Thursday, December 6, 2012

Project Update #11: "TCHOUPITOULAS" -- a new film by Bill & Turner Ross by the Ross Brothers & Co.

See this! It's amazing!

 

--Brad

Begin forwarded message:

From: Kickstarter <no-reply@kickstarter.com>
Date: December 6, 2012, 5:00:21 PM EST
To: g.reedonly@gmail.com
Subject: Project Update #11: "TCHOUPITOULAS" -- a new film by Bill & Turner Ross by the Ross Brothers & Co.
Reply-To: No Reply <no-reply@kickstarter.com>

Project Update #11: "Tchoupitoulas": Coming (TOMORROW???) to a theater near you

Posted by the Ross Brothers & Co. Like

What's up TCHOUP loyalists!

Well, we've gone and done it. The Ross Brothers operation has finally gone legit. Yep, this little film project of ours is actually playing in MOVIE THEATERS ACROSS THE UNITED STATES. Starting... TOMORROW

Do you live in NYC? We open tomorrow at the IFC CENTER!!! Bill Ross himself. In person. To A your Q's. Multiple showtimes. BUY YOUR TICKETS HERE:

http://www.ifccenter.com/films/tchoupitoulas/

Sharing a screen with a damn fine film called ONLY THE YOUNG. Brought to you by the damn fine film company Oscilloscope Laboratories.

COMPREHENSIVE PLAN FOR U.S. DOMINATION (aka where all we're screening):

12/07/2012 New York, NY IFC Center 

12/14/2012 Lansdowne, PA Cinema 16:9 

12/20/2012 Los Angeles, CA New Beverly Cinema- ONE NIGHT ONLY 

12/21/2012 Los Angeles, CA Downtown Independent 

01/03/2013 Kansas City, MO Screenland Crossroads 

01/04/2013 San Francisco, CA Roxie 

01/11/2013 Santa Fe, NM CCA Cinematheque 

01/18/2013 Columbus, OH Gateway Film Center 

01/18/2013 Phoenix, AZ FilmBar 

02/01/2013 Seattle , WA SIFF Cinema Uptown 

02/22/2013 Iowa City, IA Bijou Cinema

Why should you see it, besides the fact that you directly contributed to its very existence? Well don't take our word for it, take the high-falutin New York critics' word for it. Especially this guy below from the Village Voice.... (And if you can't make it -- please share this with friends!)

http://www.villagevoice.com/2012-12-05/film/tricky-gorgeous-tchoupitoulas-is-a-grand-traveloguethe-real-real-new-orleans/

While they almost certainly have plans for striking new projects that expand our understanding of what documentaries can be, Bill and Turner Ross—the directors, producers, camera operators, and troublemakers behind Tchoupitoulas—could do posterity a service if they simply resigned themselves to replicating this one-night-in–New Orleans documentary for each of the world's great cities.

You know how sometimes, watching an old silent or something, you can get caught up in the fleeting glimpses of L.A. or New York street life and yearn for the hurly-burly plot to slow for a breath so that you can savor? Or how invaluable the real-city footage captured by early filmmakers and compiled on collections like the "Picturing a Metropolis" disc of the Unseen Cinema collection feels to us today? The Rosses have captured on film something rare: what a night spent stumbling about New Orleans actually feels like. Here are the street characters; the make-joy-from-thin-air musicians; the spooky, shadowed parks; the tour guide in Jackson Square who insists "Andrew Jackson, the hero of the Battle of New Orleans, was the great-, great-, great-, great- grandfather of Michael Jackson." Here's the way, as you pass tin-ceilinged bars and the stalls of tchotchke-sellers, competing musics muscle in, get pushed out, and sometimes tangle up into something new. Here's that sense of thrilled and weary anticipation that anything can happen at anytime even if you've had enough.

The filmmakers show us a homeless guy hitting a nice woman with a ridiculous come-on, a drag queen's refusal to go home with a fan, burlesque performer Perle Noire in pasties, shimmying, and then, touchingly, breathing heavily back stage and sucking on a bottle of water, tired but not unpleased with a good night's work. Then there are the fire twirlers: As they whip their flames about, the movie—which alternates between a raw, handheld-camera attentiveness and meditative passages that Groucho Marx might call "strange interludes"—goes fully abstract, the fires going out of focus as we stare, until at last they are flares of abstraction, just pulsing, dancing octagons.

Of course, what can be experienced before one sunrise can hardly be recorded in that same time, especially not with the artistry on display here. So it's little surprise to learn that this loose-limbed doc was actually shot over the course of nine months. The Rosses take "documentary" to mean the documenting of an experience, and are more open about the misrepresentation of space and time for the good of the film than most other practitioners of their craft. Here, in what is no doubt a "documentary," the filmmakers pass off more than half a year's worth of New Orleans street life as the adventures enjoyed by three young boys over the course of a single night out. The boys—William, Bryan, and Kentrell Zanders—aren't actors, and their reactions to the city around them seem real: "This is everything I hoped for!" pipes eager William, the youngest. "Naked pictures, clubs, you know what I mean?"

A scene of that kid running alongside a Mardi Gras parade float and hollering up to its riders for beads is as infectious a depiction of youthful excitement as I've seen in film. Much later, when the three of them (and the unseen cameraman) sneak onto an abandoned riverboat casino,Tchoupitoulas fully captures one of childhood's most exhilarating feelings: the terror/pleasure of creeping around the places no adult would allow. That is especially powerful when, in this rotting palace of chandeliers and hiding places, the kids freeze and listen for footsteps. The light of the camera goes out, and we wait in the dark.

Would the kids have chosen to explore this boat without the egging on of the filmmakers? Would they even have been in its vicinity to consider it? Questions about the literal truth of Tchoupitoulasare thorny and perhaps besides the point. After all, the filmmakers aren't hiding the artifice. Early on, the boys ride over to New Orleans on the Algiers Ferry; before the film is halfway through, they race back to the station to catch the last boat home. They miss it and then mope about, uncertain of what to do: call their folks? Spend the night on the streets? Never do we see them do what, if this were "true," anyone would: Ask for help from the guys with the movie cameras.

If you can get over that meta-factual weirdness, though, the film is rich with pleasures. William occasionally narrates his dreams: Not only will he learn to fly, but he also says, "I'll be the first person with a star on the walk of fame for flying." The Rosses sometimes leave the boys behind and venture off into the nightlife: We see strippers in a dressing room parsing the lyrics of "Iko Iko"; we see a flirtatious oyster shucker joke with the sweetest of old women that shellfish "is gonna make you rock and roll, baby." She sniffs back, "I'm not worried about that."

The Rosses offer little context. There's no talk of Katrina or the city's class and racial divides or why sometimes the film is set during Mardi Gras and other times it isn't. There's just New Orleans and a trio of likable kids, trooping through it, finding every marvel.

 

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Wednesday, December 5, 2012

Article: US House Votes 397-0 To Oppose UN Control of the Internet

See? Congress CAN come together as one, to symbolically oppose something that was never going to happen anyway. Good job, Congresspersons!

 

--Brad

Friday, November 30, 2012

Article: The gorgeous Fantastical for iPhone re-invents the calendar as a timeline of events - The Next Web

I am a big fan of this excellent calendar app. It does natural language parsing to create events, such as "breakfast with Ellen tomorrow morning." And, of course, with the iPhone, you can use dictation to enter the event. Syncs to and from Apple's built-in Calendar app, so iCloud sync is a snap. Makes me wish I had more to do! Lol!!


The gorgeous Fantastical for iPhone re-invents the calendar as a timeline of events - The Next Web
http://thenextweb.com/apps/2012/11/29/the-gorgeous-fantastical-for-iphone-re-invents-the-calendar-as-a-timeline-of-events/

Sent via Flipboard

 

--Brad

Saturday, November 24, 2012

Article: Thoughts on Snow Leopard's return to the Apple Store | AppleTell

FYI - If you are running an older Mac or legacy software, and need to run Snow Leopard, Apple is again selling the disks for $20. 


Thoughts on Snow Leopard's return to the Apple Store | AppleTell
http://www.technologytell.com/apple/108273/thoughts-on-snow-leopards-return-to-the-apple-store/

Sent via Flipboard

 

--Brad

Saturday, November 10, 2012

Article: Nuggit: The Simple, Flexible, And Powerful Text Editor [Deals]

Good deal for a code-aware text editor. 


Nuggit: The Simple, Flexible, And Powerful Text Editor [Deals]
http://www.cultofmac.com/200640/nuggit-the-simple-flexible-and-powerful-text-editor-deals/

Sent via Flipboard

Flipboardcover

 

--Brad

Article: Popular 2Do Task Management App Arrives For Mac

This is a nice mid-level task manager and an excellent example of app development starting on mobile then backing into the desktop. 

 

--Brad

Monday, October 22, 2012

Mood today

Definitely a Jimmy Buffett mood today. Less Margaritaville, more Son of a Son of Sailor, though.


Sent from my iPad

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Article: Science Just Killed Any Hope You Ever Had of Jurassic Park Being Real

Oh, well crap!

Still, mammoth steaks, anyone???


Science Just Killed Any Hope You Ever Had of Jurassic Park Being Real
http://m.gizmodo.com/5950500/

Sent via Flipboard

 

--Brad

Thursday, September 27, 2012

Article: Announcing Camera+ for iPad!

Yay! Camera + is my favorite image app on iPhone, and it should be awesome on iPad!

 

--Brad

Sunday, September 16, 2012

Article: ‘Footprint of God’ May Have Been Made by Giant

This is hilarious! Watch the human intellect go completely off the rails right before your very eyes!

How many logical fallacies can you spot?

 

--Brad

Friday, September 7, 2012

Banana peel

This label is significantly over-engineered.

Photo

--Brad

Sunday, August 26, 2012

Saturday, August 25, 2012

Friday, August 24, 2012

Article: The New Furby Review: Absolute Horror

Bwahahahaha! Quite possibly the best gadget review EVER!!

To wit...

"The new Furby is grotesque. It is a ter­ror. It is a mile mark­er on the road to tech dystopia. Kids will love it."

The New Furby Review: Absolute Horror
http://gizmodo.com/5937402/

Sent via Flipboard

 

--Brad

Thursday, August 23, 2012

Article: Q&A with a new college student: ‘I was never taught to be ready for college’

Here's the thing... If you are still saying "I was never taught to..." then you're still not ready. 


Q&A with a new college student: ‘I was never taught to be ready for college’
http://hechingerreport.org/content/qa-with-a-new-college-student-i-was-never-taught-to-be-ready-for-college_9304/

Sent via Flipboard

 

--Brad

Monday, August 20, 2012

Article: The iPhone Makes More Money Than Every Microsoft Product Put Together

This is rather astonishing. Mind-blowing, really. One product that did t exist five years ago has eclipsed the entire company that, five years ago, was the 500 pound gorilla of tech. 

I'm sure there's a lesson in that, but for now I'm just going to marvel awhile longer. 

Oh year, some analysts are predicting apple will sell 250 million iPhone 5s for revenues exceeding $100 billion. Gulp!

The iPhone Makes More Money Than Every Microsoft Product Put Together
http://www.cultofmac.com/185660/the-iphone-makes-more-money-than-every-microsoft-product-put-together/

Sent via Flipboard

 

--Brad

Friday, August 17, 2012

Article: Google Files New Patent Lawsuit Against Apple, Seeks To Block iPhone, iPad & Mac Imports To U.S.

Apple vs. google vs. Samsung vs everybody is getting tiresome. Like listening to jr hi cheerleaders plan a party. 

Forget Medicare, al Qaeda and climate change - somebody fix the patent system!!!


Google Files New Patent Lawsuit Against Apple, Seeks To Block iPhone, iPad & Mac Imports To U.S.
http://techcrunch.com/2012/08/17/google-files-new-patent-lawsuit-against-apple-seeks-to-block-iphone-ipad-mac-imports-to-u-s/

Sent via Flipboard

 

--Brad

Article: DNA: The Ultimate Hard Drive

Hmmmm... What could @GreatDismal or @NealStephenson do with this? Encode a parasite with information and turn it loose to propagate, maybe?

 

--Brad

Article: Kasparov arrested in Pussy Riot protest

"Check MATE, Mr, Kasparov!" Um, can this get any weirder?

Kasparov arrested in Pussy Riot protest
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-19300149

Sent via Flipboard

 

--Brad

Article: Is a Flame Copycat Out to Destroy the World's Power Plants?

This is the way the world ends,
This is the way the world ends,
This is the way the world ends,
Not with a bang, but a hacker. 


Is a Flame Copycat Out to Destroy the World's Power Plants?
http://gizmodo.com/5935647/

Sent via Flipboard

 

--Brad

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Article: Star Wars Characters as '80s High Schoolers are Bodacious | Geekosystem

It's like, what if Luke woke up and the whole Star Wars universe was just a dream??  Lol !!! 

"You were there, Leia, and you Mr. Kenobi, and you and YOU! It was all so real!"


Star Wars Characters as '80s High Schoolers are Bodacious | Geekosystem
http://www.geekosystem.com/star-wars-80s-kids/#5

Sent via Flipboard

 

--Brad

Monday, August 13, 2012

Article: Left Handers Day, August 13th - Official Site

Big shout-out to all my fellow southpaws! 

Left Handers Day, August 13th - Official Site
http://www.lefthandersday.com/

Sent via Flipboard

 

--Brad

Friday, August 10, 2012

Article: You Won't Believe What This GoPro Camera Captured Underwater

Shot with a $300 camera you can buy at Target. Amazing!

You Won't Believe What This GoPro Camera Captured Underwater
http://m.gizmodo.com/5933843/

Sent via Flipboard

 

--Brad

Thursday, August 9, 2012

Article: Yekaterina Samutsevich: Closing Statement at the Pussy Riot Trial

Reading this is like watching a mirror shatter in slow motion, at once absurd and dangerous, jagged and comical, impossible and entirely too true. 

Yekaterina Samutsevich: Closing Statement at the Pussy Riot Trial
http://chtodelat.wordpress.com/2012/08/08/yekaterina-samutsevich-closing-statement/

Sent via Flipboard

 

--Brad

Monday, August 6, 2012

Article: Health Information on the Internet

Specific to health information, but a good discussion of general issues of assessing accuracy of information. 

 

--Brad

Friday, August 3, 2012

Article: This Photojournalist Is Capturing the Olympics With Just an iPhone

This surprises me not at all. 


This Photojournalist Is Capturing the Olympics With Just an iPhone
http://gizmodo.com/5931514/

Sent via Flipboard

 

--Brad

Thursday, August 2, 2012

Article: The Best Ultraportable Laptop of 2012

Spoiler alert: it's the MacBook Air. Still. 

;-)

The Best Ultraportable Laptop of 2012
http://gizmodo.com/5930896/

Sent via Flipboard

 

--Brad

SUPERMECHANICAL.BLOG

Interesting insight from the Supermechanical.com team in final development of the Twine Internet sensor device. > We tend to elevate artisanal, individually made objects for the exceptional care put into their creation. But as much human effort goes into making a great machine-made object. Mass production is itself an artform, and a modern miracle.

http://supermechanical.tumblr.com/post/28539816170/final-hardware


--Brad

Sunday, July 29, 2012

Article: Measure your brand’s effectiveness with The Social Media ROI Cookbook’s recipes

report­ed that the pri­ma­ry busi­ness impact of social media was not rev­enue gen­er­a­tion, but “insight that helped us meet cus­tomer expe­ri­ence goals.”


Measure your brand’s effectiveness with The Social Media ROI Cookbook’s recipes
http://thenextweb.com/socialmedia/2012/07/28/measure-your-brands-effectiveness-with-the-social-media-roi-cookbooks-recipes/

Sent via Flipboard

 

--Brad

Monday, July 23, 2012

Article: Watch this: 'God, the Universe and Everything Else' with Carl Sagan, Stephen Hawking and Arthur C. Clarke

A found gem - almost an hour of discussion of big ideas by Hawking, Sagan and Clarke. From 1988, pre-Hubble, etc. who would have guessed hawking would Be the survivor?

Watch this: 'God, the Universe and Everything Else' with Carl Sagan, Stephen Hawking and Arthur C. Clarke
http://www.theverge.com/2012/7/22/3173928/watch-this-god-the-universe-and-everything-else

Sent via Flipboard

Flipboardcover

 

--Brad

Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Article: The iPad Is Revolutionizing How We Read And Consume News

Um, yeah. I think we discussed this in my classes about, oh, dos years ago. 

 

--Brad

Thursday, July 12, 2012

Relativistic Baseball

A new blog from Randall Munroe, creator of the brilliant web comic XKCD. 

Relativistic Baseball
WHAT IF? | JULY 12, 2012
http://pulse.me/s/b7epO


Relativistic Baseball What would happen if you tried to hit a baseball pitched at 90% the speed of light? - Ellen McManis ... Read more

Monday, July 2, 2012

Late

Lunch in Little Italy. Important safety tip - ask about portion sizes BEFORE ordering from the specials board. Lobster far diavolo is a whole lobster, plus shrimp, mussels, littleneck and cherry stone clams. OMG!!!

Photo

--Brad

Our 4:00AM wake-up call

Photo

--Brad

Sunday, June 24, 2012

Article: UniversityNow: Another VC-Backed Online College, but This One’s Not Elite

Private models like this will seriously challenge the mission of community and technical colleges, if they don't adapt quickly. 

UniversityNow: Another VC-Backed Online College, but This One’s Not Elite
http://allthingsd.com/20120621/universitynow-another-vc-backed-online-college-but-this-ones-not-elite/

Sent via Flipboard

Flipboardcover

 

--Brad

Article: Domo’s Josh James: We’re Making Every Employee Embrace Social Media, And It’s Paying Off

Every high school and
College in America should do this with it's employees. 

Domo’s Josh James: We’re Making Every Employee Embrace Social Media, And It’s Paying Off
http://techcrunch.com/2012/06/23/domo-social-josh-james/

Sent via Flipboard

 

--Brad

Saturday, June 9, 2012

Critique of Prometheus: A Big, Beautiful Film That Misses Grand Opportunities

Ridley Scott's Prometheus is a big, beautiful film (an especially artful use of 3D) but it contains surprisingly few shocking moments, and surprisingly many science blunders. It has been described elsewhere as a horror film, but either the audience has become inured to this type of horror, or the parts just never quite clicked. I think a bit of both, actually.

[Warning: this review contains spoilers. If you want the virgin experience, stop reading now and come back later.]

Viewers looking for an adrenaline rush would be wise to look elsewhere. But Prometheus gives us plenty to think about, reflect upon, talk about and argue drunkenly with our friends about, so it's a definite must-see. The film is set in the universe we first glimpsed in Scott's iconic 1979 film Alien. If you haven't seen Alien (really? go do it NOW!) unlike Prometheus, Alien is a terror machine. I won't review Alien or its sequels here, except to make a couple of points. 

First, Alien was a living nightmare - full of techno-biological forms envisioned by Swiss surrealist artist HR Giger. Readers of science fiction/science fact/futurism in 1979 were already familiar with Giger from the covers and pages of Omni magazine. In 1979, though, movie audiences were not yet bored with these nightmares come to life. After all, this was the pre-CGI era. CGI is so commonplace now that I don't even have to explain what CGI means. This was the era of Jaws (1975), a summer movie made classic monster story because the mechanical sharks failed to cooperate during filming and had to be half hidden through much of the film; and Star Wars (1977) with its unprecedented visual effects shot with miniatures and puppets.

Alien the movie fairly quickly settled into the Big Bug Monster movie genre, and I remember seeing it in the theater for the first time and feeling cheated a bit that we didn't get to know more about the mysterious "pilot creature" and the ecosystem that could have spawned the Alien creature. Prometheus is largely that back story, although a peripheral one.

The central theme of Prometheus is the search for human origins, and it presents a number of interesting premises. Much is made of the "religion versus science" dichotomy - are we created or evolved? However, the film largely drives between the horns and suggests both - that we were "engineered" by a humanoid species at some distant past. This, by the way, is not a very original idea, even within the science fiction world. The Star Trek universe is peopled with humanoid species that share a common origin, although there are also non-humanoid intelligent species cohabiting the galaxy.

Had Scott and his screenwriters been a bit more diligent with the science, this theme could have been more compelling. The opening sequence of Prometheus shows (presumably) Earth devoid of life. We follow the river upstream to the watershed that for my money is meant to be Victoria Falls in Africa, where humans arose. We see a lone figure, humanoid but not human. This figure (is this Prometheus? An Engineer? A metaphor?) ritually drinks a fluid that quickly deconstructs his body, which washes into the river, spreading DNA and (again presumably) originating life on this planet.

Now, as a vignette, this is a compelling sequence. However, in the science of the film, it has several flaws. Was this individual a god or a physical being? (Physical, and mortal, as we see a spaceship leaving as he takes his ritual potion.) So the mythological Prometheus is out. Prometheus in Greek mythology was a Titan, who in an attempt to elevate the humans, brought fire (and with it, technology and civilization) to humans, and was tortured by Zeus for his treason. Was the figure at the outset of the film being punished for some unknown breach of protocol? Perhaps. Was he acting alone, a rogue Titan? Perhaps, but then who was piloting the ship? Was he the genetic precursor to humans on Earth? That is the implication.

The Breakdown of Intelligent Design

However, this is where science rears its ugly head. One thing we know about life on Earth is that, so far, everything we have studied - single-celled creatures, plants, animals, what have you - shares the same basic structure of DNA. That is, of all the molecules that could have been used in DNA, all life on Earth shares the same four (guanine, cytosine, adenine, and thymine). This knowledge is a strong argument for common descent (evolution) and against special creation - after all, if each species were created from scratch, rather than being slightly different copies of its ancestors, why wouldn't other perfectly good nucleotide molecules have been used instead? (Of course, right now we have a data set of 1. If and when we identify unambiguous life other than on Earth, one of the first questions will be, Does it have DNA and if so, which nucleotides does it use?)

We can accept that the scene happened four billion years in the past, before single-celled life emerged on Earth, and that the event marks the beginning of life. That does not explain how, later in the film, we find that we have a 100% match with the Engineer species, since life on Earth would have to go through four billion years of evolution contingencies to arrive at the EXACT same DNA sequence for Earth humans as extraterrestrial Engineers. There is also the problem that when the first life arose on Earth, Earth was not very "Earthlike." That is, the composition of the atmosphere would have been extremely hostile, not at all what we breathe (nitrogen, oxygen, argon and not much else) and not the composition of the distant moon where we find find another living Engineer. We see the Engineer on the "presumably" young Earth AND on the moon breathing without assistance of a helmet or other device, so that's a disconnect.

Rather than proto-Earth, let's assume that the early Earth found by the Engineers was not four billion years ago, but maybe 600 million, when complex multicellular life arose here. Let's posit that the Engineers had found a way to take the basic building blocks of life, single-celled organisms, and "infect" them with a way to organize into complex multicellular forms. A wide range of sciences - chemistry, biology, cosmology - are finding that the conditions for simple life are common, both in our solar system and elsewhere. It seems almost a mathematical certainty that simple microbial life has arisen independently countless times throughout the galaxy. Whether that life has learned to organize into complex forms is another question, and seems far less likely. For four-fifths of the life of Earth, there was only simple, microbial life. What conditions or forces caused the explosion of complex lifeforms 600 million years ago? It is this organization of simple forms into more complex ones that differentiate plants from animals from algae from fungus from slime molds. However, here we are again at the common descent problem. If the Engineers introduced DNA to create complex life that eventually led to humans, there should be a clear genetic break. There isn't.

Perhaps the Engineers introduced not DNA but a new strain of RNA, which is the molecule that contains information about how cells can synthesize proteins, including DNA. The common descent problem rears its head again, though, because not only would the Engineers have to have perfectly predicted what human DNA would ultimately be, but would have to have predicted it for every other complex species that has ever lived on Earth.

When the crew of Prometheus sampled and sequenced the DNA of an Engineer and found it to be a 100% match with humans, it was a moment intended to increase our sense of wonder but one that took a lot of life (no pun intended) out of the film. If the DNA match would have been 100%, then we would BE Engineers, and they us. We would look effectively the same, not roughly similar. And more to the point, the common lineage would have to be quite recent. Studies of DNA among populations of humans ("races" although that term means nothing from a genetic perspective) shows mostly local, individual variation, rather than distinct populations. A human is a human is a human, despite skin color, height, hairiness, facial structures, and so on. But the Engineers are distinctly different - in stature, build, superficial appearance, and presumably intelligence. They are at least as different from humans as modern humans are from, say, Homo erectus (after all, humans and chimpanzees are about 96% the same, genetically speaking, and our common ancestor is more than 5 million years old). The DNA of humans and Engineers may be 99.5% the same, but rounding up to 100% was a clunker moment. It is not trivial - it makes the premise less plausible, and less expansive.

How interesting it would be to contemplate the possibility that the Engineers in fact arose on Earth as a human species a million years ago (Homo ingenium?), developed technology and science, lived alongside their weaker and relatively primitive cousins Homo sapiens for the better part of a million years, maybe even "domesticated" the smaller species, taught us to farm and tend animals while the Engineers were off exploring other worlds, and then mysteriously, as most species do, the Engineers died off, at least here on Earth, leaving behind only fragments of their existence in the cultural memories of humans. That would be the truly Promethean story line.

Who Created the Creator?

In the "science versus religion" debate, the discovery of the Engineers on the distant moon prompts one character to challenge the believer to abandon her cross, to admit defeat of the Creationist position. But she quickly retreats to the infinite regression gambit - OK, so we know how WE were created, but who created the creators? When Intelligent Design proponents claim that they are not promoting religion because the "creator doesn't have to be God," they are begging this question. It is disingenuous to admit a known materialistic sequence with poorly understood origins and say, "there, that part we don't yet understand is evidence of intelligent design." That is called the God of the Gaps argument, and it can retreat infinitely. At the end of the movie, a door is left open to discover the origins of the Engineers, but then who created them, and those before, and on and on and on? How much more interesting if, in searching for the Engineers' origins, the way pointed back to Earth!

If You Can't Stand the Distance Stay Out of Space

I don't understand why filmmakers have such a hard time with time and distance when it comes to space travel. Stanley Kubrick had it figured out when he made 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968) although he had help from Arthur C. Clarke, who knew a thing or three about science stuff. There are a couple of nods to 2001 in Prometheus, from the android David, "Good morning, David" sounds an awful lot like "Good morning, Dave," spoken by HAL9000. And the scene of the unnaturally old man in the bedroom is a clear homage.

But Charlize Theron's character says "we're half a billion miles from Earth" as if that's supposed to impress anybody. That's approximately the orbital distance from Earth to Jupiter (perhaps another nod to Kubrick? Doubtful.) The crew were put into cryogenic suspension for two years - which seems hardly worth the effort. Interstellar travel (and we know this is significantly interstellar because the "star map" stars are not even individually distinguishable from Earth without a really really big telescope) is, even assuming travel at near-light speed, a generational thing. Without a Star Trek warp drive or a Star Wars "hyperdrive," we can't get anywhere interesting in two years, except maybe Jupiter or Saturn. (And if the spaceships of Prometheus do have some magical faster-than-light drive, why bother with the cryogenic suspension?) The closest star to us is more than four light years away. From the looks of the star map in Prometheus, the target system is somewhere in our vicinity of the spiral arm, so let's be gracious and say it's a close neighbor at 250 light years away. The harsh reality of interstellar travel is that to embark on that journey is to leave everything you know behind forever. Even if you somehow survive the journey, cryogenically suspended or twin-paradoxed or whatever, everything and everyone you left behind will be gone when you return. And if you have committed to that adventure, and things go badly, you don't just break camp and go running back home.

Ignoring the one-way nature of interstellar travel is to ignore a deep question of the exploring psyche - would you seek the answer even if it meant you could never personally share it with anyone? It is not inconceivable that an advanced technological species has explored, colonized, even re-engineered planets throughout the galaxy, but it is unidirectional. These populations may become established on habitable planets or moons, but then begin to diverge from the progenitors. Humans could have been such a colonized species, if the evidence for common descent on Earth had not been so overwhelming. However, what's to say there is not another, non-human colonized species, patiently gnawing away beneath our feet or just out of sight under the ocean, one who's DNA is distinctly different from other earthly species? The Prometheus Engineers could be here, and from there, but they cannot also be human.

What's My Motivation?

What made Alien so terrifying (as with Jaws) was the feeling that the creature was irresistibly motivated to kill humans. This drive was animalistic, but also darker, evil. They didn't want to kill us just to eat (or procreate, in the Alien case) or for any human reasons like love or money - they wanted to kill us, HAD to kill us, because that's what they do. The Alien monster and the Jaws shark were frightening because we could not see into them. While we could sense agency at work, their motivations were wholly alien and non-human.

In Prometheus, we are asked to consider, "Why would they [the Engineers] want to kill us [humans]?" Why indeed. Was Earth an experiment gone wrong? Was it the result of actions by a rogue Engineer, a mad scientist breeding life in his own image for his own ends? Did we threaten the Engineers by becoming technological beings capable of space travel?

It has long been a curiosity that our more distant primate cousins survive (if barely) while our closer ones, Neanderthal, et. al., are extinct. Was Homo sapiens threatened by the too-clever, too-similar relatives? When we get freaked out by robots or CGI characters that look and act a bit too human [the uncanny valley], is that awaking the ancient fear? Did we hunt them down and kill them off before they could out-compete us? It is a dark shadow in our species' dawning, and an answer we will perhaps never know. How compelling, though, and how Promethean to ponder the possibility that the Engineers allowed us our time and space, until we encroached upon theirs. Was their weapons stockpile, if indeed it was that, insurance against an invading cousin? Was the moon a honey trap, set to trigger only when humans from Earth arrived to muck things up by asking unpleasant questions? If so, then why the star maps? Are we to accept that they were daring us to show up, and then ready to exterminate us upon our arrival? That seems cruel and pointless.

Evolution Bombs

In the film we are teased with the possibility that the Engineers had created a munitions dump of sorts on the moon, and then were about to leave when something went wrong. At the center of this are cargo bays full of canisters full of "evolution goo." Whether they are alien eggs or some sort of "evolution accelerant" is not entirely clear.

One scenario is that the Engineers selected the moon thinking it was lifeless, and therefore a safe place to store the stuff. However, the "evolution accelerant" accidentally (or not) was contaminated by native or introduced microorganisms, and hyper-evolved into killer space nasties, including the Alien creature.

If this scenario sounds familiar, it is because it was exactly the same in Star Trek II; The Wrath of Kahn. The Genesis device - essentially an evolution accelerator, was coveted as a weapon of mass destruction (just as the Prometheus pilot presumes the goo canisters are WMDs), and, once activated, micro-organisms rapidly evolve into macro organisms.

It may be that Scott intends us to consider that the originators of the evolution bombs created them as terraforming instruments, as was the intent of the Star Trek Genesis device. That a powerful force for creation is also a powerful force for destruction is a big theme, and one that resonates throughout religion and mythology, including the original Greek Prometheus story.

From Life, Death. From Death, Life.

A theme that ties Alien, Blade Runner and Prometheus together in the Ridley Scott universe is that life inevitably begets death, and that through death, life is reborn. Any attempt to cheat the system results in disaster.

Consider Weyland Industries in the Alien universe and the Tyrell Corporation in Blade Runner. Both are unimaginably wealthy, with effectively limitless resources to do whatever their eccentric genius namesakes care to do. Each is concerned with the business of creating artificial life: David in Prometheus; Bishop in Alien; the Nexus-6 replicants in Blade Runner. Each draws comparisons of his technological progeny with The Creator. "We are the gods now," Weyland says in a future "TEDTalks" session included as part of the Prometheus marketing campaign. "More human than human is our motto," Tyrell says in Blade Runner. Naked hubris all around.

The voice of Roy Batty, Blade Runner's most introspective and therefore dangerous Replicant, resonates throughout Prometheus. When a crew member releases his "pups" - scanners that explore the Engineer's pyramid - he lets out a long and mournful howl. It is the same howl Roy wails in pursuit of Deckert in Blade Runner. Roy says to Tyrell, just before killing him in a gruesome and personal way, "Not an easy thing to meet one's maker." The ancient Weyland, secretly stowed away aboard Prometheus, says he came on the journey because he was convinced he would "meet his maker." What would Weyland demand of his maker? No doubt the same thing Roy Batty demanded of Tyrell: "I want more life."

David, the cybernetic crew member of Prometheus, draws more from Star Trek: The Next Generation's Data than from the Nexus-6 Replicants. Both David and Data understand they are artificial, and they acknowledge their limitations ("He [David] can never have a soul.") References to Pinocchio are common - the humans see the artificial ones as somehow desiring to be "real boys," even while accepting that they do not have feelings - or desires - in the human sense. David and Data are curious, but seem comfortable with it. Blade Runner's Replicants, though, at first only dimly sense their manmade nature, and the more they are aware of it, the more dangerous they become. For the Replicants, artificiality is a death sentence; David and Data transcend human mortality, and even survive what would be life-ending injuries for any organic being.

The Mother and the Other

Weyland and Tyrell are father figures, patriarchs of great corporations and creators of artificial life forms. However, it is the women in Prometheus and Alien who generate the evil, alien births. Motherhood is a powerful and terrible force for Scott. In the original Alien, the ship's biological computer was addressed by the crew as "Mother." The iconic scene in which the baby alien creature bursts forth from the chest of the crew member is a gruesome and fatal birth motif.

The facehugger/chestburster (rape and violent birth) image is so iconic that Scott is trapped by it. He feels in Prometheus he must somehow explain the origins of this bizarre reproductive method (although equally gruesome strategies exist in the animal world right here on Earth, and for real), but knows the audience can't be shocked or surprised by it. So pervasive is the Alien imagery, everybody knows the monster is inside there, growing, waiting to burst forth in blood, bone and gore. Hyper-evolved parasites burst forth from Engineer skulls, from crew members, are extracted by a robotic surgery machine, and so on. None of this shocks us. It's barely gross anymore. No one who has ever seen the parody scene from Spaceballs can even take it seriously. So why is it here?

Because in Ridley Scott's universe, birth is the first step toward death. Only through death can life exist. And the more clearly connected the act of life with the act of death, the more he makes his point. Roy Batty is not truly alive until his death is imminent: "All these moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain. Time to die." It is also evolution in extreme fast forward. In the Prometheus world one form goes in, another comes out. Perhaps Scott is making allusion to the vast number of species that have come and gone on Earth, most of which we will never know. It his own Cambrian Explosion, literally this time, from one form to another in a generation.

Yes, Questions

Ridley Scott is at his best when he presents complex and confusing issues, and doesn't lay down pat answers. Will Shaw ever find out where we ultimately come from? Will humans be destroyed by the ones who created them? Is Deckert a Replicant, and will Rachel die? Prometheus does this, if not entirely satisfactorily. Sloppiness with the science is one issue, and for me a big one. Getting the science right would have made this a better mythology, not a documentary.

The film also seems a bit rushed. If ever a film needed to be three hours, not two, it is this one. In 3D, audiences need time to scan not only left to right but front to back. We can, of course, anticipate many versions of Prometheus, as we saw with Blade Runner. Perhaps one will be a director's cut that restores some footage. The tension is rarely given time to build, and we rush from big question to big question without pausing to reflect on the implications of what the answers might be.

Thursday, June 7, 2012

Article: The Cosmic Perspective | Neil deGrasse Tyson

How humans are at once very large and very small...

The Cosmic Perspective | Neil deGrasse Tyson
http://www.haydenplanetarium.org/tyson/read/2007/04/02/the-cosmic-perspective

Sent via Flipboard, your social magazine for iPad and iPhone.

 

--Brad

Article: Prometheus

Tomorrow!

 

--Brad

Wednesday, June 6, 2012

Article: Certificates are misunderstood credentials that pay off -- mostly for men

We were right on the money with the NET degree+certificate structure. Just sayin'. 

Over all, a certificate is the highest form of education held by about 1 in 10 American workers, according to the study, which collected and crunched data from several government sources. And certificate holders earn 20 percent more than workers who hold only a high school diploma.

More surprising, however, is the finding that fully one-third of certificate holders also have an associate, bachelor’s or graduate degree. Such a large percentage suggests that workers are getting certificates to bolster skills or learn new ones in a tight job market. And people are going back to college for certificates throughout their careers, with a third of certificates earned by students over the age of 30.



Certificates are misunderstood credentials that pay off -- mostly for men
http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2012/06/06/certificates-are-misunderstood-credentials-pay-mostly-men

Sent via Flipboard, your social magazine for iPad and iPhone.

 

--Brad

Article: With Prometheus, Ridley Scott Makes Sci-Fi Horrifyingly Believable Again

Ridley Scott on vision and collaboration. 

With Prometheus, Ridley Scott Makes Sci-Fi Horrifyingly Believable Again
http://www.wired.com/underwire/2012/06/prometheus-ridley-scott/

Sent via Flipboard, your social magazine for iPad and iPhone.

 

--Brad

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

Soda-bition

Rocking' these 44s would be straight-up gangsta in the #NYC! #sodabition

Photo

--Brad

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Monday, May 28, 2012

Article: How to design book covers in a digital age


How to design book covers in a digital age
http://www.theverge.com/2012/5/28/3047745/digital-book-covers

Sent via Flipboard, your social magazine for iPad and iPhone.

Flipboardcover

 

--Brad

Friday, May 25, 2012

Article: Quantum Mechanics When You Close Your Eyes

Two facts I did not know - the amount of infrared photons generated by our bodies, and retinal, which sounds
Like one of those fake chemicals ad people make up. 

Quantum Mechanics When You Close Your Eyes
http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/cosmicvariance/2012/05/25/quantum-mechanics-when-you-close-your-eyes/

Sent via Flipboard, your social magazine for iPad and iPhone.

 

--Brad

Friday, May 11, 2012

Article: Adobe Creative Cloud now available for $49.99 per month, includes access to Creative Suite 6 and Adobe Muse

Buried at the end is that you can also subscribe to cloud versions of earlier versions of CS. 

Adobe Creative Cloud now available for $49.99 per month, includes access to Creative Suite 6 and Adobe Muse
http://www.theverge.com/2012/5/11/3013636/adobe-creative-cloud-launch-priced-49-99-per-month

(Sent from Flipboard)

 

--Brad

Thursday, May 10, 2012

From The Dayton Daily News Mobile News Reader App:

I found this story on the Dayton Daily News Mobile News Reader App:

#justsayin'

IT job fair scheduled for June 6
http://www.daytondailynews.com/story-1372960.html

Learn more about the Dayton Daily News Mobile News Reader App at
http://www.daytondailynews.com/iphone


--Brad

First Look: SoundCloud Gets an Overhaul

First Look: SoundCloud Gets an Overhaul
READWRITEWEB | MAY 9, 2012
http://pulse.me/s/94uwS


The growth of SoundCloud has been astonishing. In only three years of existence, the social sound-sharing service has blown past 15 million users and ... Read more

Sunday, May 6, 2012

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Monday, April 23, 2012

New iOS app allows anyone to make 3D model from real object

Schweeeet!

New iOS app allows anyone to make 3D model from real object
TUAW - THE UNOFFICIAL APPLE WEBLOG | APRIL 20, 2012
http://pulse.me/s/8pfDR


Arqball Spin is a strangely-named iOS app that does something pretty magical: It will create fully spinnable 3D models from real-life objects. The app... Read more

Daily iPhone App: Sketch Nation Studio opens up game dev on the App Store

Have an idea for an iPhone game? You might want to check out this game development tool.

Daily iPhone App: Sketch Nation Studio opens up game dev on the App Store
TUAW - THE UNOFFICIAL APPLE WEBLOG | APRIL 20, 2012
http://pulse.me/s/8pV1I


Sketch Nation Studio started out as Sketch Nation Shooter last year, a "game" on the App Store that actually let you make your own shooter game by usi... Read more

Dropbox Sharing Gets Ridiculously Easy With Links

I didn't think it would be possible, but sharing files from DropBox is getting even easier.

Dropbox Sharing Gets Ridiculously Easy With Links
TECHCRUNCH | APRIL 23, 2012
http://pulse.me/s/8vD41


In the words of Dropbox CEO Drew Houston, sharing documents and other files online is "bafflingly, still really difficult." I ... Read more

How the iPad Is Changing Education

"Engaging" is the key word. The touchscreen interface is inherently more engaging than a traditional mouse-keyboard setup, but the software (content) must be organized and presented in an engaging and intentional manner.

How the iPad Is Changing Education
READWRITEWEB | APRIL 23, 2012
http://pulse.me/s/8uUVD


The iPad may only be two years old, but it's already begun to change many things. Reading is one of them. Work is another. It is selling like crazy, b... Read more

Thursday, April 19, 2012

Reader

YouTube steps closer to a true online video editing platform. http://www.google.com/reader/i/?hl=en&gl=us#stream/user%2F12857850095717931967%2Fstate%2Fcom.google%2Freading-list


--Brad

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

3 Reasons Why Everyone Needs to Learn Markdown

If you've ever suffered with the "wysiwyg" editors in most content management systems, you might want to have a look at this.

3 Reasons Why Everyone Needs to Learn Markdown
READWRITEWEB | APRIL 17, 2012
http://pulse.me/s/8gqeL


You've probably heard of Markdown. Maybe you've heard the name for years. Perhaps you just encountered it, since it's enjoyed a renaissance lately. B... Read more

Solving College With Big Data

The Internet is always present. Maybe the real value to being on campus, the one worth paying for, is the part that happens offline.

Solving College With Big Data
READWRITEWEB | APRIL 17, 2012
http://pulse.me/s/8j7uI


College is stuck in the past, and tech is always trying to tow it out of the mud. The trick is finding a solution that provides more access to higher ... Read more

Monday, April 9, 2012

Article: Breaking: Facebook's Buying Instagram for a Billion Dollars

Instagram is cool and all, but a BILLION? Is that cool, Mark? This can't be right, can it? Somebody say this is a hoax. 


Breaking: Facebook's Buying Instagram for a Billion Dollars
http://gizmodo.com/5900352/

(Sent from Flipboard)

Sunday, April 1, 2012

First of the season

Nom nom nom first fresh sweet corn of the season! Not bad! Not bad at all! Yay, Kroger (4 for $1), Yay interstate commerce, yay genetic engineering, yay climate change!

Photo

Article: How to create stunning panoramic photographs with your iPhone

Nice how-to for using your iPhone camera to shoot panoramic images.

How to create stunning panoramic photographs with your iPhone
http://www.imore.com/2012/03/31/panoramic-photography/

(Sent from Flipboard)

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Video: The Impact of Kickstarter, Creative Commons & Creators Project | Off Book | PBS

A very nice video of how the Internet is changing the funding of, distribution of, and even the creation of art.

If this is typical of the quality of PBS's Off Book series, that will be worth a subscribe click.

The Impact of Kickstarter, Creative Commons & Creators Project | Off Book | PBS

(Sent from Flipboard)

Article: Even Old Media Institutions Are Acting Like New Media

Saturday, March 24, 2012

Thursday, March 22, 2012

Sidewalk math

Cool, in a nerdy kin of way.

Photo

--Brad

Sunday, March 18, 2012

Best Practices For Writing For Online Readers

Best Practices For Writing For Online Readers
READWRITEWEB | MARCH 16, 2012
http://pulse.me/s/74zEK


I have less than 30 seconds to capture your attention with this post, so here goes: if you read some, most or all of the next 750 words or so, you wil... Read more

Saturday, March 10, 2012

The most astounding fact

Neil DeGrasse Tyson at his most eloquent and expansive.

YouTube
M.YOUTUBE.COM
http://pulse.me/s/6Pyzl/

Monday, March 5, 2012

Article: Shifting Students Out of Community Colleges and Into For-Profits

" cash-strapped state schools are cutting courses that cost more to teach, which unfortunately also happen to be the classes that are most likely to get students jobs"


Shifting Students Out of Community Colleges and Into For-Profits
http://economix.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/03/05/out-of-community-colleges-and-into-for-profits/

(Sent from Flipboard)

 

--Brad

Article: Dayton Community College Trains Students for the Exciting Kind of Drone Jobs

This is kind of cool, actually.


Dayton Community College Trains Students for the Exciting Kind of Drone Jobs
http://stateimpact.npr.org/ohio/2012/03/05/dayton-community-college-trains-students-for-the-exciting-kind-of-drone-jobs/

(Sent from Flipboard)

 

--Brad

The future of online work is here

http://www.google.com/reader/i/?hl=en&gl=us#stream/user%2F12857850095717931967%2Fstate%2Fcom.google%2Freading-list


--Brad

Friday, March 2, 2012

Interneternity?

QR scan tags on memorial headstones, and online condolences - you can't escape the Internet, even in death.

Photo

--Brad

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Article: MIT launches free online 'fully automated' course

The future of education, the university as a "freemium" service.

MIT launches free online 'fully automated' course
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/education-17012968

(Sent from Flipboard)

Flipboardcover

Video about Social Media

Nice video - shout out to Ruth for sending me this link:

Friday, February 24, 2012

Anniversary batch

Today I uncasked the first batch of Grand Traverse Distillery/O'Bradley's blended Irish Whiskey, the Anniversary Batch (casked Sept 1). Netted two liters of 80 proof blended Irish whiskey (50% corn, 50% malted barley); two 250ml "pints" of cask reserve (125 proof); and from the dregs (the last bit from the cask) about a pint of "apple pie" (60 proof spiced apple). In all, the angels (evaporation) and the "devil's cut" (what remains in the wood of the cask) took about half a liter. Lacking a local source of distilled spirits, I am rolling the dice and trying "whiskey cask Long islands" (Bacardi 151, Sauza silver tequila, 110 proof vodka). I'll give it a couple of months and see what we get.

I think I'll go mix up a Manhattan toast the magic.

Photo

--Brad

Thursday, February 23, 2012

On "Apple's Sweatshops"

A colleague sent me this email (quoted in it's entirety):

> I am interested in your take on the current controversy about Apple's China sweat shops. Thanks.
I'll post my reply here. At the bottom of the post are two URLs: one for a recent article about worker raises and increased attention of the factories; the other perhaps the best article I have read on the issue, from the New York Times. I urge you to read the Times article in its entirety - it contains some very insightful observations about globalization and America's place in the new economy.

My response to my colleague follows:

---

Well, first, other that having a tremendous appreciation for Apple products, I am no industry expert, nor an economist, nor a social philosopher.

I assume you are referring to Foxconn, and specifically its plant in Shenzen which has around a quarter million workers, many of whom live in company dormitories.

While the working conditions and expectations for a factory worker at Foxconn probably sound alien (and harsh) to an American worker, but global standards perhaps not. Six-day work weeks and 12-hour shifts for the American equivalent of $20 a day may be interpreted as a "sweat shop" here, but Foxconn's factories are modern, well-lit and ventilated, clean and safe.

It should also be pointed out, in the context of your question, that the factories are not Apple's. Foxconn and the other suppliers in Asia, South America and Eastern Europe make components for and assemble virtually all the electronics Americans consume - not just iPhones but televisions, stereos, computers, automotive electronics, home energy controls, and on and on and on.

Largely as the result of Apple's success in the smartphone market and Foxconn's central role in iPhone manufacturing, the company is getting a lot of attention. A few years ago there was a "rash" of worker suicides that many were quick to ascribe to the "inhumane" working conditions. But with a worker population of a quarter-million, the number of suicides in that period were within the background frequency.

From the point of view of the worker, Foxconn is a pretty good deal. Most of its unskilled or semiskilled laborers are fleeing an agrarian - and largely unmechanized - lifestyle. A 12-hour shift in a well-lit and clean factory with wages above the regulated minimum plus overtime and bonuses must sound pretty decent to someone who is slogging pig shit by hand into a muddy field for 14 hours a day.

It is not a fair comparison to judge Foxconn's working conditions and wages in China (or Brazil or Mexico or the Czech Republic) against American middle-class sensibilities. American workers recoil at descriptions of Foxconn's working conditions, but only because they would prefer to spend more time with family, coaching their kids' soccer teams, and watching football on TV. But those are not choices workers in most of the world get to make. Their choices are often between working and starving.

There is also the matter of whether Apple (and others) really have a choice whether to employ Americans or go overseas. According to the NY Times article linked below, they really do not. The supply chain is in Asia. The Chinese government is willing to invest in factory expansion to enable Foxconn and other suppliers to bid and win contracts. They have a vast and willing population of appropriately-trained skilled and semi-skilled workers.

Foxconn workers are not slaves, and they are not children. They stood in line to apply for their jobs. They do this because factory work is their best option for a better life. I'm not claiming that Foxconn is Willy Wonka and everybody is happy and singing all day - I know I would not much like working in those conditions. But not that many generations ago, our own ancestors stood in line to work in the coal mines, or the garment shops, or meat packing plants. I would argue that a worker assembling glass screens for an iPhone in 2012 Shenzen is better off than a meatpacker in 1906 Chicago. And I would also argue that they are both in the same position economically and morally - because those conditions are better than the ones they left, and because middle class demand for inexpensive products, whether gadgets or beef, is driving the supply chain.

Upton Sinclair exposed the brutality and profit-driven conditions of the Chicago meatpacking trade, and that eventually led to better conditions for the workers, for the cattle, and for safer products for consumers. Today, the technology bloggers serve that role - calling out the Apples and Foxconns when profits seem to trump humanity, and forcing by strength of public opinion changes when changes are warranted.

Chicago and America emerged from the industrial revolution to build the largest economy the world has ever known, and has sustained that for more than a century. China (and other emerging economies) are poised to do the same in this century.

For what it's worth... Thanks for the question. Do read the Times article.

Monday, February 20, 2012

Article: The Internet is a Major Driver of the Growth of Cognitive Inequality

"Moral of the story: the internet makes dumb people dumber and smart people smarter. If you don't know how to use it, or don't have the background to ask the right questions, you'll end up with a head full of nonsense. But if you do know how to use it, it's an endless wealth of information. Just as globalization and de-unionization have been major drivers of the growth of income inequality over the past few decades, the internet is now a major driver of the growth of cognitive inequality. Caveat emptor."

Indeed. Access to a vast reserve of information, uncataloged and mostly uncurated, without a robust set of critical thinking skills and information literacy techniques, is a recipe for hyperstupid.

The Internet is a Major Driver of the Growth of Cognitive Inequality
http://motherjones.com/kevin-drum/2012/02/internet-major-driver-growth-cognitive-inequality

(Sent from Flipboard)

Article: Forbes Among 30 Clients Using Computer-Generated Stories Instead of Writers

Uh oh. 

Forbes Among 30 Clients Using Computer-Generated Stories Instead of Writers
http://www.mediabistro.com/galleycat/forbes-among-30-clients-using-computer-generated-stories-instead-of-writers_b47243

(Sent from Flipboard)

 

--Brad

Sunday, February 19, 2012

Thursday, February 16, 2012

Everything That's Wrong with Patent and Copyright Laws in One Brilliant Video [Video]

A very nice recap of the original intent of copyrights and patents, as well as a scathing condemnation of the litigious free-for-all they have become.

Everything That's Wrong with Patent and Copyright Laws in One Brilliant Video [Video]
GIZMODO | FEBRUARY 16, 2012
http://pulse.me/s/62ZOK


Read more

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Article: The iPad Dominates the Future of Retail Point-Of-Sale Purchasing | PadGadget

This article underscores the rapid shift toward off-the-shelf hardware and downloadable apps for point-of-sale support in retail.

"According to Aruba’s survey, 56 percent of businesses plan to implement mobile technology systems using the iPad and 38 percent plan on using iPhones. The big news in business-related mobile solutions is mobile PoS solutions."


The iPad Dominates the Future of Retail Point-Of-Sale Purchasing | PadGadget
http://www.padgadget.com/2012/01/16/the-ipad-dominates-the-future-of-retail-point-of-sale-purchasing/

(Sent from Flipboard)

Article: Buffalo Wild Wings Plans to Go iPad in its Restaurants

I have a feeling those are going to be some gamey touchscreens...

Article: Hand Over Your iPad – The Cat Is Bored

You know who you are...

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Article: Crack this: How to pick strong passwords and keep them that way

Good advice about passwords.

And if you don't like all the reading, XKCD covered this back in August. Http://XKCD/936

Crack this: How to pick strong passwords and keep them that way
http://www.digitaltrends.com/mobile/crack-this-how-to-pick-strong-passwords-and-keep-them-that-way/

(Sent from Flipboard)

Assistant

There's a new icon on my keyboard at the microphone and with this microphone I can dictate the contents of an email using the Siri assistant for the Apple iPhone 4S using just my voice I can create compose and send an email. This email can be sent anywhere and we'll post to Facebook and twitter. And in fact this particular post was done entirely as a dictation with no editing. I see if you Meyer errors but probably no more than I could make what I'm typing especially on the small keyboard and I can do this virtually hands-free. This seems to work at least as well as some of the dedicated text to speech applications I've used. In fact it seems to be a little bit smarter about contractions and alternative words. I'm really looking forward to wear this Siri assistant can go in the near future. --Brad

Thursday, January 26, 2012

Life in a Day, and why YouTube and Wikipedia matter

Life in a Day is, at its core, a documentary film. But its scope is what sets it apart - it is nothing less than a global snapshot of humanity.

The project asked people all over the world - and in places where "media" is not as ubiquitous as in the West, the film's producers and editors sent cameras - to video record their lives on a specific day: July 24, 2010. The producers expected to receive perhaps 15,000 submissions; they got more than 80,000, a total of 4500 hours of images mundane and extraordinary.

Through a process of cataloging and culling, the editors present the finished film in 1:35. It is available for full viewing on YouTube, and is also now available on NetFlix or DVD.

Life in a Day is sponsored by YouTube, and took advantage of YouTube's massive video servers to collect and catalog the clips. The clips were shot by amateurs - ordinary people - using HandyCams and $100 flash memory cameras, iPhones, what have you. Some clips are grainy, poorly lit, jittery, out-of-focus - it doesn't matter. The content is so compelling in aggregate that the intercutting and juxtapositions become lyrical.

The structure is loose, the themes broad, and there is no plot. The entire film may be summed up as "Life happens." There are funny moments and inspiring ones, profound moments and tragic ones. It's like, you know, life.

I picked out one particular contribution, about an 11-year-old shoeshine boy from Peru. His story is woven through other stories. He appears briefly, we move on to something else, and just about when we have forgotten him, he reappears, framed in his doorway holding his green and white laptop, supplied by the One Laptop Per Child project. This boy lives in conditions the poorest Americans would consider appalling. He works because his mother has died and he must help support his family, and he finds both refuge and escape through Wikipedia. "Wikipedia has everything," he says. "It has stories, and history, and maths, and science." He uses his laptop to play games, to draw, to write stories. "It is my friend," he says, "like my sister."

We leave him, believing - or wanting to believe - he will make it, will succeed, escape the tragic conditions life has dealt him. His worldliness and joie de vive, despite his core sadness, seem well beyond his years, and too strong to fail. That is, if disease or hunger or street thieves after the coins in his pocket don't do him in first. He has connected to the larger world, a world he might never even know of if not for the OLPC and Wikipedia. We in higher education can bemoan Wikipedia's "amateur" nature all we like, but for millions, and soon billions of people, it may be the closest they ever get to a library, or a school.

The internet is not for Americans only, or for the well-to-do. It's not just shopping and friending and World of Warcraft. It is a lifeline, a potential rescue out of desperate conditions, perhaps the only chance millions upon millions will ever have.

It is incumbent upon us - the internet wealthy - to not just focus on how the web can entertain us, or make us richer, but how it can make the world better. Life in a Day helps us remember that, and more.

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Article: Codecademy and The White House Announce Code Summer+ Youth Education Program


Codecademy and The White House Announce Code Summer+ Youth Education Program
http://techcrunch.com/2012/01/17/code-summer-plus/

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Article: iPad a Solid Education Tool, Study Reports


iPad a Solid Education Tool, Study Reports
http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2012/01/ipad-educational-aid-study/

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Article: can changing how we teach make our kids smarter, more creative?

First the $50 tablet and now self-organized learning... The education revolution is happening in the slums of India, and in America we keep building cathedrals to 1950s-style worker factories and call them "schools."

Article: iPads in Education: Wake up and Smell the Future

From what I've seen of it, iBooks Author is a game changing piece of software.

iPads in Education: Wake up and Smell the Future
http://ipadinsight.com/ipad/ipads-in-education-wake-up-and-smell-the-future

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