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“Computers are like bikinis. They save people a lot of guesswork.”
—Sam Ewing
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Our features many innovation tools.
Our
teach the proven techniques of intentional innovation.
Our
help organizations weave innovation into their everyday activities and consistently
inspire the best from everyone on their team.
Our
are immersive, entertaining, no-holds-barred
experiences that deliver surprising new solutions.
We
conferences, trade shows, and other keynote gatherings.
We’re located in Bend, Oregon’s historic Old Mill District.
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About: “Free Radicals of Innovation DVD” “The Free Radicals of Innovation has proven to be a vital tool in assisting clients to generate fresh ideas and perspectives.”
—Barry Eligon, Managing Director Aegis Management Solutions Limited, Port of Spain, Trinidad, W.I.
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Music
Heavy Weather
from Sony
Joe Zawinul and Wayne Shorter didn't truly fulfill Weather Report's artistic and commercial potential until they brought on-board a bassist who could function as an equal partner in the musical equation, like co-founder Miroslav Vitous, whose main shortcoming was his inability to play funk. In renegade bassist Jaco Pastorius, the band found a formidable composer and improvisor, who possessed deep roots in funk and R&B, yet was equally at home in modern jazz and Afro-Cuban settings. Not coincidentally, the presence of this innovative fretless bassist on Heavy Weather gave Weather Report the rhythmic/melodic dimension it had been missing since Vitous's departure, as evidenced by his voice-like declamations on Zawinul's ballad "A Remark You Made." On Zawinul's chart-topping, big band-styled arrangement of "Birdland," Pastorius provided the kind of big, sweeping orchestral gestures the tune required, while on the shifting canvas of Wayne Shorter's "Harlequin," the bassist's ability to articulate complex chords allowed him to function as a string section unto himself. And on his own "Havona," Pastorius not only soloed with horn-like artistry, but combined with drummer Alex Acuna and percussionist Manolo Badrena to give Weather Report its funkiest rhythm section ever. --Chip Stern
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