January 27, 2009

HOW TO ANNOY A PHILOSOPHER

Creationists declare war over the brain Basically, the Intelligent Design crowd is turning their sights towards neuroscience and philosophy of mind, resolute in the mission to revive Cartesian dualism with the goal of “nothing less than the overthrow of materialism and its cultural legacies”. Because, you know, they have already finished proving evolution wrong and they need something to occupy them until the second coming. However, look at the bright side. The evolution/creationism debate has spawned an entire cottage industry within academic philosophy to popularize contemporary thought and bring the basic arguments for evolution into the mainstream. I mean, Hume destroyed creationism as a plausible theory 200 years ago, but while this is common knowledge among professional philosophers it had never quite trickled down to the public, so the culture wasn’t already inoculated against these kinds of malicious memes. I suspect the same will happen for the contemporary philosophy of mind and cognitive neuroscience, which is lightyears ahead of the pseudo-Freudian psychology that most people use to explain human behavior. The popular discourse could use some serious updating, and the best way to do it is for a bunch of dualist whackjobs to make a stink and to get roundly shut down in the public square.
January 27, 2009

THE FUTURE

This is our future. Robot watch via Dvice
January 26, 2009

LET US BE HEARD

From Engadget: New York Representative Pete King is hoping that the US will soon have a law requiring that all cameraphones make a noise when they snap a picture as well. To that end, King has re-introduced the so-called “Camera Phone Predator Alert Act,” which was actually first introduced in 2007 but went nowhere at the time. The bill, as the name not-so-subtly suggests, aims to prevent folks from taking cameraphone pictures without others people’s knowledge by forcing the phones to make a sound that’s “audible within a reasonable radius” and not able to be disabled. More from Ars\, which includes this stat: a recent survey of over a thousand teenagers and young adults (13 through 26) revealed that a fifth of the teens queried have posted a digital photo or video of themselves in their complete or partial birthday suits on the Internet. A third of the latter group have done the same.
January 26, 2009

F&M

January 21, 2009

YUP

Thanks Ian!
January 13, 2009

OBJECTIFIED

January 12, 2009

BIG IN JAPAN

From IEEE: Rise of the Machines via Moral Machines via Jon
December 18, 2008

HE NEVER UNDERTSOOD IT

Bruno Latour, in conversation with Richard Powers, in honor of HAL: BL: To tell you the truth, I have never understood the Turing Test to begin with. In theory, it should match a flesh and blood human against a silicon machine. In practice however it matches a flesh and blood machine against a flesh and blood machine, so how could the test ever be negative? The distribution is different, I concede. On one side, you have one body explored by ten thousand biologists, cytologists, and neurologists, while on the other side you have one computer concentrating the brain power of ten thousand engineers, software writers, and wafer printers. But how can any Turing Test judge hope to disentangle these two collections? The idea of a test matching a naked, isolated intelligent human against an isolated naked automated machine seems to me as unrealistic as imagining than we are here alone talking through email “naturally”, “directly”, without any mediation. Things and people are too much intertwined to be partitioned before the test begins, especially to capture this most heavily equipped of all faculties: intelligence.
December 15, 2008

MEANS TO AN END

This is very old, but: U.S. Denies Patent for a Too-Human Hybrid Patents on humans could also conflict with the 13th Amendment’s prohibition against slavery. That is because a patent permits the owner to exclude others from “using” the invention. Because “use” can mean “employ,” officials wrote, a patent holder could prevent a person from being employed by any other — which “would be tantamount to involuntary servitude.”
December 8, 2008

OBJECT SEXUALITY

Watch this video. Yep, its just a train. Now read the video info. This clip was uploaded by an Objectum Sexual, which is a person who is sexually attracted to objects. In this case, they believe themselves to be in a relationship with that train. Others are attracted to picket fences or roller coasters; in one case, a woman married the Eiffel Tower. Check it out. Within the last week, Amy started a YouTube channel talking about this and related issues. More info here and here. One quick comment on this phenomenon, though it may be unrelated: Warrington & Shallice (1984) identify certain kinds of brain disorders that result in hyperactive identification of animism in objects, and can specifically lose the ability to recognize objects as inanimate. These features appear to be disassociable, so it is likely that particular parts of the brain are dedicated to the identification of animism in objects. I wonder if this sexual orientation is somehow related to these brain regions.
December 6, 2008

THERAPY

Andy Clark’s new book “Supersizing the Mind” is apparently categorized by some trade book shops as “Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy”. Made me giggle.
November 24, 2008

SYNTHETIC SAPIENCE

As workers in the field fully understand, the phrase “artificial intelligence” is a terrible way to pick out the topic. Artificial intelligence is to be real intelligence, created by artifice. But artificial diamonds are not real diamonds created by artifice. They are fake diamonds. Real diamonds created in a laboratory are synthetic diamonds. And what is at issue is not intelligence—a phenomenon that admits of degrees and has its primary application to comparative assessments within the discursive community. It is really sapience that is at issue—something we language-users have and cats do not. So the issue would be better identified as “synthetic sapience” than “artificial intelligence.” But it is too late to get the label right. Brandom, John Locke lecture 3 “Artificial Intelligence and Analytic Pragmatism”
June 20, 2010

THE ANSWER IS OVER THERE

June 19, 2010

MUON THE HUMANOID ROBOT IS OUR IDEAL BEST FRIEND

We don’t speak German, and machine translation continues to be an intermittent and annoying bundle of failure, so bear with us on this one as we try to cobble together what exactly is going on here. This is Muon, the humanoid robot who is apparently being developed in Berlin by Frackenpohl Poulheim at the ALEAR Laboratory of Neuro Robotics at the Humboldt University in Berlin. Like other humanoid bots, Muon is about the size of an eight year old child so as not to creep out his human companions by being too threatening, and his design, while reminiscent of previous robots we’ve seen, is pretty original. It’s actually hard to tell what stage of development Muon is in — certainly many of the photos we have spied were concepts — but we’re going to keep our eyes peeled for him moving into the future. If you hit up the source link, you can check out a video of Muon’s development. There’s one more amazing shot after the break. Continue reading Muon the humanoid robot is our ideal best friend Muon the humanoid robot is our ideal best friend originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 19 Jun 2010 16:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds. Permalink | source Frackenpohl Poulheim | Email this | Comments
June 18, 2010

FORCETEK XIO: THE GAMING CONTROLLER THAT HURTS YOU, NOT THE TV (VIDEO)

Forget the Wiimote, PlayStation Move and Kinect; here’s a controller that actually makes you feel the games. At E3 earlier this week, startup firm ForceTek was seen demoing its XIO Virtual Gaming System — a rather fancy name for a force-feedback arm exoskeleton that “provides a controlled resistance” to your arm and wrist movement. The rig sure looks like a great addition for action games — imagine feeling a virtual basketball bouncing, or your virtual machine gun recoiling, or even the reaction force from a virtual punch. Want it now? Try next year, when the XIO will apparently ship at a “competitive” price comparable to that of a guitar for Guitar Hero. See the controller in action after the break, and try not to wince. Continue reading ForceTek XIO: the gaming controller that hurts you, not the TV (video) ForceTek XIO: the gaming controller that hurts you, not the TV (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 18 Jun 2010 21:03:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds. Permalink DVICE | source SeriouslyE3 (YouTube), Awesome Game Blog | Email this | Comments
June 17, 2010

THE HUMAN MODEM VIDEO [RETROMODO]

Remember the analog modem? Those noisy unreliable screamers that used to rule our online life? Anna Jane Grossman*—Gizmodo collaborator and author—made this video of people paying homage to the venerable device: The human modem handshake, 2400bps full-duplex. [Obsolete] More » Modem – Data Communications – Cable modem – Linux – Operating Systems
June 17, 2010

BUTTERFLY ORNITHOPTER IS COOL, ISN’T A BUTTERFLY

This video of an ornithopter from Harvard University and the University of Tokyo has been making its way around the internet, and while it’s pretty amazing to see those bio-inspired flapping wings, I thought I’d share a slightly different perspective on this ‘robotic butterfly.’ Wired magazine spoke with Robert Dudley, a professor at UC Berkeley who specializes in biomechanics. Butterfly flight is somewhat mysterious because it’s roughly the opposite of “as the crow flies.” Butterflies flit about rather than flying in a straight line. That actually costs them more energy, Dudley said, so scientists assume their looping flying serves some evolutionary purpose. “The advantage is that it’s thought to be an anti-predator behavior,” Dudley said. “The claim is that irregular flight paths are a permanent signal of prey unprofitability.” The Japanese researchers somewhat capture this oscillating type of flight with their plastic-winged flyer, but Dudley argued that the differences between the bot and a real butterfly are so great as to invalidate the biological lessons the researchers try to draw. “There is nothing fundamentally wrong with this approach but it severely limits any claims to the biology,” Dudley said. This is really interesting, from an evolutionary point of view… Basically, butterflies flit about randomly like they do because it makes them a pain in the butt to catch. The extra energy that they expend doing this is made up for by the fact that they don’t get eaten as frequently. Anyway, back to robots. It seems to me as though the scope of this particular research has been somewhat misemphasized… The researchers look to have been experimenting with the dynamics of butterfly wings, as opposed to attempting to create a robotic butterfly that flies like a real one. Specifically, they were looking at the wing veins, and as it turns […]
June 16, 2010

PR2 BESTS ITS CREATORS AT POOL IN FIVE DAYS

To be fair, some of PR2’s Poolshark programming team look to be pretty terrible at pool, but that doesn’t make it any less impressive that in only five days, PR2 learned how to hold and shoot a pool cue, recognize ball locations, select the best shot, and then sink it. If you’re wondering what this robot can’t do, the answer seems to be nothing (besides using stairs and round door knobs). Willow Garage has two more of these week long ‘hackathons’ planned this month, which will include teaching PR2 how to push a cart (meh) and fetching drinks from a fridge (yes please). A robot that can play pool and fetch me beer? Hellooooo new best friend. [ Willow Garage ]
June 14, 2010

CONFESSIONS OF AN ACA/FAN: ARCHIVES: THE FUTURE OF TEENAGERS: MY INTERVIEW IN O GLOBO

June 14, 2010

CREEPY ROBOTS: WHAT EVERY POWER LINE WILL BE WEARING IN 2014

Creepy robots: What every power line will be wearing in 2014 Those big high-tension power lines that form the national power grid need to be carefully inspected on a regular basis for impinging trees and other potential problems. In remote areas this work is often done by costly helicopter crews, but that could change when this cable crawling robot enters service. Creeping along the top guide wire at 3 mph, the robot actually runs using power harvested by induction from the main cables. The solar cells are only there for backup, and presumably so it can also look for problems during a blackout. The robot’s high-resolution cameras will automatically make comparisons with images taken earlier from the same location and then issue alerts if it finds obstructions like abnormal tree growth, some kid’s dangling sneakers, or an Earth Liberation Front banner on the line. The robot communicates using both satellite and cellphone links. Developed by the Electric Power Research Institute, each 6-foot-long, 140-pound robot will cost around $500,000, and according to EPRI it can cover 160 miles in a year. That seems kind of low to me, when you consider that 3 mph works out to over 26,000 miles in a year. Still, they claim it will save at least 30 percent when compared to the current helicopter inspections. The first commercial test is expected in 2014, just enough time for the UFO hunters and conspiracy theorists to come up with some crazy theory about what these robots are really doing. Technology Review, via Crave
June 10, 2010

YOUTUBE – GIANTS STEPS SOLO BY A ROBOT, FASTER (350BPM)!

June 10, 2010

YOUTUBE – GIANT STEPS

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