March 12, 2009

OBVIOUS

March 9, 2009

SEARCH IS SOLVED

Next we solve knowledge. From Wolfram Alpha Computes Answers To Factual Questions. This Is Going To Be Big. There is no risk of Wolfram Alpha becoming too smart, or taking over the world. It’s good at answering factual questions; it’s a computing machine, a tool — not a mind. I predict that this will work rather poorly, but enough to generate interest and to be appealed to a moderate amount of the time. And it will be followed by competitors that do the same thing, only much worse. And then, out of nowhere, using some closely guarded proprietary methods, some tech company will knock this out of the park with the “It just works” feature from day one. And it will be the dawning of a new age.
March 2, 2009

HISTORY

I had a brief debate on the patio of Jesse’s apartment on Saturday regarding ‘dangers’ of historically blind philosophy. Today, I read the following aside on Peter Smith’s blog : Why should the philosopher be any more especially interested in the history of her subject than the physicist is in the history of hers? If you take a broadly naturalist line, then I think the answer, to a first approximation, is: there is no good reason. The physicist and philosopher alike should start from the hard-won available theoretical options in their best-developed forms. Of course, philosophy is difficult, there’s a danger of foreclosing options too soon, and it is a good to remind ourselves that there may be more theoretical options than the currently most explored ones: the Great Dead Philosophers might provide a useful source we can mine for alternative ideas. So, less approximately, the naturalistic philosopher — being grateful for all the help she can get in her pursuit of truth — might occasionally delve into the history of philosophy for inspiration (and she supposes that she’s more likely to get inspiration from something like the lines of thought actually pursued by her best predecessors than from straw positions created by incompetent exegesis). Still, by my lights, the naturalistic philosopher’s interest in the history of her subject should remain relatively minor and completely instrumental. It perhaps feeds into her thinking about causation or knowledge, or whatever: but it is causation and knowledge that she cares about, and she is interested in Descartes or Hume or Kant only insofar as they offer useful pointers. And as soon as she finds herself at the edge of interpretative swamps — which is in practice rather soon — the naturalistic philosopher will typically lose interest: let the historians amuse themselves, and come […]
February 27, 2009

THIS ROBOT USES LANGUAGE

From Chaos filter helps robots make sense of the world The Oxford group’s FabMap software tackles those problems by having a robot assign a visual “vocabulary” of up to a thousand individual “words” for each scene, every two seconds. The “words” describe particular objects in a scene, for example a bicycle seat, and the software learns to link words that occur together into groups that are given words of their own. For example, the word “bicycle seat” is almost always found associated with the words “bicycle wheel” and “bicycle chain”, so they linked together in a so-called “bag of words” – “bicycle”. That means when the robot revisits a scene that now lacks, say, a bicycle, it notes a single change rather than the disappearance of many smaller features. That prevents too much significance being attached to the bike’s disappearance and means the robot is more likely to recognise the scene as familiar, says Newman. Video of this bot posted below the break because its shitty ad autoplays.
February 26, 2009

INTERFACES

February 26, 2009

WALL-E AND GENDER

From Pixar’s Gender Problem WALL-E: Robot somehow acquires human gender characteristics, strives to clean up earth, goes on adventure to space. Why does WALL-E need to be male? Why does EVE need to be female? Couldn’t they both be gender ambiguous and still fall in love? That would have been a bold move, but I think it’s safe to say that Pixar is less than bold on the gender front. “Hey, guys, we have this robot with no inherent gender identity. We want to give it an arbitrary gender. Maybe we could make it female. Yeah, no, that would just just be ridiculous.” Female characters: EVE, Mary, maybe some of the dead ex-captains of the Axiom Challenging Gender Stereotypes score: 2/10. EVE is the competent scientist-bot. Still, making something that is inherently genderless male because male=neutral is bullshit.* … I just returned from seeing WALL-E with my 12-year-old sister, and I’d like to revise my comments on it somewhat. The first time, I just watched for enjoyment, but this time, I tried very hard to identify the cues and actions that marked WALL-E’s and EVE’s genders and see if I could imagine them as gender neutral. In truth, it wasn’t too hard. Up until the scene when they introduce themselves by name, it was pretty easy to imagine each of them as either the opposite gender or gender-neutral. There are only a few things that specifically gender WALL-E as male: his name, a single comment from John (“I know that guy.”), and his copying of the male part of the “Hello Dolly” dances. His voice could be interpreted as masculine, but I forced myself to think “gender neutral” and it actually worked pretty well. With just a few tweaks, particularly the name, I think that WALL-E could have been portrayed […]
February 25, 2009

PEOPLE DO NOT UNDERSTAND TECHNOLOGY

or the brain, for that matter. In this case, the sensible, anti-pseudoscience guy has the wrong position, for the same reason, as the other wrong person. 5 points extra credit for listing each scientific, theoretical, conceptual, or practical confusion the motivates this discussion.
February 18, 2009

BEST ROBOTS OF 2008

From Singularity Hub (thx Lally)
February 11, 2009

YOU DON’T HAVE A RIGHT

This is sort of interesting: New Kindle Audio Feature causes a stir (WSJ) Kindle 2 is smaller than the first version of the product.The new device also features a five-way navigation element, faster wireless service for downloading books and the ability to wirelessly sync between Kindles and cellphones. Some publishers and agents expressed concern over a new, experimental feature that reads text aloud with a computer-generated voice. “They don’t have the right to read a book out loud,” said Paul Aiken, executive director of the Authors Guild. “That’s an audio right, which is derivative under copyright law.” An Amazon spokesman noted the text-reading feature depends on text-to-speech technology, and that listeners won’t confuse it with the audiobook experience. Amazon owns Audible, a leading audiobook provider. Is reading a book a derivative work? How can we even make sense of ‘derivative works’ when dealing with digital technologies?
February 2, 2009

PRINT IS DEAD

– Egon, “Ghostbusters” I recently wrote up a very long comment in response to this post on LiteraryGulag. It screwed up the formatting of my comment, so I am reproducing it here for posterity. Let’s see if we can’t get Sheets to show up and respond! I find the recent lamenting over the death of traditional newspapers to be a curious phenomenon. I suppose people wailed and moaned over the death of radio, and I vaguely remember similar chicken little articles as cable (and particularly cable news) began to steal viewers from network television. Newspapers enjoyed a monopoly over the kitchen table during these media transitions for a few basic reasons: the news was reliable, portable, and incredibly user friendly. More than any other alternative, the newspaper allowed readers to extract the information they wanted, and to skim or ignore the rest. The internet radically increases the portability and user-friendliness of media, and of news media in particular. I scan RSS feeds on my phone on the bus ride to work, and my girlfriend is infatuated with aggregator services like Newser and The Daily Beast that can digest and colsolidate massive amounts of information from all over the net into easily assimiliated bites. There may be some sacrifice of depth in favor of a breadth of knowledge, though articles of interest will get singled out and saved for more in depth review at a more convienent time. This behavior in particular is sorely absent from your attempt to villainize the internet and hold it responsible for the death of journalism. The moral you draw from studies about apparent “changes” in reader behavior are terribly misleading in this regard. Exploring the web is precisely a process of filtering and sorting, of determining what is important and worth paying attention to, what […]
January 31, 2009

I HAVE BEEN SAYING THIS FOR YEARS

New Study Shows Time Spent Online Important for Teen Development Results from the most extensive U.S. study on teens and their use of digital media show that America’s youth are developing important social and technical skills online – often in ways adults do not understand or value. “It might surprise parents to learn that it is not a waste of time for their teens to hang out online,” said Mizuko Ito, University of California, Irvine researcher and the report’s lead author. “There are myths about kids spending time online – that it is dangerous or making them lazy. But we found that spending time online is essential for young people to pick up the social and technical skills they need to be competent citizens in the digital age.”
January 31, 2009

I THINK THE WORD IS HAMMER

June 23, 2010

STUPID ROBOT MAKES THE OIL SPILL EVEN WORSE, SOMEHOW [BP]

The hits keep on coming from BP! Today, a bumbling robot knocked the cap off the well, causing the spill to actually increase in its rate of destruction. Well, fuck. More »
June 23, 2010

HOMING IN ON THE ORIGINS OF BLINDSIGHT

One of the most striking examples of our brain’s capacity to subconsciously process visual input is the phenomenon called “blindsight.” Individuals with damage to the primary visual cortex are effectively blind—they’re not consciously aware of objects in their visual field. But, remarkably, they remain capable of navigating around obstacles they can’t actually “see.” Now, research with other primates has started to untangle the pathways that enable this blindsight ability. A paper describing the findings will appear in today’s issue of Nature. Read the rest of this article… Read the comments on this post
June 23, 2010

KANSAS HOSTS WORLD RECORD LINE FOLLOWING EVENT

A big train station seems like a very appropriate place to try for a world record in robot line following, and for a brief period last week, Union Station in Kansas City was (partially) given over to a bunch of little robots following a really, really long line. Over 400 feet of line, to be specific. 50 robots managed to follow the line all at once for a few seconds, setting a new world record which, to be fair, hadn’t officially existed beforehand. Now, though, 50 robots on one line for 2 seconds or 15 robots on one line for 1 minute are the numbers to beat. If you want a part in the challenge, you can build a line following robot for next to nothing (or a lot more than that). After the jump, a bot’s-eye view of the event. [ Kansas City Robotics Society ] VIA [ Robots Dreams ]
June 23, 2010

GOOGLE TRIUMPHANT, BEATS BACK BILLION DOLLAR VIACOM LAWSUIT

It was a billion dollar lawsuit, and YouTube has won—for now. The United States District Court for the Southern District of New York has rejected Viacom’s claim that Google’s premier video site was guilty of massive copyright infringement. Instead, the court has granted Google’s motion for summary judgment and asserted that YouTube fully qualifies for “safe harbor” protections under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. “This is an important victory not just for us, but also for the billions of people around the world who use the Web to communicate and share experiences with each other,” Google just announced on its blog. “We’re excited about this decision and look forward to renewing our focus on supporting the incredible variety of ideas and expression that billions of people post and watch on YouTube every day around the world.” Viacom had contended that most of the “safe harbor” provisions in the DMCA did not protect Google from Viacom’s infringement claims. Groups like the Electronic Frontier Foundation argued that if Viacom’s arguments prevailed, they would severely compromise the viability of online content providers both huge and small, and would gut the DMCA’s protections for sites that host or transmit other people’s content. eBay, Facebook, Ask.com, and Yahoo! similarly weighed in on the case. “The present case shows that the DMCA notification regime works efficiently,” the court noted, “when Viacom over a period of months accumulated some 100,000 videos and then sent one mass take-down notice on February 2, 2007. By the next business day YouTube had removed virtually all of them.” Viacom, it should be noted, doesn’t agree with the sweeping judicial ruling (which was a relatively sparse 30-pager), as is evident from the press statement we just received. Viacom intends to appeal the case. “We believe that this ruling by the lower court […]
June 23, 2010

YOUTUBE – PHIRTUAL BEES

June 22, 2010

GOOGLE AND TWITTER POUR COLD WATER ON “HOT NEWS”

Google and Twitter have weighed in on the “hot news” doctrine, which grants newspapers in some states a time-limited, quasi-property right over facts they report, arguing that the legal concept is old ‘n’ busted in the instantaneous Internet age. The companies filed an amicus brief in the legal case between financial website theflyonthewall.com and Barclays Plc, claiming that Internet chatter cannot be contained and that restricting the spread of news content could hurt the public. FREE-RIDING FLY A US federal judge ruled back in March that The Fly had misappropriated content from major analyst firms—Morgan Stanley, Barclays Plc, and Merrill Lynch—to get a “free ride” on their stock recommendations. The firms (and the judge) believed that they had invested time and resources into researching the market, and The Fly was making money off of their hard effort by offering subscriptions so that users could access The Fly’s near-realtime writeups of the analysts’ work. Read the rest of this article… Read the comments on this post
June 22, 2010

XYTOI.JPG

http://i.imgur.com/xyToi.jpg
June 22, 2010

YOUTUBE – WORLD PREMIERE: 20 NAO ROBOTS DANCING IN SYNCHRONIZED HARMONY

Shared by Daniel I still don’t understand the fascination with dancing robots, but there you go.
June 22, 2010

ICUB LEARNS TO CATCH, SORT OF

iCub is a robot designed to study cognition and learning, and his latest talent is dynamic ball catching. Rather than being programmed to do this, iCub gets ‘taught’ by a human, who makes catching motions while being hooked up to some motion encoding hardware. This approach allows iCub to dynamically adapt to variable ball trajectories, which is the kind of thing that happens all of the time outside of the lab, as it were. Obviously, iCub needs to speed up a bit if he wants to be useful in a baseball game, and he certainly doesn’t have anything on the speed or precision of robot hands like this or this. But, iCub also doesn’t depend on an array of high speed cameras, and he also doesn’t depend on a constant trajectory for the ball, making him far more adaptable. At this point, I’m not entirely sure if iCub needs faster hardware or software or both, but the potential is here for something pretty cool in the near future. [ RobotCub iCub ]
June 20, 2010

BBC NEWS – UTAH FIRING SQUAD DEATH ANNOUNCED ON TWITTER

Shared by Daniel classy News of the firing squad execution of Utah murderer Ronnie Lee Gardner was officially announced on Twitter, in a grisly first for the micro-blogging site.
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