June 7, 2012

HELLO SUSIE, I AM THE LAST MOMENT ROBOT….

Hello Susie, I am the Last Moment Robot. I am here to help you and guide you through your last moment on earth. i am sorry that [pause] your family and friends can’t be with you right now, but don’t be afraid. I am here to comfort you. [pause] You are not alone, you are with me. [pause] Your family and friends love you very much, they will remember you after you are gone. [pause] Time of death 11:56 More: http://www.theverge.com/2012/6/7/3069974/last-moment-robot-dan-chen-video via +Peter Asaro http://youtu.be/T8PNzA2S6EY
June 7, 2012

RESHARED POST FROM GUNTHER COX

Gunther Cox originally shared this post: What Happens When You Load a Web Page?
June 7, 2012

RESHARED POST FROM JOHN BAEZ

John Baez originally shared this post: My last post showed a video of a ‘multi-scale Turing pattern’ which creates patterns that look biological. But it had perfect 3-fold symmetry artificially imposed on it, which is a bit of a cheat. Nature builds symmetrical patterns in some more subtle way – ‘imperfect’ but robust. So until we figure that out, I like this asymmetrical example better. W. Blut wrote: “It’s been more than two years since I came across his [Jonathan McCabe’s] multi-scale Turing pat­terns. They instantly intrigued me. And although I could recre­ate the gist of his images, I could never over­come the prac­ti­cal problems. In fact, the code proved haz­ardous to the elderly, infants and pregnant women. I thought my lack of numer­i­cal skill in tack­ling the huge equa­tions I ran into was the prob­lem. It was pon­der­ously slow and I suspected Jonathan had a secret lair packed with supercomputers.” “Turns out I was being silly. An almost inci­den­tal post on Flickr revealed that Jonathan has a paper on his cyclic sym­met­ric multi-scale Turing patt.., what the hell, on his McCabeisms. And it’s full of DTC lines (a rarely needed acronym for “damn that’s clever”). Seems I wasn’t bark­ing up the wrong tree, I was in the wrong for­est, on the wrong con­ti­nent, on the wrong planet… As if that wasn’t enough, Jason Rampe pro­vides a blog post with use­ful point­ers in imple­ment­ing Jonathan’s idea. I say point­ers, it’s actu­ally more of a very elab­o­rate pseudocode than a blog post. So the McCabeism is out there, ready to be imple­mented by anyone.” “So I did, […] and thanks to Jason, it only took a few hours.” All the references can be found here: http://www.wblut.com/2011/07/13/mccabeism-turning-noise-into-a-thing-of-beauty/
June 7, 2012

LIVE STREAMING AND GAMIFYING EDUCATION IN…

Live Streaming and Gamifying Education In addition to +Fraser Cain and +Pamela Gay‘s brilliant Astronomy Hangouts, one other vibrant community of streamers has heavily influenced my thinking about the medium: the Starcraft 2 streaming community. Although the community has significant presences across the internet (especially on Reddit and Twitter), the heart of the community is on the Team Liquid forums. If you aren’t familiar, hit up the link and let me introduce you to the community. At the time of my posting, there are 95 live streamers reaching an audience of roughly 16,000 viewers. This is near midnight on an average Wednesday; during major tournaments or other community events, audiences will easily clock in over 100,000 viewers. And the community is attracting advertising dollars in proportion to the attention it attracts. Starcraft is one of a number of games streamed regularly on services like Twitch.tv, which hosts streams to thousands of viewers daily. http://www.twitch.tv/directory But the Team Liquid forums cater to the SC2 community directly, and have generated quite a sophisticated culture and economy surrounding their gaming. http://www.teamliquid.net/video/streams/ At top of this list are a number of features streams. Some featured streams are highly produced tournaments; right now, the IGN Pro League is streaming their tournament, complete with casting and commentary, studio productions, and commercial sponsorship. This produced content is usually broadcast several times during the day. Other featured streams are professional Starcraft players live streaming their own online play. Individual streamers are also usually sponsored and run their own advertisements (either on screen logos during the game, or full screen commercials between games), and are paid in proportion to their viewership. Some pros, like Destiny, support themselves entirely through their streaming. http://www.reddit.com/r/IAmA/comments/g7q91/iam_destiny_i_quit_my_job_to_play_starcraft_2_for/ The really interesting thing for me, however, is the other live streams, the “long tail” of the […]
June 7, 2012

RESHARED POST FROM JOHN BAEZ

John Baez originally shared this post: How much a message tells you depends on what you were expecting. We can understand this very precisely using the concept of ‘relative information’. Today I’ll explain this and give an incredibly cool application to biology. Suppose a population of organisms has an evolutionarily stable state. Then as time passes, the information in this stable state relative to its current state always decreases! In short: the population keeps learning through natural selection, so it has less ‘left to learn’. (This is a theorem proved by +Marc Harper and others. Like all theorems, it has assumptions… and these assumptions don’t fit nicely into a G+ post. So please read the blog article before you argue.) Information Geometry (Part 11) Last time we saw that given a bunch of different species of self-replicating entities, the entropy of their population distribution can go either up or down as time passes. This is true even in the……
June 6, 2012

RESHARED POST FROM COLIN MACKAY

Objectification The following are philosopher Martha Nussbaum’s criteria for objectification, that is, the act of treating a person as an object: instrumentality: the treatment of a person as a tool for the objectifier’s purposes; denial of autonomy: the treatment of a person as lacking in autonomy and self-determination; inertness: the treatment of a person as lacking in agency, and perhaps also in activity; fungibility: the treatment of a person as interchangeable with other objects; violability: the treatment of a person as lacking in boundary-integrity; ownership: the treatment of a person as something that is owned by another (can be bought or sold); denial of subjectivity: the treatment of a person as something whose experiences and feelings (if any) need not be taken into account. To which Professor Rae Langton, MIT, adds the following: reduction to body: the treatment of a person as identified with their body, or body parts; reduction to appearance: the treatment of a person primarily in terms of how they look, or how they appear to the senses; silencing: the treatment of a person as if they are silent, lacking the capacity to speak. Colin Mackay originally shared this post: What is objectification, anyway? The following are philosopher Martha Nussbaum’s criteria for objectification, that is, the act of treating a person as an object: instrumentality: the treatment of a person as a tool for th…
June 5, 2012

RESHARED POST FROM CLIFF HARVEY

Cliff Harvey originally shared this post: Lawrence Lessig interviews Jack Abramoff about the US political system, institutional corruption, and strategies for reform. I knew this was going to be great immediately based on the participants. Lawrence Lessig studies political corruption at Harvard and has been advocating a proposal to soften the dependence of the political system on outside money (See: Rootstriking ), while Jack Abramoff is arguably one of the most effective (former) lobbyists in the business. He did hard time for some abuses, but as they make clear, the legal restrictions are so loose its almost hard to imagine the need to break them. I thought this conversation was extraordinarily fascinating, especially for some of the specific insights into the actual mechanisms of power used by this class of people – “that world” as Jack calls it – and also because this is exactly the kind of insight that needs to be accounted for in order to craft a smart strategy to reign in the corrosive dependence of politicians on private money that has denied them of any real autonomy. Jack seems pretty genuinely reflective, ashamed and serious about trying to help contain the damage done by people like himself. I think we’d be wise to hear what he has to say. The meta-organization seeking to address this key structural issue is called United Republic, which incorporates several smaller organizations. I’d definitely encourage giving them a look, and your email: http://unitedrepublic.org/
June 5, 2012

#VENUSTRANSIT # +FRASER CAIN +PAMELA GAY…

#venustransit +Fraser Cain +Pamela Gay
June 4, 2012

RESHARED POST FROM JON LAWHEAD

Jon Lawhead originally shared this post: I’ve had a paper about the foundations of mathematics in my head for a while now. I had a long conversation with a good friend who does quantum field theory today, and found him unexpectedly sympathetic to the view. Now I’m thinking seriously about writing it. This is partly scratch paper for recording my thoughts, and partially an RFC. If anyone out there has any thoughts about this, please chime in. I’ve always been sympathetic to a kind of formalism, and I think that the big objections that get raised to the formalist program aren’t necessarily fatal. The spirit of the program can (I think) be decoupled from Hilbert’s personal project of providing a complete and consistent foundation for arithmetic (which Godel torpedoed), and from the formulation that requires all of mathematics to computerized. The spirit of formalism just requires that mathematics be thought of as kind of symbol manipulation game in which we play around with constructed formal systems, deducing as many consequences as we can from a set of axioms. I think it’s possible to give a concrete version of formalism that satisfies this spirit, but which doesn’t run afoul of either the Turing or Godel-based objections. In particular, I’d like to target the “unreasonable effectiveness of mathematics” argument (which sort of parallels the “no miracles” argument in the philosophy of science. The quick and dirty version of that argument is that if mathematics isn’t “discovering” genuine truths about real objects in the world, it seems incredibly miraculous that so much of contemporary mathematics has turned out to be so useful for doing science. It seems to me that this is something like being astonished by the fact that so many words in the English language actually represent objects in the real […]
June 4, 2012

THE EULERIZER OUR GOAL IS TO REVEAL TEMPORAL…

The Eulerizer Our goal is to reveal temporal variations in videos that are difficult or impossible to see with the naked eye and display them in an indicative manner. Our method, which we call Eulerian Video Magnification, takes a standard video sequence as input, and applies spatial decomposition, followed by temporal filtering to the frames. The resulting signal is then amplified to reveal hidden information. Using our method, we are able to visualize the flow of blood as it fills the face and also to amplify and reveal small motions. Our technique can run in real time to show phenomena occurring at temporal frequencies selected by the user. More: http://people.csail.mit.edu/mrub/vidmag/ via +Tim O’Reilly ___________ Check out the infant video at 1:52. With just video input, you can get a direct visualization of vital signs. Simply amazing. http://youtu.be/ONZcjs1Pjmk
June 2, 2012

THE EULERIZER OUR POST FROM JOHN BAEZ

John Baez originally shared this post: Q: What’s negative information? A: I could tell you, but then you’d know even less… Just kidding. In 2005 Michal Horodecki, Jonathan Oppenheim and Andreas Winter wrote a nice paper on negative information. I find it a bit easier to think about entropy. Entropy is the information you’re missing about the precise details of a system. For example, if I have a coin under my hand and you can’t see which side it up, you’ll say it has an entropy of one bit. Suppose you have a big physical system B and some part of it, say A. In classical mechanics the entropy of B is always bigger than that of A: S(B) ? S(A) where S means ‘entropy’. In particular, if we know everything we can about B, we know all we can about A. In quantum mechanics this isn’t true, so S(B) – S(A) can be negative. For example, it’s possible to have an entangled pair of electrons with no entropy, where if we look at either one, it has an entropy of one bit: we don’t know if it’s spin is up or down. The paper by Horodecki, Oppenheim and Winter studied the implications of negative information for communication. There was a popularization here: Quantum information can be negative, Phys.org, 4 August 2005, http://phys.org/news5621.html but I understood less after reading it than before, so I decided to write this. Puzzle: why do physicists use S to stand for entropy? [quant-ph/0505062] Quantum information can be negative Abstract: Given an unknown quantum state distributed over two systems, we determine how much quantum communication is needed to transfer the full state to one system. This communication measures the &…
June 1, 2012

THE HANDSHAKE PROTOCOL VIA +JENNIFER OUELLETTE…

The Handshake Protocol via +Jennifer Ouellette “This is a choreographed sequence that allowed these digital devices to piggyback on an analog telephone network. “A phone line carries only the small range of frequencies in which most human conversation takes place: about 300 to 3,300 hertz,” Glenn Fleishman explained in the Times back in 1998. “The modem works within these limits in creating sound waves to carry data across phone lines.” What you’re hearing is the way 20th century technology tunneled through a 19th century network; what you’re hearing is how a network designed to send the noises made by your muscles as they pushed around air came to transmit anything, or the almost-anything that can be coded in 0s and 1s.” More: http://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2012/06/the-mechanics-and-meaning-of-that-ol-dial-up-modem-sound/257816/ ___________ The #handshake protocol is the way we got our machines to talk to each other. Now there is more machine conversations happening online than human conversations. Yet humanity is so generous that we’d turn these grating noises not meant for us into fond memories, and even music. Consider Aphex Twin’s Corn Mouth: http://vimeo.com/20505006 From a review of the album: “Make no mistake, this is NOT dance music. But it is music, and more importantly music generated by technological devices. And in an industry where such devices amount to incesant counting 1-2-3-4, 1-2-3-4, James taps out secret messages to us in what can only be described and this incredible, ambient morse code.” The Mechanics and Meaning of That Ol’ Dial-Up Modem Sound Pshhhkkkkkkrrrrkakingkakingkakingtshchchchchchchchcch*ding*ding*ding”
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 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

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

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 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 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 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 12, 2012

H/T +MATT UEBEL +JASON SILVA

h/t +Matt Uebel +Jason Silva http://vimeo.com/29938326
April 12, 2012

RESHARED POST FROM JASON GOLDMAN

Grainger trained baboons to recognise English words, and tell them apart from very similar nonsense words. The monkeys learned quickly, and could even categorise words they had never seen before. They weren’t anglophiles by any stretch. Instead, their abilities suggest that the act of reading words is just a more advanced version of the pattern-recognition skill that lets us identify letters. It’s a skill that was there long before the first human had scrawled the first letter. Stanislas Deheane, one of the leading figures in the science of reading, thinks that the study is “extraordinarily exciting”. He says, “It fits very nicely with my own research, which suggests that reading relies, in part, on learning the purely visual statistics of letters and their combinations.” Jason Goldman originally shared this post: Reading without understanding: baboons can tell real English words from fake ones by +Ed Yong ‘Wasp’ is an English word, but ‘telk’ is not. You and I know this because we speak English. But in a French laboratory, six baboons have also learned to tell the difference between genuine English words, and nonsense ones. They can sort their wasps from their telks, even though they have no idea that the former means a stinging insect and the latter means nothing. They don’t understand the language, but can ‘read’ nonetheless. Reading without understanding: baboons can tell real English words from fake ones | Not Exactly Rocket Science | Discover Magazine Uncategorized | ‘Wasp’ is an English word, but ‘telk’ is not. You and I know this because we speak English. But in a French laboratory, six baboons have also learned to
April 12, 2012

I’M SHARING THE OTHER TWO +JASON SILVA VIDEOS…

I’m sharing the other two +Jason Silva videos below: To understand is to perceive patterns RCVR The pattern video is amazing. I like the RCVR video less because I think the idea is less clearly thought through. We aren’t just receivers, which implies the same kind of passivity as consumers. We also act on the information we receive; this is part of the massive feedback loop that is allowing us to self-organize, and characterizing ourselves as mere receivers threatens to miss the cybernetic dimension of this organization. In the #attentioneconomy , I describe the nodes not just as receivers but as attenders to try and capture this dynamic activity as more than mere receptivity. If you like the Web 2.0 schtick, call us ATNDRS, or better yet @ndrs, which lends itself nicely to words like @ndroid and the like. ____ On a separate note, if this tiny burst of activity is enough to summon +Jason Silva back to G+, I would very much like to get in contact and talk more. For the past 6 years I’ve taught a summer course called “Human Nature and Technology” at Princeton to gifted high school students through Johns Hopkins’ Center for Talented Youth program. We basically cover exactly these themes in a wide-ranging discussion of the philosophy of technology, covering everyone from Aristotle and Heidegger to Andy Clark, Larry Lessig, and Clay Shirky. If you are in the area, I’ll be teaching the course again this summer and I’d love to arrange for you to come talk to the class. It would be fascinating to brainstorm ideas for using your philosophical approach in the classroom, and for getting students interested in the realities and implications of human technological change, from a humanistic (and not merely engineering) perspective. If you are interested, please get […]
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