Archive for the 'tech' Category

Days of Our Digital Lives

July 14, 2015

Days of Our Digital Lives by @seththoughts http://www.nytimes.com/2015/07/05/opinion/sunday/seth-stephens-davidowitz-days-of-our-digital-lives.html #Search data shows misspellings & forgotten passwords more common at night

QT:{{"
“There is some evidence that we get less sharp as the day progresses. Between 2 and 3 a.m., search rates for “forgot password” are 60 percent higher than average. They are lowest around 9 a.m. Between 2 and 3 a.m., we are more than twice as likely to misspell “facebook” as “facbook” and nearly twice as likely to misspell “weather” as “wether.””

"}}

Why do we keep expecting robots to kill us?

July 10, 2015

Why do we…expect…robots to kill us?
http://mashable.com/2015/07/02/robot-killers/ Freak accident & coincidental reporting leads to skynet/#Terminator posts

QT:{{”
“The news flashed around the world, every headline a variation on the classic “man bites dog” — Robot Kills Man. To make matters more ominous, one of the reporters tweeting about the story was the Financial Times’ Sarah O’Connor — who was apparently unaware of the Terminator franchise featuring her namesake, Sarah Connor, and didn’t understand why so many of her replies talked about something called Skynet becoming self-aware.

Never mind that the robot in question was a relatively prosaic piece of machinery, a giant arm designed to operate within a cage, far away from humans. Never mind that, according to the preliminary assessment, the worker was at fault. Never mind that since the first robot-related death was reported in 1979, we’ve seen fewer than one such incident per year. Toilets, zippers and pants all cause more deaths than robots.

But we see what we want to see, and apparently what we want to see is the robopocalypse.”
“}}

Solar Power for Everyone – The New Yorker

July 6, 2015

Power to the people
http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2015/06/29/power-to-the-people Will utilities go for refitting homes w/ solar & more insulation? Or will they resist?

Not uploading to picasaweb | Eyefi Customer Community

July 6, 2015

Googlecode redux: @eyeficard provides another example of a relied-on webservice pulling the plug on a loyal userbase
https://community.eyefi.com/eyefi/topics/not-uploading-to-picasaweb

Amazon Web Services Announces Amazon Machine Learning

June 21, 2015

AWS Announces $AMZN #MachineLearning
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/amazon-web-services-announces-amazon-machine-learning-2015-04-09 Will it be useful for genomics? http://aws.amazon.com/machine-learning

Also, redshift

How Do We Build a Safer Car? – The New Yorker

June 1, 2015

How [to] Build a Safer Car?
http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2015/05/04/the-engineers-lament QT: Pessimist sees glass as 1/2 empty; optimist, 1/2 full; engineer, 2X what it should be

Dept. of Transportation MAY 4, 2015 ISSUE
The Engineer’s Lament
Two ways of thinking about automotive safety.
BY MALCOLM GLADWELL

QT:{{”
There is an old joke about an engineer, a priest, and a doctor enjoying a round of golf. Ahead of them is a group playing so slowly and inexpertly that in frustration the three ask the greenkeeper for an explanation. “That’s a group of blind firefighters,” they are told. “They lost their sight saving our clubhouse last year, so we let them play for free.”

The priest says, “I will say a prayer for them tonight.”

The doctor says, “Let me ask my ophthalmologist colleagues if anything can be done for them.”

And the engineer says, “Why can’t they play at night?”

The greenkeeper explains the behavior of the firefighters. The priest empathizes; the doctor offers care. All three address the social context of the situation: the fact that the firefighters’ disability has inadvertently created conflict on the golf course. Only the engineer tries to solve the problem.

Almost all engineering jokes—and there are many—are versions of this belief: that the habits of mind formed by the profession enable engineers to see things differently from the rest of us. “A pessimist sees the glass as half empty. An optimist sees the glass as half full. The engineer sees the glass as twice the size it needs to be.” “}}

NSA Snooping Was Only the Beginning. Meet the Spy Chief Leading Us Into Cyberwar | WIRED

May 25, 2015

#NSA Snooping Was Only the Beginning
http://www.wired.com/2013/06/general-keith-alexander-cyberwar/ Overview of the activities of Alexander the Geek, spy master behind #stuxnet

The Mind of Marc Andreessen – The New Yorker

May 23, 2015

QT:{{”
Andreessen laughed and continued, “They were doomed from the start, because Apple in Cupertino”—in Silicon Valley—“had spent three years building that. I’ve been totally determined to be on the other side of that dynamic by being here, because success in software follows a power-law distribution. It’s not Coke and Pepsi and a bunch of others; it’s winner take all. Second prize is a set of steak knives, and third prize is you’re fired.”
“}}

http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2015/05/18/tomorrows-advance-man

TOMORROW’S ADVANCE MAN

by Joe Pugliese

Special Report: 50 Years of Moore’s Law – IEEE Spectrum

May 19, 2015

Special Report: 50 Years of Moore’s Law
http://spectrum.ieee.org/semiconductors/design/the-death-of-moores-law-will-spur-innovation Its glorious history & some benefits from its death (eg more open hardware)

The Man Who Broke the Music Business – The New Yorker

May 17, 2015

The Man Who Broke the #Music Business http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2015/04/27/the-man-who-broke-the-music-business An original conduit for the #MP3 & Napster boom, the dawn of digital piracy

Annals of Technology APRIL 27, 2015 ISSUE

The Man Who Broke the Music Business
The dawn of online piracy.
BY STEPHEN WITT