innovations may be beliefs, organizational
methods, and discoveries. Its the creation of value. And despite the
stereotype of the innovator as a tireless tinkerer, the impulse that
spawns actually innovation is laziness, because it arises from our
desire to extract more value from our time and from things around us.
It's how we've managed to get away from long days of hunting and
gathering and generate economic surpluses. It's often been a way to
spend more time in bed or on the couch. Come learn about innovationand
the surprising lives of some of our lazy inventive heroesfrom Lawrence
Husick, whose job titles also include Co-Director of the Program on
Teaching Innovation at the Foreign Policy Research Institute's Wachman
Center. He'll tackle the tough-but-fun innovation question: What are
the most important innovations in history, ranked in order? You'll be
welcome to chime in with your own ideas, as independent thinking is a
big part of what this talk is about. You might not leave able to build
a better mousetrap, but your odds of doing so might improve, and
you'll gain appreciation of those who did. (Advance tickets: $12.
Doors: $15, save $2 with a student ID. Listed time is for doors. Talk
starts 30 minutes later. Please allow yourself time to place any
orders and get seated and settled in.)
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22/02/2020 Last update