Speed Networking Sustainable Development Goals

@Kilian the networking room themes for 6 rooms can be thematic issues, rather than the 17 goals including the following:

  1. Water (Water and Sanitation | Department of Economic and Social Affairs)
  2. Energy (Energy | Department of Economic and Social Affairs)
  3. Climate(Climate Action and Synergies | Department of Economic and Social Affairs)
  4. Ocean (Oceans and Seas | Department of Economic and Social Affairs)
  5. Urbanization (Sustainable cities and human settlements | Department of Economic and Social Affairs)
  6. Transport (Sustainable transport | Department of Economic and Social Affairs),
  7. Science and technology (Science | Department of Economic and Social Affairs)

Today, the Division for Sustainable Development Goals (DSDG) in the United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs (UNDESA) provides substantive support and capacity-building for the SDGs and their related thematic issues listed above in the Global Sustainable Development Report

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Love this design @Kilian! I can see several use cases for this - speed networking, speed dating, speed teaming, and speed pitching to investors.

Agree to the use cases (apart from speed pitching to investors), the others, yes.

Started theming the rooms. Tell me if they are not self explanatory…

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Done

@KrystalLucado

Still need to add some details such as shadows and the roofs.

Are we happy with it beeing in space?

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Map is accessible now.

@KrystalLucado

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Thank you @Kilian Celebrating our co-creation and your capacity to execute a strategy. To support same I am creating a robot for each room with the following SDG Goals:

1. Water

  • Goal 6: Clean Water and Sanitation: Lack of clean water causes health issues and poverty, while providing clean water improves health and economic opportunities.
  • Goal 1: No Poverty: Water scarcity exacerbates poverty, but access to water can lift communities out of poverty.
  • Goal 2: Zero Hunger: Water shortages hinder food production, whereas adequate water supply boosts agricultural yields.
  • Goal 3: Good Health and Well-Being: Contaminated water spreads diseases, but clean water ensures better health.
  • Goal 4: Quality Education: Water-related chores reduce school attendance, while water access allows children to attend school.
  • Goal 5: Gender Equality: Women and girls often bear the burden of water collection, but improved water access frees up time for education and work.
  • Goal 10: Reduced Inequalities: Unequal water access deepens inequalities, while equitable distribution promotes fairness.
  • Goal 17: Partnerships for the Goals: Collaborative efforts are essential to address water challenges and implement sustainable solutions.

2. Energy

  • Goal 7: Affordable and Clean Energy: Energy poverty limits development, but clean energy access drives economic growth and sustainability.
  • Goal 1: No Poverty: Lack of energy access perpetuates poverty, while affordable energy reduces it.
  • Goal 2: Zero Hunger: Energy shortages affect food production, but reliable energy supports agriculture.
  • Goal 3: Good Health and Well-Being: Polluting energy sources harm health, whereas clean energy improves it.
  • Goal 4: Quality Education: Energy scarcity disrupts education, but reliable energy enhances learning environments.
  • Goal 5: Gender Equality: Women are disproportionately affected by energy poverty, but clean energy empowers them.
  • Goal 10: Reduced Inequalities: Energy access disparities widen inequalities, while equitable energy distribution reduces them.
  • Goal 17: Partnerships for the Goals: Partnerships are crucial for expanding clean energy access and innovation.

3. Climate

  • Goal 13: Climate Action: Climate change threatens livelihoods, but proactive climate action mitigates risks and builds resilience.
  • Goal 1: No Poverty: Climate impacts worsen poverty, but climate action can protect vulnerable communities.
  • Goal 2: Zero Hunger: Climate change disrupts food systems, while climate-smart agriculture ensures food security.
  • Goal 3: Good Health and Well-Being: Climate change exacerbates health issues, but climate action safeguards health.
  • Goal 4: Quality Education: Climate impacts disrupt education, but climate education fosters resilience.
  • Goal 5: Gender Equality: Women are more vulnerable to climate impacts, but inclusive climate action empowers them.
  • Goal 10: Reduced Inequalities: Climate change deepens inequalities, while equitable climate action addresses them.
  • Goal 17: Partnerships for the Goals: Global partnerships are essential for effective climate action and innovation.

4. Ocean

  • Goal 14: Life Below Water: Ocean degradation threatens livelihoods, but marine conservation supports sustainable development.
  • Goal 1: No Poverty: Ocean health is vital for coastal economies, while sustainable practices reduce poverty.
  • Goal 2: Zero Hunger: Overfishing depletes food sources, but sustainable fisheries ensure food security.
  • Goal 3: Good Health and Well-Being: Polluted oceans harm health, but clean oceans support it.
  • Goal 4: Quality Education: Lack of marine education hinders conservation, while marine education promotes stewardship.
  • Goal 5: Gender Equality: Women in coastal communities face unique challenges, but inclusive policies empower them.
  • Goal 10: Reduced Inequalities: Unequal access to marine resources deepens inequalities, while equitable access promotes fairness.
  • Goal 17: Partnerships for the Goals: Collaborative efforts are crucial for marine conservation and sustainable use.

5. Urbanization

  • Goal 11: Sustainable Cities and Communities: Rapid urbanization strains resources, but sustainable planning creates livable cities.
  • Goal 1: No Poverty: Urban poverty is a major issue, but inclusive urban development reduces it.
  • Goal 2: Zero Hunger: Urban food deserts exist, but urban agriculture can improve food security.
  • Goal 3: Good Health and Well-Being: Poor urban environments harm health, but sustainable cities promote well-being.
  • Goal 4: Quality Education: Urban inequality affects education, but equitable access improves outcomes.
  • Goal 5: Gender Equality: Unsafe cities limit women’s opportunities, but safe, inclusive cities empower them.
  • Goal 10: Reduced Inequalities: Urban disparities are significant, but inclusive urban policies reduce them.
  • Goal 17: Partnerships for the Goals: Partnerships are key to developing sustainable and inclusive urban solutions.

6. Transport

  • Goal 9: Industry, Innovation, and Infrastructure: Inadequate transport limits development, but robust infrastructure drives progress.
  • Goal 1: No Poverty: Poor transport access perpetuates poverty, while improved transport reduces it.
  • Goal 2: Zero Hunger: Transport issues hinder food distribution, but efficient transport ensures food security.
  • Goal 3: Good Health and Well-Being: Lack of transport affects healthcare access, but reliable transport improves it.
  • Goal 4: Quality Education: Transport barriers limit education access, but good transport facilitates it.
  • Goal 5: Gender Equality: Unsafe transport affects women disproportionately, but safe transport empowers them.
  • Goal 10: Reduced Inequalities: Transport inequities deepen disparities, while equitable transport access reduces them.
  • Goal 17: Partnerships for the Goals: Collaborative efforts are essential for developing sustainable transport solutions.

7. Science and Technology

  • Goal 9: Industry, Innovation, and Infrastructure: Technological gaps hinder development, but innovation drives progress.
  • Goal 1: No Poverty: Lack of technology perpetuates poverty, while technological access reduces it.
  • Goal 2: Zero Hunger: Agricultural technology is crucial for food security.
  • Goal 3: Good Health and Well-Being: Medical technology improves health outcomes.
  • Goal 4: Quality Education: Educational technology enhances learning.
  • Goal 5: Gender Equality: Technology access empowers women.
  • Goal 10: Reduced Inequalities: Technological disparities deepen inequalities, while equitable access reduces them.
  • Goal 17: Partnerships for the Goals: Partnerships drive technological innovation and dissemination.

8. Governance

  • Goal 16: Peace, Justice, and Strong Institutions: Weak institutions perpetuate issues, but strong governance ensures justice and peace.
  • Goal 17: Partnerships for the Goals: Collaboration is essential for achieving all SDGs.
  • Goal 1: No Poverty: Good governance reduces poverty.
  • Goal 2: Zero Hunger: Effective policies ensure food security.
  • Goal 3: Good Health and Well-Being: Strong institutions improve health systems.
  • Goal 4: Quality Education: Governance ensures educational access and quality.
  • Goal 5: Gender Equality: Justice systems protect gender equality.
  • Goal 10: Reduced Inequalities: Inclusive governance reduces disparities.

Please confirm your agreement on the Goals listed under each room as I will upload language to each AI Agent supporting the goal based on the questions to support connection in the SDG Networking Space. I plan to do this on Sunday. I did two bots as an example for your to see but they are not in the correct rooms.

we cant have the NPCs in JITSI Meetings. Jitsi Meeting Areas are automatically deactivating proximity chat, which the NPCs are utilising for communication.

In the Bot menu:
The description is only for human, it doesnt affect the bot itself.

You can put some context into the Instruction field. Try to be concise and short here, as this is limiting the overall context window of the ai.

I guess you could leave the Move instruction empty.

To make the bot spawn in their right rooms, you would have to create Areas that include the “Entrance” Attribute and define those accordingly. (as I’ve shown it to you earlier) let me know if you have any further questions.


Oh and, if you are okay with not having text to speech and move functionality, but get a larger context window. You should use Custom LLM and go (for example) over the ai.newit.works or other, AI tool provider.

Regarding your feedback with the glass wall. I tested it, also before this release and again now, and the floor shouldnt be made completely out of glass. Its not visually translating. I couldnt tell a difference from this and just “floating” in space.

What’s the solution for the deactivation, or a new way for the AI Agents to engage, as I see AI raising our capacity in meetings 10x.

I don’t understand the problem.

You named the problem. Ai agents can’t engage in Jitsi.

Okay, hhhhmm I’m just confused then.