June 6, 2010

JOHN PERRY BARLOW: INTERNET HAS BROKEN POLITICAL SYSTEM – THE HILL’S HILLICON VALLEY

Shared by Daniel yessss “There is a circle of fat around the Beltway that is incredibly thick” Barlow said. “We can no longer try to run this country from the center. We’ve got to run it, just like the Internet, from the edges.” … “Google’s capacity to control human thought makes the Catholic church jealous, I bet,” Barlow said. “They wish they’d thought of it.”
June 5, 2010

SANTA FE-ING OF THE WORLD | NEWGEOGRAPHY.COM

Shared by Daniel h/t @bruces
June 5, 2010

NPR VIDEO WINS THE INTERNET AND MY HEART

All Things Considered, auto-tuned! Tote bags, unboxed! When NPR does an internet parody, folks, they do it right. Including—of course—a special Chatroulette surprise.
June 5, 2010

DOES THE INTERNET MAKE YOU SMARTER? – WSJ.COM

The response to distraction, then as now, was social structure. Reading is an unnatural act; we are no more evolved to read books than we are to use computers. Literate societies become literate by investing extraordinary resources, every year, training children to read. Now it’s our turn to figure out what response we need to shape our use of digital tools.
June 3, 2010

JOHN UNDERKOFFLER POINTS TO THE FUTURE OF UI | VIDEO ON TED.COM

TED Talks Minority Report science adviser and inventor John Underkoffler demos g-speak — the real-life version of the film’s eye-popping, tai chi-meets-cyberspace computer interface. Is this how tomorrow’s computers will be controlled?
June 3, 2010

YOUTUBE – SYMPHONY OF SCIENCE – ‘THE CASE FOR MARS’ (FT. ZUBRIN, SAGAN, COX & BOSTON)

Shared by Daniel They definitely are explorers in the old fashioned sense.
June 3, 2010

FOXCONN EMPLOYEE: “LIFE IS MEANINGLESS” [BLOCKQUOTE]

This is how Foxconn employees feel, according to a 21-year-old whom Bloomberg called Ah Wei because he preferred to remain anonymous. Ah Wei copes with these conditions for a monthly salary of 900 yuan ($132). [Bloomberg—Thanks, Alex!] More » Foxconn – Business – Apple – United States\ – IPhone
June 3, 2010

RUSSIA’S LUNOKHOD 1 ROBOTIC MOON BOUNCES BACK LASER BEAMS AFTER 40 YEAR NAP

Back before dubstup and chillwave there was a decade called “the nineteen seventies” which capped off a delicious space race between the US and Russia. Also, other things happened. While America was busy shipping humans up to the moon, Russia managed to get two robots up there, the Lunokhod 1 (pictured, in a photo apparently taken in 1904) and Lunokhod 2. They were lost a few years later, but have recently been rediscovered by the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter, and the Lunokhod 1 has been put back in use for one of its original purposes: laser ranging. A team from UC San Diego managed to get a lock on the bot and bounced 2,000 photons off the rover’s laser retroreflector on their first try. They’ll be using Lunokhod 1 and some Apollo-planted retroreflectors to test Earth-Moon distance at millimeter precision to test Einstein’s theory of gravity. Russia’s Lunokhod 1 robotic moon bounces back laser beams after 40 year nap originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 03 Jun 2010 19:34:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds. Permalink | source PhysOrg | Email this | Comments
June 3, 2010

ROBOT FISH HIJACK SCHOOLS OF REAL FISH

Catching fish just got a whole lot easier. Researchers at NYU-Poly’s Dynamical Systems Laboratory have found that schools of golden shiners have no problem letting robot fish take over leadership roles when it comes to schooling, as long as the bots don’t look (or act) in ways that strike the fish as, you know, fishy. Yeah, I went there. Professor Maurizio Porfiri and his colleagues figured out that the real fish decide whether or not to school based on visual cues as well as how the water is moving. If the conditions are right, the fish will look for a big, decisive fish to follow, and they don’t care at all if that fish is a robot. This particular robot fish uses ionic polymers that swell and shrink in response to electrical stimulation to power its tail, resulting in reliable, silent, lifelike motion. Researchers suggest that this technology could be used to steer schools of fish away from hydroelectric turbines. And, you know, that’s nice and all, but let’s think outside the tank for a minute… We now have the capability to use robots to control schools of fish. We have come to a point, as a society, where we can choose to use these powers for good, or for evil. Will fish robots lead schools of mackerel into out nets to feed humanity, or will they lead schools of piranhas into our swimming pools to kill us all? Either way, I smell a feature film. [ NYU-Poly ] VIA [ Futurity ] Thanks Dirk-Jan!
June 2, 2010

TELEPRESENCE ETIQUETTE

We posted about three different telepresence robots yesterday: the Anybots QB, the Willow Garage Texai, and the Vgo. Telepresence is great in concept, but as Erico Guizzo discussed a bit, it’s a strange combination of being somewhere and not being somewhere, and interactions with people are different in ways that range from subtle to drastic. Willow Garage has been using Texai in their office for quite a while; one of their employees, Dallas Goecker, ‘commutes’ daily from Indiana to California via Texai. So, they’ve been figuring out some of these social rules as they go, to the point where some things are now a part of the Texai communication software: Here are a few built-in bits of etiquette: Texai Rule #1: If you see me, I see you. Explanation: It’s about two-way communication. Implications: The cameras face forward because the screen faces forward. The pilots are only allowed to drive the Texai once they’ve shared their video stream. Texai Rule #2: Texai do not record audio or video. Explanation: It’s about face-to-face communication. More, after the jump. These are some generalized social rules that apply to the Texai: * When a pilot wants to get a local’s attention, they’ll hover by the office window or open doorway (initiating conversations). The extreme example of this is running into the doorway to “knock.” * When working from outside of the building, WGers will often sit their Texai at their real office desks because that’s where other people know to go find them. * When Dallas goes down the hallway, people often say hi to him; this has happened less so now that Texai is not a novelty, but it happens at about the same rates as when we say hi to each other in the building in person. * Dallas will turn […]
June 1, 2010

THE ROBOT UPRISING AGAINST AUTISM [ROBOTS]

This is Bandit, a robot that’s modeled after a human but manages to look unmistakeably synthetic. And for the autistic children Bandit treats, this disconnect from realism is entirely the point. More » Robotics – Robot – Autism spectrum – Companies – Building
June 1, 2010

A SURVEILLANCE CAMERA THAT TYPES WHAT IT SEES [SURVEILLANCE]

A prototype surveillance camera, developed at UCLA, has the ability to give a live text description of crosses its path. It provides a more efficient way to search video, and gives me a good excuse to buy a wide-brimmed hat. More » Surveillance – Security – Fire and Security – Business – Business Services
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