Archive for May, 2010

Rethink Afghanistan

Friday, May 28th, 2010

The US Senate just approved funding for a surge in troops in Afghanistan, but overwhelmingly voted down giving a timetable for withdrawal. What does that mean? What are we doing in Afghanistan anyway, why, and to what effect on the Afghan people? Are there peaceful solutions we could be employing that would dramatically improve the situation?

The answers to these questions are literally a matter of life and death for the people of Afghanistan and for the enlisted personnel stationed in the area. “Rethink Afghanistan” cuts through the myriad of conflicting evidence and delivers the relief of a clear and concise perspective.

Caution: there are visually disturbing parts of this film. It’s graphic nature is a reflection of the reality of the situation, and in this case could be good medicine for our cultural disconnection from this very real conflict.

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Gaming and Dreaming

Wednesday, May 26th, 2010

By controlling the events within a video game reality, gamers are practicing for controlling other alternate realities – like dreams. Psychologist and lucid dream researcher, Jayne Gackenbach, conducts studies on the positive effects of video games on the ability to lucid dream.

Several intriguing parallels between lucid dreams and video games first emerged when Gackenbach examined past research on games. Both lucid dreamers and gamers seemed to have better spatial skills and were less prone to motion sickness.

The two groups have also demonstrated a high level of focus or concentration, whether honed through lucidity-training activities, such as meditation, or through hours spent fighting virtual enemies to reach the next level in a game.

The first study suggested that people who frequently played video games were more likely to report lucid dreams, observer dreams where they viewed themselves from outside their bodies, and dream control that allowed people to actively influence or change their dream worlds – qualities suggestive of watching or controlling the action of a video-game character.

A second study tried to narrow down the uncertainties by examining dreams that participants experienced from the night before, and focused more on gamers. It found that lucid dreams were common, but that the gamers never had dream control over anything beyond their dream selves.

The gamers also frequently flipped between a first person view from within the body and a third person view of themselves from outside, except never with the calm detachment of a distant witness.

Tim Schafer’s game game Psychonauts put players into a psi-training school for the purposes of developing telekinesis, telepathy, pyrokinesis, and teleportation (and much, much more). In the game, the player enters the psyches of other characters to help them overcome fears, traumas, and nightmares. If you’re into gaming and dreaming this gem is an excellent trainer.

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Euler’s Identity Crop Circle

Tuesday, May 25th, 2010

A fresh crop circle next to a windmill in central England demonstrates the mathematical theorem known as Euler’s Identity.

Euler’s Identity, also known as “the most beautiful theorem in mathematics” and “the greatest equation ever”, is encoded in the crop circle via binary digits in standard 8-bit ASCII code. The circle is divided into 12 sections, each filled with blanks and notches – 0′s and 1′s. The equation is mirrored on both sides of the formation.

Read each 8-bit ASCII character from inside to out, starting along a double tramline which points towards a nearby windmill, using bars = 1 or spaces = 0. Then proceed clockwise until all twelve 8-bit characters have been read. In order to read a second duplicate set of binary digits, use bars = 0 or spaces = 1.

It seems like the Wilton Windmill circle could be decoded by using the windmill itself as a key. We got 4 crossings of the windmill… so the 12 sections of the crop circle become 3 main groups. Each ASCII row of the 3 groups become a byte. Possibly leading to a deeper level to decode. The crop circle is spinning clockwise – so that might be the direction to read the code from section to section. As the crop circle might be connected to the windmill as a key to decode it, the angle of the entry section is probably the same angle of the stairs of the windmill. It also seems to have a DNA connection as there are 4 elements used in each section (no line, left line, right line and left + right line) just like the 4 basic elements of the DNA: Adenine, Thymine, Guanine, Cytosine. Leaving further decoding to all gr8 researchers out there.

The breakdown gets more and more complicated from there. I highly recommend checking out the full range of interpretations and adding any of your own.

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Teleportation and Quantum Entanglement

Saturday, May 22nd, 2010

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Effects of Psychoactive Substances on Spiders

Friday, May 21st, 2010

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Posted in Video |

Singularity Now!

Thursday, May 20th, 2010

When it rains, it pours. And right now it’s pouring Singularity like sweet, hot maple syrup all over the fluffy stack of flapjacks that is humanity.

An editor from the transhumanist magazine H+ sums it all up very nicely with a compilation of recent developments on everything from nanofactories to 3D human tissue printers to plasma fusion. The asymptote is in view.

Meanwhile, American researchers have successful produced an amazing breakthrough in the creation of artificial life. Pre-programmed DNA “software” implanted in a surrogate cell. The cell then reads the new, synthetic DNA, produces the proteins encoded therein and converts the surrogate into the cell species specified by the genetic code. The newly minted cell species then copies itself billions of times – all containing the same synthetically programmed DNA. New life.

“I think they’re going to potentially create a new industrial revolution,” Dr Venter said.

“If we can really get cells to do the production that we want, they could help wean us off oil and reverse some of the damage to the environment by capturing carbon dioxide.”

Simultaneously, we don’t know the risks of launching vast synthetic organisms into the wild. It’s kind of an organic grey goo quandry.

However, we will have the machines on our side! Newly developed transistors allow biological proteins to communicate with to nano-electronic circuits.

First, researchers built the backbone of the transistor out of a carbon nanotube between two electrodes. Next, they insulated the electrodes and covered the nanotube with a mixture of fatty molecules called lipids and proteins. The covering formed a lipid “bilayer” — a double lipid membrane — much like those that make up the outer membranes of biological cells.

The researchers then poured a solution of sodium ions, potassium ions and adenosine triphosphate, or ATP, over the transistor while running a voltage through it. In cells, ATP is the primary source of energy. It fulfilled the same role in the transistor, powering the proteins embedded in the lipid bilayer.

These proteins began working, transferring sodium and potassium ions across the bilayer. The charges from the ions created an electrical field around the transistor, which then changed the ability of the transistor to conduct electricity by as much as 35 percent. The higher the concentration of ATP, the more the conductivity changed.

Getting a biological molecule to control the electric current in a transistor is a first step toward computers that would interface directly with the brain.

“We are about to break the surly bonds of [reality] and punch the face of God!” – H. Simpson

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DataTomb

Thursday, May 20th, 2010

What happens to all the data encoded on defunct digital storage devices? It disappears.

But not if the Swiss can save it! A superteam of European archivists have banded together to save archaic data formats by creating a “digital genome” timecapsule to be secreted away deep inside the Swiss Alps.

The timecapsule is the work of the Planets Project and contains the future-key to unlock defunct digital formats.

But as technological breakthroughs help people to live longer, the lifespan of technology gets shorter, meaning the European Union alone loses digital information worth at least 3 billion euros every year, they said.

Studies suggest common data storage formats like CDs and DVDs only last 20 years, while digital file formats have a life expectancy of just five to seven years. Hardware even less.

The project hopes to preserve “data DNA,” the information and tools to access and read historical digital material and prevent digital memory loss into the next century.

America tried something similar by carving a Hall of Records into Mt. Rushmore. The archive includes America’s founding documents, the story of the United States, and a bunch of golden plates explaining why we’re better than Mexico.

Make a note and save it to your ZIP disc! Then get outside and build some pyramids – that data lasts forever.

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Oldest North American Pyramid Tomb Discovered

Tuesday, May 18th, 2010

A team of archeologists in Mexico’s deep south have excacated the oldest Mesoamerican pyramid tomb. The tomb is dated between 700 and 500 BC.

The tomb was found at a site built by Zoque Indians in Chiapa de Corzo, in southern Chiapas state. It may be almost 1,000 years older than the better-known pyramid tomb of the Mayan ruler Pakal at the Palenque archaeological site, also in Chiapas.

The ornaments — some imported from as far away as Guatemala and central Mexico — and some of the 15 ceramic vessels found in the tomb show influences from the Olmec culture, long considered the “mother culture” of the region.

“While I have no doubt it relates to Olmec, there is no tie to Maya at this time per se,” said archaeologist Lisa Lucero of the University of Illinois. “There are scholars who would like to see Olmec-Maya connections so they can show direct ties from Olmec to Maya, but this would be difficult to show with evidence at hand.”

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Harmonizing Science and Morals

Sunday, May 16th, 2010

Sam Harris swiftly bridges the gaps between science and morality:


From TED

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Portland Government plans 200ft Energy Saving Plant Wall!

Saturday, May 15th, 2010

From Gizmondo:

“Portland, Oregon is so into the green movement that they’re going to cover their federal building from ground floor to rooftop with a 200-ft. wall made from living, breathing vegetation…(more)”

Thanks for the tip, Domanique!

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