"

“The simple fact is that we humans are made from hardware that is just too bandwidth-limited, and too slow, to compete with coming waves of computer technology.”
On the one hand, digitization increases growth and prosperity. On the other, write MIT scholars Brynjolfsson and McAfee, “There is no economic law that says that everyone, or even most people, automatically benefit from technological progress.”
Life in the digital world doesn’t just change our behavior; it also changes how we learn and think. Children are growing up in a world in which the distinctions between real and simulated life, as well as between machines, humans and animals, are starting to disappear, concludes Sherry Turkle, a professor of Social Studies of Science and Technology at MIT.

Indeed, the behavior of small children can reveal whether their parents own iPhones and iPads. These are the children who spread their fingers across paper photo albums when they want to enlarge the images or drag their fingers across television screens when they’re bored by a cartoon they’re watching.
According to a recent study by Columbia University psychologist Betsy Sparrow, a person who knows that he or she can readily look up a piece of information online doesn’t remember it as well as someone without Internet access. The study finds that the human brain treats the Internet as an extension of itself, as a kind of external memory. Ideally, this means that trivial knowledge can be stored in this external memory, freeing up brain space for creativity. But, in the worst case, the computer becomes a prosthetic brain.
Computer technologies have been a boon to medicine and of great benefit to human beings. But the advances also illustrate that the divide between man and machine is becoming narrower. Neuro-implants define this boundary because they entail having a machine penetrate into the human body. Although today’s instruments are still relatively crude, brain pacemakers are already being used in patients with depression and obsessive-compulsive disorder. In this way, machines are no longer just intervening in the body’s mechanical functions, but also in its emotional life.

"

Blessing or Curse? Competing Visions of a Computer-Controlled Future - SPIEGEL ONLINE - News - International (via myserendipities)

(via wildcat2030)

This is my first post in Diaspora. Happy to be part of this new social network ( :

curiositycounts:

Ah, yes. Over or Under – a brief visual history of the great toilet paper debate   (via)

curiositycounts:

Ah, yes. Over or Under – a brief visual history of the great toilet paper debate   (via)

If Haiti were to commit to permaculture settlement, it would find many willing experts scattered among its 10,000 uncoordinated NGOs; some of these experts — like Rodrigo Silva and Joe Jenkins, who work with the organization Give Love — are today literally stuck in the trenches of Port-au-Prince, dealing with the waste. Other potential activists include the Nouvelle Vie Youth Corps — a kind of permaculture peace corps. And in fact there are relevant organizations and projects that predate the quake, such as the eco-village ofSadhana Forest, in Anse-a-Pitre, which will host a summit this October, and the agro-forestry Project Racine, begun in 2007 by the International Association for Human Values.

Photo taken by me inside a compost toilet door in Boom Festival 2010 - Portugal

Photo taken by me inside a compost toilet door in Boom Festival 2010 - Portugal

"‎”We are in a state of devolution, in fact civilization is a state of devolution, and tribal living is much more sophisticated and peaceful and ‘civilized’ than ‘civilization’ cares to portray."

Tags: quote

Chris Anderson: How web video powers global innovation

 TED’s Chris Anderson says the rise of web video is driving a worldwide phenomenon he calls Crowd Accelerated Innovation — a self-fueling cycle of learning that could be as significant as the invention of print. But to tap into its power, organizations will need to embrace radical openness. And for TED, it means the dawn of a whole new chapter …

How come TED’s head guy Chris Anderson is giving his own TEDTalk? Well, it all started with an idea that wouldn’t go away — an insight into the true significance of web video, and what it might mean for the world’s future. Bruno Giussani, who runs our TEDGlobal conference, got excited enough about the idea that he insisted Chris speak at Oxford this summer. The talk ushers in a whole new chapter in TED’s history … one which you’re invited to help write. Please watch, and then help shape the future of TED with your comments.

Quants are the math wizards and computer programmers in the engine room of our global financial system who designed the financial products that almost crashed Wall st. The credit crunch has shown how the global financial system has become increasingly dependent on mathematical models trying to quantify human (economic) behaviour. Now the quants are at the heart of yet another technological revolution in finance: trading at the speed of light. 

What are the risks of treating the economy and its markets as a complex machine? Will we be able to keep control of this model-based financial system, or have we created a monster?

A story about greed, fear and randomness from the insides of Wall Street.

Director: Marije Meerman
Research: Gerko Wessel

"‎”I am because we Are"

— African proverb

r(EVOL)ution for (EVOL)ution!!!

(evol)ution!!

"Our DNA is made of the same DNA as a tree. The tree breeds what we exhale. When the tree exhales, we need what the tree exhales. So.. we have a common destiny with the tree. We are all from the Earth.. and when the earth, the water.. the atmosphere is corrupted that will create it’s own reaction. Mother Earth is reacting! The atmosphere is corrupted!"

Tags: tree dna quote

“balanced dualistic ONEss”

What time is it?

Particle physicist Professor Brian Cox asks, ‘What time is it?’ It’s a simple question which sounds like it has a simple answer, but do we really know what it is that we’re asking?

In this intriguing documentary from the BBC’s ‘Horizon’, Prof Cox visits the ancient Mayan pyramids in Mexico, where the Maya built temples to time. He discovers that a day is never 24 hours, and meets Earth’s very own Director of Time. He journeys to the beginning of time, goes beyond it within the realms of string theory, and explores the very limit of time. He learns that we not only travel through time at the speed of light, but the experience we feel as the passing of time could be an illusion.

You will never see time in the same light again!