March 30, 2012

RESHARED POST FROM GOOGLE

This is pretty awesome. Plug these equations into your search bar. Google originally shared this post: sqrt(x*x+y*y)+3*cos(sqrt(x*x+y*y))+5 from -20 to 20 sin(5.5x)*cos(5*y)+x*x+1 x is from -1 to 1, y is from -1 to 1, z is from 0.1 to 2.8 tanh(y(y^4+5x^4-10(x^2)(y^2))/(x^2+y^2)^4)
March 30, 2012

BELOW IS A REPOST OF MY FINAL COMMENT IN…

Below is a repost of my final comment in this thread: https://plus.google.com/115633934578783827271/posts/fzQHDwgtLSE __ +Alex Schleber Thanks for helping me find my community, its definitely appreciated. I agree without hesitation about the need for deep #systemhacking . And undoubtedly, there are thousands of minor system hacks that are waiting to be exploited for building a better world within the existing infrastructure, and that possibly will result in some genuine social change. +Jennifer Pahlka‘s amazing TED talk that went around a few weeks ago is, I think, a slightly less nihilistic call to hack the system than the Cult of Done, but the two approaches compliment and reinforce each other well. https://plus.google.com/u/0/117828903900236363024/posts/1XLMigFwWZz But these are just minor hacks, patchwork fixes on a broken and sinking system. Latching onto that system is a losing prospect, and relying on these hacks is fundamentally unsustainable. There is only one system hack that matters, and it is the hack where we all agree collectively to stop using money as a means of organizing ourselves. Transitioning off money as a form of social organization is precisely how we overcome the industrial age economies that we have used to organize ourselves for the last few hundred years and fully transition into the digital age. At +Occupy Wall Street the #freegan groups hacked the system and got things done by visiting all the businesses around Zuccotti Park late at night and asking for the food they would otherwise throw away. +Starbucks Coffee was particularly generous with their garbage, siphoning bags of perfectly edible baked goods that fed dozens of people. These are the kinds of system hacks that actually generate change, but they aren’t the sort that are going to attract the dollars of a venture capitalist. These are the system hacks that the homeless communities have known for […]
March 30, 2012

“THE BLIND JUGGLING MACHINES CAN JUGGLE…

“The Blind Juggling Machines can juggle balls without seeing them, and without catching them. Most of them, in fact, can juggle balls without any sensory feedback, such as sound or contact; this is achieved by exploiting the dynamics of these machines to achieve stable ball trajectories. This is very much in contrast to how most human beings would perform the same task: we would use our eyes to determine where to put our hands, for example.” http://raffaello.name/dynamic-works/juggling-machines http://vimeo.com/30373506
March 30, 2012

RESHARED POST FROM ALEX SCHLEBER

The chicest of all favelas: The Cult of Done. I’m just catching up, excuse the archiving. No shame being part of the long tail. Alex Schleber originally shared this post: *Public Service Announcement: We’re at 42 / 366 = 11.5% of your year have already expired.* Good reminder from the Cult Of Done Manifesto: “…12. If you have an idea and publish it on the internet, that counts as a ghost of done.” So I guess that makes G+ the “ghost of Done” too…!? Food for thought. Bre Pettis | I Make Things – Bre Pettis Blog – The Cult of Done Manifesto Dear Members of the Cult of Done,. I present to you a manifesto of done. This was written in collaboration with Kio Stark in 20 minutes because we only had 20 minutes to get it done. The Cult of Done …
March 30, 2012

RESHARED POST FROM BRAD SNOWDER

As I’ve discussed with +Jon Lawhead before, the neutrino results are a good opportunity to take stock of the way science handles its PR outfit. I was worried for a bit that we’d just chalk the whole thing up to normal science without thinking critically about how the announcement went down, so I’m glad to see them take responsibility for their mistakes, Brad Snowder originally shared this post: Two leaders of “Faster-Than-Light” Neutrino Team Resign On the morning of September 22, 2011, OPERA spokesperson Antonio Ereditato announced to the world that members of the OPERA experiment had observed neutrinos traveling faster than the speed of light.
March 30, 2012

RESHARED POST FROM AZIMUTH

Azimuth originally shared this post: A paper on networks, systems biology and medicine: “Proceeding from a topological description of these networks to an appreciation of their role in defining human disease requires recognition of a few important organizing principles derived from network theory. In brief, any network can be viewed as a collection of linked nodes, the distribution of which can range from random to highly clustered. Biological networks are not random collections of nodes and links, but evolve as clustered collections of genes, regulatory RNAs, proteins, or metabolites. Biological and pathobiological networks are scale-free; contain few highly connected nodes (hubs) and bottlenecks (nodes that link different highly connected clusters to each other, gaining, as a result, high ‘betweenness centrality’; manifest the small-world effect and disassortativity (highly connected nodes, or hubs, typically avoid linking to one another); and contain motifs with predictable functional consequences (feedback loops, oscillators, etc.). All of the biological networks relevant to disease manifest these properties, as well, which gives us a starting point from which to begin to identify those subnetworks or modules that are responsible for a specific pathobiological process or a specific disease.” Of course we should expect some of the general principles here may apply in ecology and elsewhere, too! http://www.barabasilab.com/pubs/CCNR-ALB_Publications/201111-00_WIREs-SysBiology/201111-00_WIREs-SysBiology.pdf
March 30, 2012

RESHARED POST FROM ALEXANDER KRUEL

Alexander Kruel originally shared this post: “In 2010, Cornell researchers Michael Schmidt and Hod Lipson published a groundbreaking paper in “Science” titled, “Distilling Free-Form Natural Laws from Experimental Data”. The premise was simple, and it essentially boiled down to the question, “can we algorithmically extract models to fit our data?”” Automated science, deep data and the paradox of information – O’Reilly Radar Bradley Voytek:
March 29, 2012

AXELROD’S EXCELLENT INTRODUCTION TO #COMPLEXITY…

Axelrod’s excellent introduction to #complexity as it pertains to the #socialsciences . I took the Standing Ovation Problem article from this collection, and there are easily a dozen more open in tabs on my browser opened from this page that I can’t wait to go through. http://www2.econ.iastate.edu/tesfatsi/abmread.htm It is unfortunate that they chose the acronym ABM, because Latour’s Actor Network Theory is so much more fun. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Actor%E2%80%93network_theory On-Line Guide for Newcomers to ABM (Axelrod and Tesfatsion) On-Line Guide for Newcomers to. Agent-Based Modeling in the Social Sciences. Robert Axelrod and Leigh Tesfatsion. Last Updated: 19 February 2012. Site Maintained By: Leigh Tesfatsion: Professor of Eco…
March 29, 2012

RESHARED POST FROM KYLE BROOM

kyle broom originally shared this post: “There is no simple formula for the relationship of art to justice. But I do know that art–in my own case the art of poetry–means nothing if it simply decorates the dinner table of power which holds it hostage. ” Hot Ink Adrienne Rich Refuses to Accept National Medal. Hot Ink is the Pacific Northwest’s premiere online magazine of thought and writing. Daily essays about current books, magazines, press, pop culture, and…
March 29, 2012

RESHARED POST FROM BRUCE HEAD

Bruce Head originally shared this post: “With no central planner or decider, both brains and bee hives can resolve their inner differences to commit to single courses of action. To watch a group of bees is to see a frenzy of different interests coalesce into a single, clear thought. This is analogous to neurons in the brain, which must reach a consensus on how to achieve a behavioral goal by positioning the body in space. Bees in a hive must do something similar when deciding where to move the superorganism that is the swarm … The remarkable unifying theme in all of these systems is how an aggregate swarm intelligence is built from just a few kinds of simple, local interactions between agents. Both neurons and bees are presumably unaware of how their impulses and signals transcend the individual, and lay the substrate for a grander, collective intelligence.” You Have a Hive Mind: Scientific American There is a deep connection between the way your brain and a swarm of bees arrives at a decision
March 29, 2012

RESHARED POST FROM KATKA FILIPOVÁ

Clarke is dead on target in this video. Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic, and Clarke is a wizard. Katka Filipová originally shared this post:
March 29, 2012

RESHARED POST FROM JEREMY SHIPLEY

Krauss gets destroyed in this review. David Albert is a total boss. Even his glancing blows completely rip apart contemporary metaphysics and religious practice. If you are a fan of intellectual steam-rolls, read this. Jeremy Shipley originally shared this post: This is a good review. I’d be interested in second opinions on what Krauss is saying. ‘A Universe From Nothing,’ by Lawrence M. Krauss Lawrence M. Krauss argues that the laws of quantum mechanics answer our most profound questions.
April 11, 2012

RESHARED POST FROM ROBERT SCOBLE

#attentioneconomy #implementation Robert Scoble originally shared this post: This app will freak you out, but it’s the future of, well, a lot Everyone I’ve shown this app to today (it came out last week) says “that’s freaky.” What does it do? It captures a ton of data on your phone as you move through the world. Right now it keeps a list of places. But here I sit down with founder Sam Liang for a discussion about just what data it captures, how that data could be used, and how he’s going to get people to cross the freaky line. This is the future folks and, it, is, indeed, freaky. Learn more at https://www.placemeapp.com/placeme/ It’s a free Android or iPhone app. Last night I spent a few hours with Liang talking about this kind of persistent ambient sensing app. It studies all the sensors in your phone. Temperature. Compass. Gyroscope. Wifi and bluetooth antennas. Accelerometer. It collects all that data and uploads it to his servers. This app knows EVERYTHING about where you are, even more than you do. It is TOTALLY FREAKY and TOTALLY is the future. I’m already addicted to it, and Highlight, which uses some of the same data to show me people near me. I’m not the only one. +Tim O’Reilly is using it. So are thousands of other people. Let’s see what it learns pretty quickly. 1. Where you live. 2. Where you work. 3. Your route to work (it can tell you’re driving). 4. What church you go to, or if you go at all. 5. What strip club you go to and just how excited you are (seriously!) 6. What gas station you stop at. It also knows how many miles you have to drive before you have to get more gas. 7. […]
April 10, 2012

RESHARED POST FROM LUIS CARVALHO

#systemhacks #hugesuccess This brings us to the second part of our policy: When we build our own software or contract with a third party to build it for us, we will share the code with the public at no charge. Exceptions will be made when source code exposes sensitive details that would put the Bureau at risk for security breaches; but we believe that, in general, hiding source code does not make the software safer. We’re sharing our code for a few reasons: First, it is the right thing to do: the Bureau will use public dollars to create the source code, so the public should have access to that creation. Second, it gives the public a window into how a government agency conducts its business. Our job is to protect consumers and to regulate financial institutions, and every citizen deserves to know exactly how we perform those missions. Third, code sharing makes our products better. By letting the development community propose modifications , our software will become more stable, more secure, and more powerful with less time and expense from our team. Sharing our code positions us to maintain a technological pace that would otherwise be impossible for a government agency. The CFPB is serious about building great technology. This policy will not necessarily make that an easy job, but it will make the goal achievable. Luis Carvalho originally shared this post: #opensource I had to check a couple times if this was actually in the US… apparently, it is… WOW. Digital Native Government Agency Embraces The Power Of Open Source | Techdirt The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is a young federal agency (founded in July 2011), and as such has a history of getting it when it comes to the digital world. They launched by taking online su…
April 9, 2012

RESHARED POST FROM GARY LEVIN

Dataminr combs through 340 million daily tweets on Twitter and its algorithms quickly seize on abnormal and actionable signals that can be analyzed and confirmed as a relevant event for a client. This could be anything from an assassination or general instability in certain countries to government sanctions, natural disasters or on-the-ground chatter about products or trends. Dataminr uses available Twitter metadata along with other contextual factors such as historical and concurrent data to create a mathematical signature for an event, ultimately deciding on the fly whether an event is valuable for decision-making purposes. For example, Dataminr’s clients were alerted 20 minutes ahead of mainstream news coverage of Osama Bin Laden’s death. “It’s not just that we capture early information, but also where the eyes of the world are pointing. That’s a valuable indicator of what’s happening in the world and where the world will focus in the future,” said Bailey. “We have event detection software that is able to pinpoint specific events going on in the world. Instead of predicting the future, we’re very much predicting the present and giving people better understanding of what’s happening right now. And that has enormous value.” #attentioneconomy Gary Levin originally shared this post: Dataminr builds a Twitter-powered early warning system Dataminr, a New York-based start-up that has been quietly building a global sensor network powered by Twitter, is now introducing its technology to the public today, showing how its real-time engine c…
April 9, 2012

RESHARED POST FROM DERYA UNUTMAZ

I am made of robots. Derya Unutmaz originally shared this post: Nano-sized ‘factories’ churn out proteins Drugs made of protein have shown promise in treating cancer, but they are difficult to deliver because the body usually breaks down proteins before they reach their destination. To get around that obstacle, a team of MIT researchers has developed a new type of nanoparticle that can synthesize proteins on demand. Once these “protein-factory” particles reach their targets, the researchers can turn on protein synthesis by shining ultraviolet light on them. The particles could be used to deliver small proteins that kill cancer cells, and eventually larger proteins such as antibodies that trigger the immune system to destroy tumors, says Avi Schroeder, a postdoc in MIT’s David H. Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research and lead author of a paper appearing in the journal NanoLetters. MIT news Tiny particles could manufacture cancer drugs at tumor sites.
April 9, 2012

RESHARED POST FROM JEFF JARVIS

“As a result,” he writes, “throughout the Institutional Revolution numerous circumstances would have existed where the old institutional apparatus was inappropriate for the new order of things. This mismatch would have acted as a brake on economic growth…. [T]echnical innovations by themselves created institutional problems at the same time they solved engineering ones. Because the institutions took time to adjust, the full benefits of the technical changes took a long time to be felt.” Jeff Jarvis originally shared this post: A post inspired by a fascinating book, The Institutional Revolution. And what it teaches today. A snippet from it (full post with links below): I’m fascinated with Allen’s examination of society’s institutions — as organizations and as sets of rules — as they adapt to or are made extinct by new technologies. He points out that the transition to modern democratic institutions and bureaucracies was slow and syncopated. “As a result,” he writes, “throughout the Institutional Revolution numerous circumstances would have existed where the old institutional apparatus was inappropriate for the new order of things. This mismatch would have acted as a brake on economic growth…. [T]echnical innovations by themselves created institutional problems at the same time they solved engineering ones. Because the institutions took time to adjust, the full benefits of the technical changes took a long time to be felt.” Sound familiar? Allen does not attempt to extrapolate to today — and perhaps I should not. But he does suggest that “an institutional reexamination of the Industrial Revolution” could “help modern economists in their policy recommendations on matter of current economic growth and development.” (Or a lack thereof.) I wonder how inadequate — or doomed — our institutions are today in the face of new and disruptive technologies, including — to echo Allen — profound new means of […]
April 9, 2012

THE INTERNET IS THE POWER TO REPLACE MONEY…

The internet is the power to replace money as the primary instrument for social organization. #ourweb #attentioneconomy I don’t think Google is paying attention, but since I know the answer to the question it is worth a shot. Let’s start something – Google Take Action You stood together to stop something. Today, let’s start a conversation about the future of the web and what makes it awesome. Because it’s about more than wires and chips, politicians and companies. …
April 9, 2012

THE OCTOPUS PROJECT POSTED THIS VIDEO TO…

The Octopus Project posted this video to their YouTube channel with zero explanation, but we do know a couple things about it. First, those big tentacles at the front are labeled as “SMA Arms,” which means that they’re actuated by a shape-memory alloy that changes is length when heated, no servos or anything necessary. The other six arms are silicone with a steel cable inside, and this steel cable is attached to a bunch of nylon cables, and by manipulating those nylon cables, the tentacle can be made to wiggle around and even grip things. More info here: http://www.octopusproject.eu/ http://spectrum.ieee.org/automaton/robotics/robotics-hardware/robotic-octopus-takes-first-betentacled-steps#.T4MBau3UY24.facebook robotic octopus-like crawling_SMAplusSilicone.avi
April 8, 2012

RESHARED POST FROM SAKIS KOUKOUVIS

Neuroscience discovers Aristotle. The Epic Conclusion via Athens circa 330 BCE Sakis Koukouvis originally shared this post: Validating Your Brain: The Epic Conclusion 1. The brain is working primarily on an unconscious level. Because of this, we are rarely as aware of what we are doing and why as we would like to believe. 2. The brain is well-intentioned and is trying to accomplish its sole purpose, surviving the moment. 3. Because it is focused on surviving the moment, it will make decisions that favour short-term benefits EVERY SINGLE TIME, unless we override it. 4. Because the brain operates primarily on the level of our unconscious, it usually communicates with our conscious brain indirectly. Often, it is trying to get our attention and we are not listening to it, which leads to the perpetuation of problem behaviors, thoughts, and feelings. 5. If we learn to really listen to our brain, it will tell us everything we need to know. Articles about NEUROSCIENCE http://www.scoop.it/t/science-news?tag=neuroscience Validating Your Brain: The Epic Conclusion | Science News I’m going to be demonstrating how working together with your brain, instead of fighting against it, is the surest way to mental health and a better experience of your existence. Let’s start with askin…
April 8, 2012

RESHARED POST FROM JOHN KELLDEN

Pay close attention to the argument against the Enlightenment picture of human nature as aggressive and self-interested. The digital age is perhaps most clearly understood as an overthrow of this fundamental assumption of the Enlightenment age. The enlightenment is a celebration of the individual in its freedom and autonomy; the Digital Age is the ideological revolution where we celebrate our unity as a cohesive whole. John Kellden originally shared this post: Redesign: Me to We via +Donald Lee & +Vibral Voices
April 8, 2012

RESHARED POST FROM CHRIS ROBINSON

Chris Robinson originally shared this post: Interesting graph. I wonder what the slopes will look like when people stop replacing their VCRs and land line phones. What percentage of families still own a cassette player? 30%? Source: http://m.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2012/04/the-100-year-march-of-technology-in-1-graph/255573/
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