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PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
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❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
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dirt enthusiast
AnasAbdin
Acquired Stardust
YOU ARE THE REASON
Keni
Not today Justin
art blog(derogatory)

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@machines2016
It’s 2017 and computer graphics have conquered the Uncanny Valley, that strange place where things are almost real... but not quite. After decades of innovation,…
Born with tibial hemimelia, Japanese artist Mari Katayama chose to have her legs amputated at the age of nine. Now she uses her body in her dazzling work, adorned with crystals, seashells and lifesize dolls
“Only the paranoid survive.” — Andy Grove
May 4 -- U-Ram Choe is one of South Korea’s most exciting contemporary artists. Born in 1970 in Seoul, U-Ram creates meticulously intricate and beautiful art...
Australian entrepreneur Craig Wright has publicly identified himself as Bitcoin creator Satoshi Nakamoto.
Machine anthropomorphism and empathy (that Ikea commercial I was talking about)
To harken back to a theme from earlier in the semester, former Apple designer Scott Summit produces custom 3-D printed limbs with the philosophy that each limb should be unique to the person, return them as close as possible to their original form, and also be beautiful in its own right. His team’s method involves 3d scanning the surviving limb (when there is one) and using a mirror image of that data to formulate the shape of the prosthetic. In the process, the limb is fully customized with tattoos, material choices, formal alterations, among other possible changes, all with the ultimate goal of imbuing an otherwise exclusively utilitarian object with the person’s personality.
I’ve been working in the privacy space for the last six years, and privacy never really mattered that much to me. I can’t say I was ever in the..
class and race factor into our access to privacy.
NSF's mission is to advance the progress of science, a mission accomplished by funding proposals for research and education made by scientists, engineers, and educators from across the country.
This is a really interesting concept of using a combination of AI and complex math in order to predict where poachers and illegal loggers are going to attempt to work. The math and science of it is a bit over my head, but it boils down to the computer taking into effect a lot of different variables including current patrol paths to predict areas that would be ideal for poachers. This information is then used to adjust patrol routes, as live patrols are the most widely used to catch poachers this could help a great deal. I absolutely love this application of the technology, computers helping catch poachers and illegal loggers, awesome, but there’s a part of me, the par that’s seen Minority Report, that fears the other possible use for this technology. Right now it seems hard for this iteration of the technology to be abused, but applied to other to other aspects of crime and pushed to preemptive measurements, a definite punishment for a crime not committed vibe is definitely felt for me.
Learning from how birds handle turbulence
This is about scientists looking to birds in order to better develop drones. They've built a wind tunnel that allows the bird to maintain flight while in a confined area therefore able to be studied. They can regulate the wind, create turbulence, and control the angle of the turbulence. This will allow them to study how the birds shift their wings and control movement under different circumstances. This data will be applied to the flight of drones and will hopefully enable them to work better under more unpredictable wind circumstances. I am again fascinated with this idea of lookign to nature to help solve our technological problems. Again, why reinvent the wheel, or flying device, when nature has perfect functioning examples of this already existing?
Looking deeper into Stelarc’s Ear on Arm project I found out it took him roughly 10 years to find the team of plastic surgeons who would actually are to do the job. Initially I didn’t think this was too weird, as a surgeon who would want to put an ear on a guy’s arm. Stelarc himself commented, “‘The medical community is essentially a very conservative community and medical practice is about curing people and repairing damage,’ he said. ‘It seems trivial and unethical, in the sense of a waste of time and effort, to construct an extra ear on the arm of an artist who is perfectly healthy.’" So yeah, saving lives is more important than throwing an ear of a guy’s arm, but how many elective surgeries are already being performed anyway. In a study done in the USA put out in 2014 by the American Society of Plastic Surgeons 15.6 million cosmetic procedures were performed, up 3% from 2013, which totals to $12.9 Billion dollars spent on plastic surgery. Comparatively the number of Reconstructive, or medically relevant, Procedures was only 5.7 million which puts the cosmetic surgeries just under three times the amount. So really, Stelarc wasn’t fighting with ethical implications of society; these statistics prove there are plenty of plastic surgeons out there willing to perform elective cosmetic surgeries. So he was really not fighting the medical community for reasons of triviality or the unethical. What seems here to be the case is more of a struggle against societal norms. So thinking in this regards, how much different is it to throw a surgical implant under Stelarc’s arm as opposed to under someone’s chest?
Something a little humorous that kind of relates to our discussion of dystopia. Sculptor Y. Nakajima has given Thomas the Train a new life as a six legged, 300mW laser firing robot! This robot is Mad Max-esque and reminiscent of the botched toys in the room of Sid in Toy Story. Overall, this robot reads as some sort of manifestation from a post-apocalyptic setting, where disfigured parts of machines are combined to become weapons. While the general consensus is horror, I think it’s meant to be funny.
http://www.visualnews.com/2015/12/20/nightmarish-thomas-tank-engine-hack-totally-off-rails/
While I genuinely do think that this is hilarious, it is surprising to what extent you find people on youtube showcasing early examples of potential high tech weaponry/ other technologies in their videos, some of which are scrapped together with scavenged electronics like Metal Gear Thomas. This guy that I’m posting in my video sort of embodies the mindset of many others like himself that dabble with these kinds of experiments.
A paper that leverages affect theory for post-colonial thinking about contemporary Western media treatment of foreign (specifically Arabic) political uprisings. Proposing the notion of the “affect-stereotype — “a stereotype [that] occupies a territory of impressions that is maintained by a power structure that allows it to proliferate and to ‘stick’ to the point it operates as affect” — this sociological piece explodes the image of the so-called “Angry Arab Man” to lay bare the affective operations of a contemporary, technology-enabled orientalism. Allouche summarizes an instance:
“In a more recent example, Western media reduced the frustration of an angry Egyptian youth, and the complexity of Egypt’s internal politics, to the question of whether the removal of Mohammed Morsi constituted a coup or not (Shalaan 2013; Tadros 2013; Trager 2013). Instead of focusing on the reasons behind the on-going uprising, despite the successful removal of Hosni Mubarak and the election a new president in the person of Mohammed Morsi, Western media focused mostly on the lack of democratic understanding of the lay Egyptian man.”
An essay that seems almost patronizing in its airy, commonsensical theorizing of everyday spaces, bodies, and gadgets — its basic proposition is that “material thresholds are the limits that determine the potential affects an object can generate, which in turn define what that object is.” But this attempt to expand affect theory’s scope of study (i.e., to make it object-oriented) turns out to be an unusually careful and well-articulated reconsideration of banal physical processes (unlocking a lock, hearing sound from speakers) that reorients notions of ontological status and offers grounds on which to theorize the everyday through critical-theoretical or phenomenological lenses. It should be noted that Ash, the essayist, defines “technology” with the breadth of an anthropologist: “technical objects,” “inorganically organized objects.”
Technological innovation is arguably the greatest agent of change in the modern world. Participants in this week’s Annual Meeting of the New Champions (and online followers) will learn an...
A synoptic look at the (optimistically still-mutable) trajectory of technological progress (mainly the developed world’s). Infuriated by its accuracy, I have little else to say.