Shoot, I Forgot to Charge My Glasses Again!

>> Saturday, February 26, 2011

If you're constantly running out of battery with your phone because you can't remember to charge it, you may not want to get these. Stick with the unpowered kind.

NYT - 2.12.11 by Anne Eisenberg


A NEW device may be joining smartphones, iPads and music players that you have to charge overnight: electronic eyeglasses. These glasses have tiny batteries, microchips and assorted electronics to turn reading power on when you need it and off when you don’t.

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Watson steals Conan announcer job from Andy Richter

>> Tuesday, February 22, 2011



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Opie and Anthony Interview Ray Kurzweil

>> Saturday, February 12, 2011

Informative and hilarious. (A bit of rough language in the first few minutes, NSFW.)



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2045: Dateline Immortality

>> Thursday, February 10, 2011

Time - 2045: The Year Man Becomes Immortal (by Lev Grossman)

On Feb. 15, 1965, a diffident but self-possessed high school student named Raymond Kurzweil appeared as a guest on a game show called I've Got a Secret. He was introduced by the host, Steve Allen, then he played a short musical composition on a piano. The idea was that Kurzweil was hiding an unusual fact and the panelists — they included a comedian and a former Miss America — had to guess what it was.

On the show (see the clip on YouTube), the beauty queen did a good job of grilling Kurzweil, but the comedian got the win: the music was composed by a computer. Kurzweil got $200. (See TIME's photo-essay "Cyberdyne's Real Robot.")

Kurzweil then demonstrated the computer, which he built himself — a desk-size affair with loudly clacking relays, hooked up to a typewriter. The panelists were pretty blasé about it; they were more impressed by Kurzweil's age than by anything he'd actually done. They were ready to move on to Mrs. Chester Loney of Rough and Ready, Calif., whose secret was that she'd been President Lyndon Johnson's first-grade teacher.

But Kurzweil would spend much of the rest of his career working out what his demonstration meant. Creating a work of art is one of those activities we reserve for humans and humans only. It's an act of self-expression; you're not supposed to be able to do it if you don't have a self. To see creativity, the exclusive domain of humans, usurped by a computer built by a 17-year-old is to watch a line blur that cannot be unblurred, the line between organic intelligence and artificial intelligence.


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What is Reality? BBC Horizon Video

>> Monday, February 07, 2011

This excellent presentation takes us from relativity and quantum theory to the very latest theories and the experiments designed to prove or disprove them. Learn about the holographic principle, which theorizes that reality is a holographic projection of information encoded at the very edge of the universe, and about the idea that reality is a giant mathematical structure. Amazing stuff.



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Mostly dead is still partly alive - The future of emergency medicine

>> Sunday, February 06, 2011

Why should a shutdown of oxygen to the brain for more than 4 minutes result in irreversible death? Imagine if when you turned off your car for more than a few minutes, it became irreversibly damaged. Kind of a design flaw, wouldn't you say? What about if removing the battery from your smartphone for 4 minutes ended up killing its CPU? Ridiculous. So why do our brains go bye-bye under analogous circumstances?

As you'll see in this video, it turns out that it's not necessarily the lack of oxygen that destroys our brain cells. It's the reintroduction of oxygen that kills them. Lance Becker shows how "controlled reperfusion" can extend the boundary between life and death and allow patients to be successfully reanimated after longer and longer periods of oxygen deprivation.


Lance Becker: Modifying the Boundary between Life and Death from Singularity Institute on Vimeo.



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