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2025-05-01 00:00:00Z | Apr 30, 2025 | Ki Siadatan | Revolutionizing Aging: How Innovation and Emerging Technologies are Shaping the Future of Longevity | May 01, 2025 |
Ki's presentation explores the impact of emerging technology on aging and healthcare over the next 5, 10, and 20 years. It highlights advancements such as telemedicine, remote monitoring, smart homes, and AI-driven healthcare solutions in the near term, with robotics, genomics, and personalized medicine shaping the decade ahead. Looking 20 years into the future, the presentation delves into breakthroughs like regenerative medicine, organ printing, nanotechnology, and the game-changing potential of quantum computing. Ultimately, these advancements promise a future where aging is redefined, healthcare is more predictive and personalized, and innovation transforms every aspect of longevity and well-being.
Ki considers himself a mission-driven health executive, a gerontechnologist, innovator and health and aging futurist. He currently serves as the CEO of Kairahn, a global consultancy that exists to transform the global experience of aging. He is also co-founder and managing partner of Brain Meets Bytes, a premier digital publication focused on the latest advancements in brain health, longevity and the innovations poised to revolutionize these fields. From his early days at Microsoft and high tech, through his nearly 15-year career in Senior Housing, Ki is inspired by the endless possibilities and opportunities that will impact the human condition. He works passionately to bring about a world where longevity is matched by healthspan, where aging is embraced as a life stage filled with vitality, and where every person has access to the latest advancements in healthcare. Ki resides in Roseville, CA with his wife Dawn, and his children Cyrus and Lexi. In his down time he enjoys traveling, astrophotography, reading, cooking and playing chess. He is also a proud Rotarian and a volunteer in many community organizations. |
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2025-05-08 12:00:00Z | May 08, 2025 | Max Huff | Incoming President Max Huff will introduce the 2025-2026 Board | May 08, 2025 12:00 PM | View | ||||||
2025-05-15 12:00:00Z | May 15, 2025 | Professor Andrew Reddie | Nuclear Risks | May 15, 2025 12:00 PM |
Andrew W. Reddie is an Associate Research Professor at the University of California, Berkeley’s Goldman School of Public Policy, and Founder of the Berkeley Risk and Security lab. His research at the intersection of technology, politics, and security examines how emerging military capabilities shape international order—with a focus on nuclear weapons policy, cybersecurity, AI governance, and innovation. He is also a pioneer of the use of wargaming methods in both classroom and experimental settings. Andrew serves in faculty leadership roles at UC Berkeley’s Center for Security in Politics, the Berkeley APEC Study Center, and UC-wide Disaster Resilience Network. He is also an affiliate of UC Berkeley’s Institute of International Studies and the University of California’s Institute on Global Conflict and Cooperation. Andrew received his B.A. and M.A. degrees from the University of California, Berkeley, an M.Phil. in International Relations from Oxford University and his Ph.D. from the University of California, Berkeley in 2019. |
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2025-05-22 12:00:00Z | May 22, 2025 | Spaulding Marine Center | Rotary Vocational Scholarship Success! | May 22, 2025 12:00 PM |
As a 501(c)3 Nonprofit Spaulding Marine Center’s mission is to preserve the Spaulding Boatworks as a working and living museum; to educate the next generation of shipwrights and marine service technicians; to restore and return to active use historically significant vessels such as our flagship Freda; to share with the community maritime history and culture through classes and public programming. |
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2025-06-12 12:00:00Z | Jun 12, 2025 | Megan Gorman | All The Presidents’ Money: What The Finances of Our Leaders Can Teach Us About Wealth | Jun 12, 2025 12:00 PM |
We all have our opinions on how presidents have handled affairs of state, but how exactly did they handle their own financial affairs? In her delightful and chatty book, Megan offers plenty of anecdotes: how a president born wealthy died broke (Thomas Jefferson, whose last correspondence was about buying wine on credit), a president born poor died rich Lyndon Johnson, who used his government connections to build a tiny Texas radio station bought by his wife for $17,500 in 1942 that netted the family $105 million 30 years later after LBJ died, and a president addicted to get-rich-quick schemes (that would not be the one you might be thinking of but Ulysses S. Grant, who lost money "selling ice, developing farmland, and invested in a social club in San Francisco"). J.F.K. was wealthy but frugal, Lincoln died without a will, and the Clintons...well, let's just say they are comfortable thanks to post-presidential speeches and books. |
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2025-06-26 00:00:00Z | Jun 25, 2025 | @ Sausalito Books by the Bay | Jun 26, 2025 |
Join your fellow Rotarians for an evening not to be missed. Watch for details, reservations and more. |
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