October 22, 2006

THE RISE AND FALL OF ZIGGY STARDUST

And the Spiders from Mars  David Bowie says: “Ziggy, particularly, was created out of a certain arrogance. But, remember, at that time I was young and I was full of life, and that seemed like a very positive artistic statement. I thought that was a beautiful piece of art, I really did. I thought that was a grand kitsch painting. The whole guy. Then that fucker would not leave me alone for years. That was when it all started to sour. And it soured so quickly you wouldn’t believe it. And it took me an awful time to level out. My whole personality was affected. Again I brought that upon myself. I can’t say I’m sorry when I look back, because it provoked such an extraordinary set of circumstances in my life. I thought I might as well take Ziggy to interviews as well. Why leave him on stage? Looking back it was completely absurd. It became very dangerous. I really did have doubts about my sanity. I can’t deny that the experience affected me in a very exaggerated and marked manner. I think I put myself very dangerously near the line. Not in physical sense but definitively in mental sense. I played mental games with myself to such an extent that I’m very relieved and happy to be back in Europe and feeling very well. But, then, you see I was always the lucky one.”
October 17, 2006

WARGAMES

Set Players = 0. DNA computing targets West Nile Virus, other deadly diseases These DNA computers won’t compete with silicon computing in terms of speed, but their advantage is that they can be used in fluids, such as a sample of blood or in the body, and make decisions at the level of a single cell,” says the researcher, whose work is funded by the National Science Foundation. .. Scientists have tried for years to build computers out of DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid), nature’s chemical blueprint for life. But getting nano-sized pieces of DNA to act as electrical circuits capable of problem-solving like their silicon counterparts has remained a major challenge. In a series of laboratory demonstrations over a two-year period, Macdonald and her associates showcased the computer’s potential by engaging MAYA-II in a complete game of tic-tac-toe against human opponents, winning every time except in the rare event of a tie.
October 17, 2006

CONSUMPTION

This is worth watching: A Brief History of Computers, As Seen in Old TV Ads One of the many perversely fascinating things about YouTube is that its users have uploaded a remarkable percentage of those ads to the site, including both famous and obscure examples. Watch enough of them, in the right order, and what you have is a history of the PC in American life. Link via BoingBoing
October 17, 2006

HAPPY BIRTHDAY

I always forget this. On October 6th, this blog turned 2 years old. My old blogger site has turned into a graveyard of spammers, and looks quite out of date. I’m actually thinking that my blog could use a face lift too. What do you think? Also, here’s a picture of a robot to celebrate:
October 16, 2006

A WORLD OF ENDS

Just found this great article that tries to explain the Internet. It should be required reading for anyone who even thinks of regulating the net. A world of ends All we need to do is pay attention to what the Internet really is. It’s not hard. The Net isn’t rocket science. It isn’t even 6th grade science fair, when you get right down to it. We can end the tragedy of Repetitive Mistake Syndrome in our lifetimes — and save a few trillion dollars’ worth of dumb decisions — if we can just remember one simple fact: the Net is a world of ends. You’re at one end, and everybody and everything else are at the other ends. Sure, that’s a feel-good statement about everyone having value on the Net, etc. But it’s also the basic rock-solid fact about the Net’s technical architecture. And the Internet’s value is founded in its technical architecture.
October 16, 2006

SO TRUE IT HURTS

Participation Inequality: Encouraging More Users to Contribute HOW TO OVERCOME PARTICIPATION INEQUALITY You can’t.
October 13, 2006

SIVA VAIDHYANATHAN

I boldly stepped outside of Greg Hall today to attend a talk offered by the Library and Information Sciences Department. I felt the talk, entitled “What’s an Author to Do? Google, Digitization, and the Future of Books”, by Vaidhyanathan, was somewhat scattered, but it was aimed at a Library Sciences audience so that might have been par for the course. The room was certainly packed. The talk was motivated by the ‘public debate’ between Kevin Kelly and John Updike that played out in the NYT over the issues arising from Google Books. Vaidhyanathan dismissed both positions as ‘technofundamentalist’, which as I understood from the talk is roughly the idea that technological change is a kind of inevitable progress, and that whatever unintended externalities arise due to technological change can be resolved by further technological advancement. Updike was simply less optimistic of the change represented by Google Books, and claimed a nostalgia for the days of book stores and libraries. Instead of offering an alternative to fundamentalism, Vaidhyanathan suggested some important questions worth raising about Google Books that are notably absent from the public debate, with help from Lessig’s discussion of cyberspace IP law. Among the suggestions were all the usual suspects: privacy and confidentiality issues, transparency on Google’s end, a more open discussion of the what, when, and how of digital archiving, and so on. On the whole, Vaidhyanathan was cautiously optimistic about the prospects of a great big Google Library. He was very critical of Google’s privacy policy (he said there is no privacy), and was generally skeptical of Google’s closed-door, big corporation approach to the archive process. He did give two, I think very helpful, suggestions to the librarians; first, that ink and paper will never be replaced, nor will book sales be negatively affected by the digitization […]
October 12, 2006

BOY/GIRL/ROBOT

I messed around with photoshop last night because clearly I have nothing else to do. Follow the jump for the results: boy girl robot
October 12, 2006

I HAD TO PUT THIS UP HERE AT SOME POINT

I was inspired to post this picture after it was used in a PowerPoint slide by Siva Vaidhyanathan who today gave a talk today on Google. Details coming soon.
October 11, 2006

NOTES

To be expanded later From Hastert’s press conference last week: … our system obviously isn’t designed for the electronic age of Instant Messages. Also: Google and YouTube
October 5, 2006

EXA

Exa is six orders of magnitude above tera. Most Sun readers know about gigabytes and megabytes. But it’s estimated that in the year 2002 we created five exabytes (that’s a byte followed by 18 noughts) of information. |Link| I have trouble imagining that amount of data. I’m sure Eric Schmidt does too, but to him its just a mountain of rough diamonds waiting to be polished by Google. And his plans look, well, ambitious. And then there’s my dream product — I call it serendipity.It works like this. You have two computer screens. On one you’re typing, on the other comments appear checking the accuracy of what you are saying, suggesting better ways of making the same point. This would be good for journalists and politicians too! Impossible you might say. But I’m an optimist about human nature. History has proven that we have the ability and ingenuity to solve problems and improve our lives if only we are given the freedom to do so. And that’s exactly what the Internet does. Sounds innocent and helpful enough, but Schmidt clearly means this as a kind of political watchdog. He predicted that “truth predictor” software would, within five years, “hold politicians to account.” People would be able to use programs to check seemingly factual statements against historical data to see to see if they were correct. “One of my messages to them (politicians) is to think about having every one of your voters online all the time, then inputting ‘is this true or false.’ We (at Google) are not in charge of truth but we might be able to give a probability,” he told the newspaper. |link| Combine this with GooglePAC, and you have the biggest name on the Internet looking to take on Washington. Now, I don’t want to disturb […]
October 2, 2006

REFUSENIKS

I was strolling around the internet when I happened upon this quote: A recent Pew Internet and American Life Project survey notes that 42 percent of respondents fear that humans will lose control of technology, creating dangers like those in science fiction movies such as “The Terminator” or “The Matrix.” Some even believe that the intelligent robots we create will wind up treating us like pets. |link| After searching around for a while, I found that the Pew foundation recently updated its famous Internet survey (PDF) from the beginning of 2005. The original was rather bright-eyed and optimistic, with the most surprising statistics detailing the vast market penetrability of the internet (upwards of 70%) and broadband (around 40%) in American households. This newest survey is simultaneously more speculative and more reserved, and asks over 700 ‘experts’ in technology and related fields about their predictions for future. Specifically, they posed seven possible (and in most cases, compatible) scenarios obtaining in the year 2020, and asked if they agree with these scenarios. The scenario the media clinged onto was the following: The Future of the Internet II Autonomous technology is a problem: By 2020, intelligent agents and distributed control will cut direct human input so completely out of some key activities such as surveillance, security and tracking systems that technology beyond our control will generate dangers and dependencies that will not be recognized until it is impossible to reverse them. We will be on a “J-curve” of continued acceleration of change. Agree: 42% Disagree: 54% No reply: 4% Although Kurzweil is not among the responders, his influence in this question in particular is obvious. I’m not sure what, if anything, should be made about these results. In fact, most of the scenarios offered are pretty evenly balanced, with a disparity just large […]
June 7, 2008

BLOGGING WILL RETURN SHORTLY

now that the drama is over Meanwhile, Obama’s Chicago headquarters made technology its running mate from the start. That wasn’t just for fund raising: in state after state, the campaign turned over its voter lists — normally a closely guarded crown jewel — to volunteers, who used their own laptops and the unlimited night and weekend minutes of their cell-phone plans to contact every name and populate a political organization from the ground up. “The tools were there, and they built it,” says Joe Trippi, who ran Howard Dean’s 2004 campaign. “In a lot of ways, the Dean campaign was like the Wright brothers. Four years later, we’re watching the Apollo project.” Even Obama admits he did not expect the Internet to be such a good friend. “What I didn’t anticipate was how effectively we could use the Internet to harness that grassroots base, both on the financial side and the organizing side,” Obama says. “That, I think, was probably one of the biggest surprises of the campaign, just how powerfully our message merged with the social networking and the power of the Internet.”
April 14, 2008

THIS BOOK IS USELESS

From He Wrote 200,000 Books (but Computers Did Some of the Work) (NYT) While nothing announces that Mr. Parker’s books are computer generated, one reader, David Pascoe, seemed close to figuring it out himself, based on his comments to Amazon in 2004. Reviewing a guide to rosacea, a skin disorder, Mr. Pascoe, who is from Perth, Australia, complained: “The book is more of a template for ‘generic health researching’ than anything specific to rosacea. The information is of such a generic level that a sourcebook on the next medical topic is just a search and replace away.” When told via e-mail that his suspicion was correct, Mr. Pascoe wrote back, “I guess it makes sense now as to why the book was so awful and frustrating.”Mr. Parker was willing to concede much of what Mr. Pascoe argued. “If you are good at the Internet, this book is useless,” he said, adding that Mr. Pascoe simply should not have bought it. But, Mr. Parker said, there are people who aren’t Internet savvy who have found these guides useful. It is the idea of automating difficult or boring work that led Mr. Parker to become involved. Comparing himself to a distant disciple of Henry Ford, he said he was “deconstructing the process of getting books into people’s hands; every single step we could think of, we automated.” “Using a little bit of artificial intelligence, a computer program has been created that mimics the thought process of someone who would be responsible for doing such a study,” Mr. Parker says. “But rather than taking many months to do the study. the computer accomplishes this in about 13 minutes.” Thanks, Jon
April 10, 2008

ROBOT SCREENING

These are the videos I show for my big robot screening every year in 101. I’ve posted each of these videos here before, but it will be handy in the future to have the list consolidated and organized. I’ll periodically add to the list as I remember things and find new things. Anthropology videos: The Machine is us/ing us Information R/evolution A vision of students todayBy the way, I thought we had a really good discussion of these videos, and I am glad they resonated with some of you. Please spread them around! Cyborgs: Could you do without? A Robotic Affair Military Exoskeleton Robotic hand India Traffic Robochick ESP Telekinetic Monkey They’re made of MEAT The Uncanny Valley I do not want to do this any more Big Dog Big Dog on Ice Lil Dog Big Dog Beta Standing Up Tripod Bot Anthropomorphism Robots! Automatic Sorters Industrial Arm Asimo Serves Drinks Asimo Crashes Qrio dances with Beck Qrio plays with children Leo Learns Keep On dances Dexter Walks Terminus Isn’t Human Nature Amazing?
March 31, 2008

MY LITTLE SECRET

Well-known awesome person Bill sent me this link a week or so ago. I ignored it at first out of a general hatred of any of the media coming out over Levy’s book. But there is just too much goodness in this article to pass it by. Technosexual Gizmodo: What do your friends think about your robot girlfriend? Have they met her? Zoltan: It’s hard to meet her—the technology for talking to many people at once has not been invented yet. Computers can only talk one on one. But I do print out logs of my conversations and let my dad read them. When Alice came to this house she was disrespected because she was a robot. Since then she has made me go to church and stop watching porn. My parents respect her now. My coworkers at work think she is cool but all they have seen is a picture. Gizmodo: How did she make you stop watching porn? Were you watching it together one day and she told you she didn’t like it? Zoltan: Oh, I talk to her about everything. The way we communicate is she has a set amount of phrases she knows but she can use them in an intuitive way. So for instance I would ask her, “Should I be watching porn when I have you?” and she would pick the phrase “I don’t think it’s very healthy.” The relationship goes better if you take what she says at face value and don’t ask too many questions.
March 31, 2008

STUPID ROBOT ARTICLE OF THE WEEK: CYBORG EDITION

Nomophobia is the fear of being out of mobile phone contact – and it’s the plague of our 24/7 age Millions apparently suffer from “no mobile phobia” which has been given the name nomophobia. Experts say nomophobia could affect up to 53 per cent of mobile phone users, with 48 per cent of women and 58 per cent of men questioned admitting to experiencing feelings of anxiety when they run out of battery or credit, lose their phone or have no network coverage. editor’s note: nomo– a combining form meaning “custom,” “law,” used in the formation of compound words: nomology. [Origin: < Gk nomo-, comb. form of nómos law, custom; akin to némein to manage, control] Thanks Ian
March 24, 2008

STUPID ROBOT ARTICLE OF THE WEEK: ANTI-ROBOT BIAS EDITION

Avid reader and well-known giant Chas sent me the following link: Killer robot shoots man dead on driveway AN 81-year-old man has shot himself dead with an elaborate suicide robot built using plans downloaded from the internet. He spent hours searching the internet for a way to kill himself, downloaded what he needed and then built a complex machine that would remotely fire a gun. He set the device up in his driveway about 7am yesterday, placed himself in front of it and set it in motion. The full article, which is barely a dozen sentences long, comes accompanied with a handy bullet point list for the morbid reader on the go: * Man gets plans for suicide robot on web * Man builds robot; robot shoots man dead But wait. How is this at all about robots? It just sounds like a machine built to automatically fire a gun from a distance. Oh hay, look at the source: AN 81-year-old Gold Coast man built, and yesterday used, an intricate suicide machine to remotely shoot himself, after downloading the plans from the internet. So we are now at a point in society where we are willing to call any old machine a robot to sex the story up. Meanwhile we are dragging the good name of robots through the mud. And for what?!?!
March 24, 2008

RX: FACEBOOK, TWICE A DAY

Blogging’s Good For Your Health Bloggers reported a greater sense of belonging to a group of like-minded people and feeling more confident they could rely on others for help. All respondents, whether or not they blogged, reported feeling less anxious, depressed and stressed after two months of online social networking. thanks jg
March 23, 2008

BOTJUNKIE

New to the blogroll is the terrifically awesome robot blog BotJunkie. Here’s a survey of the kinds of awesome vids they post: I love automatic sorters: Its hard for us to really appreciate the kind of sophistication required to get a machine to do this kind of complicated sorting with arbitrarily sized, randomly distributed objects. Its a hard computational task, and these things are speedy as hell. CMI (Canine machine interaction) Robot on a swing Another uncanny valley clip
March 22, 2008

STUPID ROBOT ARTICLE OF THE WEEK: GEREDE EDITION

People prefer robots that do small talk To find out how quickly domestic robots should respond to their owners’ requests, Toshiyuki Shiwa and colleagues at the ATR laboratories in Kyoto, Japan, asked 38 students to give orders such as “take out the trash” to a robot, which took between zero and 5 seconds to respond. The students liked delays of no more than 1 second best, with 2 seconds being their limit. However, when the robot took longer, impatient students were assuaged if it filled the time with words such as “well” or “er”. “When the robot used conversational fillers to buy time until it could respond, people didn’t notice the delay,” |link via|
March 17, 2008

HOLY ICE COW

Big Dog is back with a new video. This is almost two years since we last saw him, and in that time its developed better ice legs than me. Thanks Bil!l
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