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  2. Nomad - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nomad

    Nomads are communities who move from place to place as a way of obtaining food, finding pasture for livestock, or otherwise making a living. Most nomadic groups follow a fixed annual or seasonal pattern of movements and settlements. Nomadic people traditionally travel by animal, canoe or on foot. Animals include camels, horses and alpaca.

  3. Digital nomad - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_nomad

    Digital nomad working from a restaurant. Digital nomads are people who travel freely while working remotely using technology and the internet. [1] Such people generally have minimal material possessions and work remotely in temporary housing, hotels, cafes, public libraries, co-working spaces, or recreational vehicles, using Wi-Fi, smartphones or mobile hotspots to access the Internet.

  4. Mobilities - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mobilities

    Mobilities emerged as a critique of contradictory orientations toward both sedentarism and deterritorialisation in social science. People had often been seen as static entities tied to specific places, or as nomadic and placeless in a frenetic and globalized existence. Mobilities looks at movements and the forces that drive, constrain and are ...

  5. Nomad (disambiguation) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nomad_(disambiguation)

    Nomad (upcoming film), an upcoming science fiction film; Nomads (film series), a Canadian virtual reality documentary project; Nomad: In the Footsteps of Bruce Chatwin, a 2019 documentary directed by Werner Herzog; Nomad , the name of a robot in the Star Trek episode "The Changeling"

  6. Sedentism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sedentism

    At the same time, only 0.5–1 percent of these represented villages with more than 3–4 houses. This means that the old nomadic or migratory life style continued in a parallel fashion for several thousand years, until somewhat more sites turned to sedentism, and gradually switched over to agricultural sedentism.

  7. Seasteading - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seasteading

    Nomadic ocean life has been practiced for millennia by so-called sea nomad peoples, particularly around Southeast Asia. [7] Venice, while built on stilts, has been identified as an early example of seasteading, not only as a long standing maritime settlement, but also as the center of the historic independent state of the Republic of Venice. [8]

  8. AI and the meaning of life: Philosopher Nick Bostrom says ...

    www.aol.com/news/ai-meaning-life-philosopher...

    A decade later, with AI more prevalent than ever, Professor Bostrom has decided to explore what will happen if things go right; if AI is beneficial and succeeds in improving our lives without ...

  9. List of nomadic peoples - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_nomadic_peoples

    This is a list of nomadic people arranged by economic specialization and region. Nomadic people are communities who move from one place to another, rather than settling permanently in one location. Many cultures have traditionally been nomadic, but nomadic behavior is increasingly rare in industrialized countries .