April 16, 2012

SINCE #HOLOGRAM IS A TRENDING TOPIC, LET…

Since #hologram is a trending topic, let me talk a bit more about another famous hologram star. This is Hatsune Miku. Created in 2007, she is a completely digital hologramatic pop star. Even her voice is entirely synthesized! In fact, she was built by voice synthesis company Crypton to showcase their Vocaloid technology. Crypton conceived of Hatsune Miku as “An android diva in the near-future world where songs are lost.” Okay, the music is awful and should have probably stayed lost, but Hatsune Miku has attracted thousands of fans to concerts every year, including shows in the United states. The shows are largely supported by the vibrant #vocaloid community. Since Hatsune Miku’s voice is entirely synthesized, the songs she performs are largely written by her fans, who have built programs for both song writing and dancing, and can completely control the performance of the hologram. Wikipedia says that in 2011, her fans had written over 22,000 songs for her.. That community is influential enough that I’m sure you’ve heard one of its more famous songs: Hatsune Miku is also the voice behind Nyan Cat! Maybe you don’t find this terribly interesting, but this is a pretty good window into Digital Culture, and its worth paying some attention. For one thing, it shows a pretty striking contrast to the way holograms are treated in the States. Undead Tupac at Coachella and the novelty uses on cable news shows both treat holograms as somewhere between a joke and a spectacle, to be dangled out before the massed who they’ve already drugged up on ecstasy or politics; but it is dangled coyly, always concealing the wizards behind the curtain. In Japan, however, their holograms are literally singing the songs written by its communities of enthusiasts. There, everyone involved knows exactly who is pulling […]
April 16, 2012

RESHARED POST FROM ALLISON SEKULER

Allison Sekuler originally shared this post: Memory as an Optimal Foraging System Researchers test the idea that we hunt for memories in our minds the same way some animals search for food…. Sometimes, when we actively remember something, our attention seems to strategically shift from cluster to cluster of stored information, like a bee flitting from one patch of flowers to another. more at Scientific American: http://goo.gl/eQqjK #ScienceEveryday
April 16, 2012

RESHARED POST FROM SINGULARITY 2045

The spotting of this latest prototype comes just days after California Senate Bill 1298 – which directs the California Highway Patrol to set safety standards and performance requirements for autonomous vehicle testing and operation — passed the Senate Transportation Committee with an 8 to 0 vote before being sent to the Senate Rules committee. Singularity 2045 originally shared this post: http://www.wired.com/autopia/2012/04/google-autonomous-lexus-rx450h/ Exclusive: Google Expands Its Autonomous Fleet With Hybrid Lexus RX450h | Autopia | Wired.com Google has added another family member to its autonomous vehicle program, and an eagle-eyed reader in Southern California caught the Big G’s Lexus RX45
April 16, 2012

RESHARED POST FROM FREDERIC EMAM-ZADÉ GERARDINO

Frederic Emam-Zadé Gerardino originally shared this post:
April 16, 2012

DIGITAL HUMANISTS CALL IT TRANSHUMANISM,…

Digital Humanists Call it transhumanism, post-humanism, the singularity, or Human 2.0. Whatever you call it, these users see the future. This circle contains users who actively post on cybernetics, cognitive enhancements and bodily extensions, digital communities, robotics and artificial intelligence, network theory and complexity, and other aspects of the human condition in the Digital Age. __ A few people have popped up in gchat asking if I had recommendations along these lines, so I decided to make a public circle. I haven’t seen one like it; I hope this is appreciated. It is obviously small at the moment and I’m positive that there are plenty of active people in my stream that I’ve missed. Hopefully we can make the circle grow. If you think you belong in this circle or have other recommendations, please leave a comment!
April 15, 2012

RESHARED POST FROM JEFFREY SULLIVAN

Flagging the list of +John Battelle‘s so-called “open values”, which are roughly in line with what I’ve been calling the #digitalvalues . More discussion on the philosophy of digital values here: https://plus.google.com/u/0/117828903900236363024/posts/TXUwt32fWU8 Jeffrey Sullivan originally shared this post: What Values Do You Want Your Social Media Site(s) to Share with You? It’s a fascinating question, as we wrap our lives into publicly-searchable sites. John Battelle proposes the list below in the referenced article. Are these the right values, and how well does G+ fit them so far? – No gatekeepers. The web is decentralized. Anyone can start a web site. No one has the authority (in a democracy, anyway) to stop you from putting up a shingle. – An ethos of the commons. The web developed over time under an ethos of community development, and most of its core software and protocols are royalty free or open source (or both). There wasn’t early lockdown on what was and wasn’t allowed. This created chaos, shady operators, and plenty of dirt and dark alleys. But it also allowed extraordinary value to blossom in that roiling ecosystem. – No preset rules about how data is used. If one site collects information from or about a user of its site, that site has the right to do other things with that data, assuming, again, that it’s doing things that benefit all parties concerned. – Neutrality. _No one site on the web is any more or less accessible than any other site. If it’s on the web, you can find it and visit it. – Interoperability. Sites on the web share common protocols and principles, and determine independently how to work with each other. There is no centralized authority which decides who can work with who, in what way. Or would you add or replace […]
April 15, 2012

RESHARED POST FROM JENNY WINDER

Lots of great lessons on the #attentioneconomy in this essay by Dan Dennett, which is about the life and death of memes as a biological phenomenon. One aspect of attention economy that has gotten some push back is the idea that you can’t store attention the way you can collect and store traditional currencies. Dennett gives a similar argument in this essay: It is important to remember that there is very little inertia in culture; an art form or practice (or language or institution) can become extinct in a generation if its elements aren’t assiduously reproduced and reproduced. The argument, roughly, is that cultural trends that were previously “popular” (that is, memetically successful) may suddenly lose that popularity if it isn’t maintained and curated properly. I believe this generally supports my intuition that you can’t store attention; you can’t reap the benefits of former success in the present if the work hasn’t been done to maintain that attention along the way. Jenny Winder originally shared this post: The social cell What do debutante balls, the Japanese tea ceremony, Ponzi schemes and doubting clergy all have in common? By Daniel Dennett New Statesman – The social cell Current affairs, world politics, the arts and more from Britain’s award-winning magazine
April 15, 2012

RESHARED POST FROM DREW SOWERSBY

Drew Sowersby originally shared this post: Is the awakening of #AugmentedReality within reach? “The human eye has tremendous capabilities, but it is limited in its ability to focus on objects placed very near the eye. This inability to focus on near objects has lead traditional near-eye display developers to develop complex optical solutions that make the so-called near-to-eye image source appear to be located further away than it actually is and comparable to a typical television or small monitor. Innovega has developed an alternative display architecture that is based on enhancing the human eye’s normal vision capabilities. It improves sharpness of vision in one’s real-world while enabling the wearer to view extreme detail of objects placed very near to the eye and specifically at the usual distance between traditional eyewear and the eye. In this way the wearer is able to simultaneously focus on virtual content from the eyewear and on the entire spectrum of activities in the real-world. This new iOptik approach leverages the mature technology used by contact lens suppliers and eliminates the usual bulky optics that have previously been required in the design of video eyewear products.” — http://innovega-inc.com/new-architecture.php
April 15, 2012

RESHARED POST FROM RAHMET VALENTIN

The differences between Asimo and PETMAN, the walking bot from Boston Dynamics, are pretty dramatic. It might be a fun exercise to reflect on what those differences are. Consider it exercise in the #philosophyofrobotics . I could write an essay on the differences between these bots, but I want to see my stream finds most salient. What differences do you notice about PETMAN and Asimo? What are the sources and consequences of those differences? If you didn’t catch it the first time around, here’s PETMAN: http://wallpapergravity.com/wallpapers2/192/192970.jpg h/t +Matt Uebel Rahmet Valentin originally shared this post: Skynet is working. Judgement day cometh.
April 15, 2012

RESHARED POST FROM BO JENSEN

Google understands the #attentioneconomy better than anyone. h/t +Jean Bezivin Bo Jensen originally shared this post: Strata 2012: Hal Varian, Using Google Data for Short-term Economic Forecasting I enjoyed this talk about using Google Data. Definitely worth a watch. Strata 2012: Hal Varian, “Using Google Data for Short-term Economic Forecasting”
April 14, 2012

RESHARED POST FROM PETER G MCDERMOTT

The hand gestures are awkward, I think, and I hope ends up being one of those guesses we got horribly wrong. The idea of gestures is partly the result of thinking about information in terms of objects that need to be “handled” in some way or other; gestures are a way of making data objects tactile, in at least some sense. But I think this is a gross underestimation of the symbolic capability of the human brain. When I type at the keyboard, for instance, I am engaging with an interface that is very abstractly related to the content I am dealing with, and yet I can manipulate that interface with a high degree of dexterity, speed, and control. Language generally works by manipulating meaningful symbolic representations with incredibly fine-grained control. We can do it with our fingers, we can do it with the muscles in our throat, and we can do it with tiny squiggles of pixels transmitting light into our retina. We should be looking for ways of taking advantage of new symbolic structures, instead of making us paw at media like a bear at honey. Seriously, anyone knows anything about ASL or other signing systems should be embarrassed at the complete lack of sophistication in our gesture interfaces. It’s like we are proud of our illiteracy. These are interface problems, and hopefully neural interfaces, including retinal tracking, have a bigger impact on our interfacing with screens in the future. h/t +michael barth, left the comment in his thread: https://plus.google.com/u/0/108101284889680772496/posts/LYfbMfExqpq Peter G McDermott originally shared this post: The Evolution of Screen Technology If you look at most of the sci-fi movies from the 70’s and 80’s, they featured CRT’s still as the technology of the future. With the advent of Plasma and LCD (now OLED), we are starting […]
April 14, 2012

RESHARED POST FROM DERYA UNUTMAZ

Derya Unutmaz originally shared this post: This video is about Man’s quest to find Artificial Intelligence.
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