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Comment Re:Days of Destruction, Days of Revolt with Joe Sa (Score 1) 107

Yeah, I'm reading this now.. I'm not really a fan of comics, they generally overload my brain or something. But this book seems much more powerful with the graphical element. I'm so impressed. Hedges always complains that contemporary society has gone too far "visual" so i guess this is his response to that.
Robotics

Cheap Four-fingered Robot Hand Edges Closer To Human Dexterity 73

ananyo writes "A robot that can reproduce the dexterity of the human hand remains a dream of the bioengineering profession. One new approach to achieving this goal avoids trying to replicate the intricacy of the bones, joints and ligaments that produce our most basic gestures. A Sandia National Laboratories research team has adopted just such a strategy by designing a modular, plastic proto-hand whose electronics system is largely made from parts found in cell phones. The Sandia Hand can still perform with a high level of finesse for a robot, and is even capable of replacing the batteries in a small flashlight. It is expected to cost about $10,000, a fraction of the $250,000 price tag for a state-of-the-art robot hand today. The Sandia Hand's fingers are modular and affixed to the hand frame via magnets. This gives the researchers the flexibility to design interchangeable appendages tipped with screwdrivers, flashlights, cameras and other tools. The fingers are also designed to detach automatically to avoid damage if the hand hits a wall or other solid object too hard. The researchers say the hand can even be manipulated to retrieve and reattach a fallen finger. The Hand's current incarnation has only four fingers, including the equivalent of an opposable thumb. In the video with the article, the Sandia Hand demonstrates a number of capabilities, including, perhaps most impressively, dropping a AA battery into a flashlight."

Comment Global Cooperative Forum (Score 1) 594

If you see humanity as a collection of separate automata then this is not going to work. But is this true? Are we really all a bunch of self-optimizing machines?

My teacher Adi Da points to what he calls "prior unity", and indicates that some global internet based approach to decision making could arise virtually overnight if we got our shit together.

From the book "Not-Two Is Peace":

... no global organization presently
is equipped to deal with the complexity of the world situation,
in a way that accounts for the whole, because of the
prevailing paradigm--which is that of separate interests
negotiating toward settlements that are most advantageous
for themselves. The global good (both human and non-
human) is thereby subordinated to the aims of the separate
interests.
In the current world, human beings are simply suffering
this situation, or exploiting it, or both. Therefore, a shift of
consciousness is essential, from the mind of "tribalism" to
taking responsibility for the whole. A new global institution
needs to emerge--one which genuinely represents humakind
altogether, or "everybody-all-at-once", and, thus, empowers
the human population as a totality.
Such a forum would allow humankind to become conscious
of itself as one great coherent force--the only force
capable of requiring and implementing systemic change
that takes all factors into account. The purpose of the
Global Cooperative Forum is to create the context for a new
cooperatively-based global civilization to emerge, rather
than the current "non-civilization" that is being imposed
worldwide by exploitative, consumer-driven economics and
related military agendas.

Comment Re:Quantum Theory + Chaos Theory = Consciousness (Score 1) 729

Yeah, cool. I have often wondered about this, when quantum effects are "amplified" by a chaotic hamiltonian. But whenever I read about quantum chaos, they start going on about random matrices and billiard balls. Very strange, i don't get it at all. Thanks for the name, do you have a link to his work?

Comment Re:Not good for the market: need synchronous clock (Score 1) 448

The exchange will also need to shuffle the incoming messages (order place/cancel etc.)
Otherwise it is still a speed game: who can respond the fastest to the update (even if it happens only once a second).
This is actually really easy to do, or legislate. They could even do it on the millisecond scale and it would kill this insane quest for "zero" latency.
Suddenly a whole lot of businesses would go kaput (the HFT scene probably is worth billions btw.)

Google

Google x86 Native Browser Client Maybe Not So Crazy After All 332

GMGruman writes "Google's experimental technology to run native x86 binaries in the browser shows lots of potential, writes Neil McAllister. He's previously said it was a crazy idea, but a new version of Native Client (NaCl) caused McAllister to take a fresh look, which has led him to conclude the technology is crazy like a fox. McAllister explains what NaCl is useful for, how to use it, and why it's not a Java or a Flash or a JavaScript replacement, but something else."
Censorship

WikiLeaks Moves To Swiss Domain After DNS Takedown 488

An anonymous reader writes "Netcraft posted two reports on the movement of the WikiLeaks website today. First the site was taken down by EveryDNS, who terminated the DNS provision for wikileaks.org. A few hours later, WikiLeaks moved to a Swiss domain (wikileaks.ch). Netcraft suggests this move could be because the wikileaks.org domain was registered with a US company, which could be influenced by the US government. The new wikileaks.ch site is hosted in Sweden, but redirects all of its traffic to France. Strangely, WikiLeaks has chosen to use EveryDNS again for their new domain." This follows Amazon's removal of WikiLeaks from their cloud hosting, which has the EFF and others worrying about free speech on the net as various hosting providers receive political pressure to censor certain content. Amazon claims their decision wasn't influenced by a government inquiry, while Tableau Software freely admits that a public request from Senator Joe Lieberman prompted them to take down WikiLeaks data visualizations.

Comment Ordinal numbers and game theory (Score 1) 525

Does anyone actually have anything to say about TFA ?

It seems to be more "game theoretic", (looking at the graph of possible moves and inferring value back to the root) which makes me think about the connection between ordinal numbers and game theory that John Conway wrote about in his 1970 book "on numbers and games".

Technology

Russian Man Aims To Reinvent "Taser" Technology 131

Lanxon writes "A Russian man is hoping to overhaul the technology within Taser-type weapons — transforming them from single-shot, short-range devices that stun for a few seconds, into more effective long-range, rapid-fire weapons — by modifying the wires and the type of shock they generate, reports Wired. Non-lethal weapon developer Oleg Nemtyshkin's design uses bare wires, rather than the insulated wires favored by Taser and other stun gun makers. These wires weigh only about one sixteenth as much as insulated wire, providing less drag on the darts and improved accuracy. Nemtyshkin demonstrated his bare wire technology with a prototype – 'Legionary" — in 2001. His latest version is the S5, and a video of the weapon in action shows it firing repeatedly — almost as fast as the trigger can be pulled."
Earth

Giant Plumes of Oil Forming Below the Gulf's Surface 483

An anonymous reader sends in a NY Times article about the spread of oil from the BP gusher in the Gulf of Mexico. Quoting: "Scientists are finding enormous oil plumes in the deep waters of the Gulf of Mexico, including one as large as 10 miles long, 3 miles wide, and 300 feet thick in spots. The discovery is fresh evidence that the leak from the broken undersea well could be substantially worse than estimates that the government and BP have given. ... The plumes are depleting the oxygen dissolved in the gulf, worrying scientists, who fear that the oxygen level could eventually fall so low as to kill off much of the sea life near the plumes. Dr. Joye said the oxygen had already dropped 30 percent near some of the plumes in the month that the broken oil well had been flowing. ... [Scientists on the Pelican mission] suspect the heavy use of chemical dispersants, which BP has injected into the stream of oil emerging from the well, may have broken the oil up into droplets too small to rise rapidly. ... Dr. Joye said the findings about declining oxygen levels were especially worrisome, since oxygen is so slow to move from the surface of the ocean to the bottom. She suspects that oil-eating bacteria are consuming the oxygen at a feverish clip as they work to break down the plumes."

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