"All this he saw, for one moment breathless and intense, vivid on the morning sky; and still, as he looked, he lived; and still, as he lived, he wondered."

The Autodesk University Journal – Day 2

Just my top 3 from my Day 2 here at Autodesk University, in chronological order. We can dive in later.

1. Diverse Subcontractors and Where to Find Them

With a focus on subcontractor selection, Wissam Akra started off by highlighting how, at least in the US, supplier diversity is a requirement by government law, and of course diversity brings more efficiency, more profitability, and it’s the right thing to do. Not meeting the diversity requirements might result in finacial penalties, disqualification from bids, withholding payments and an impact on the stakeholder.

Supplier Diversity was here defined starting with a certifications they might qualify for, such as LGBTBE (LGBTQ Owned Business) or WOSB (Women Owned Small Business), and these certifications are either issues by the government and by State Agencies, or by private institutes such as the WEBNC. Of course the subcontractors need to be doing actual work, and sometimes it’s possible for companies to present a self-certification.

Positive impacts of meeting the requirements though include a higher innovation level and more creativity, more efficiency and overlooked aspects such as local support and alignment of your project goals with local goals, which is pretty awesome.

So, how do you achieve that?

The proposed strategies for implementation involve, of course, Tough Leaf solutions and this is where the talk got salesy, which I never particularly enjoy. They propose their own database with information collected from the different official sources and verified directly (and for free) with the suppliers themselves. The database can then be used on the search engine.

The engine makes sure you only see companies who meet the requirements and does the outreach for you. The subcontractors on the other side only are invited to jobs they actually have a chance of getting, because they meet the requirements, and they only work on bids that have a realistic chance of going somewhere. Which is a lot.

They also connect subcontractors with Capacity-Building Partners who will support these minority-owned businesses in being successful for the project, which of course is needed for the whole thing to work.

2. Kids are going to space

Tobias Jäger and Theresa Schmitt from the Technical University in Munich showcased their Elara project: the first student rocket with bi-liquid methalox engine which will soar to a 100 km altitude, in the upper atmosphere.

They showed us ambition, design principles and their usage of Fusion.

3. BIM and GIS

Olivia Melazzo from /slantis showed us her proof of concept for analysis in ArcGIS and interoperability with Revit on a neighborhood in Buenos Aires that’s affected by a lack of public spaces and no accessibility to public green areas, virtually no connection with other areas of the city and no access to healthcare facilities.

music and theatre

Suzanne Vega in Milan

Yesterday, we went to see Suzanne Vega, one of the greatest artists and musicians of all times whom occupies a special place in my heart next to Tori Amos. It was a packed house at Conservatorio Giuseppe Verdi here in Milan, with people belonging to

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books and literature

Isaac Asimov’s Gold (and other stories)

It’s unfortunate that I’m coming to this after the very unsatisfactory collection of “fantasy” stories (Asimov never wrote fantasy: he wrote satire), because this was another disappointment. The book is half short stories and half non-fiction, for random reasons, and the non-fiction half is random writings

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books and literature

The Murderbot Diaries: Rogue Protocol + Exit Strategy

I’m not crying: a piece of some murdering bot must have gotten in my eye. Rogue Protocol is the third novella in the Murderbot Diaries, and deals with the titular character going deep undercover to figure out what happened in the “mining incident” that was

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