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LeopoldS

Schumpeter: More than just a game | The Economist - 3 views

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    remember the discussion I tried to trigger in the team a few weeks ago ...
  • ...5 more comments...
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    main quote I take from the article: "gamification is really a cover for cynically exploiting human psychology for profit"
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    I would say that it applies to management in general :-)
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    which is exactly why it will never work .... and surprisingly "managers" fail to understand this very simple fact.
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    ... "gamification is really a cover for cynically exploiting human psychology for profit" --> "Why Are Half a Million People Poking This Giant Cube?" http://www.wired.com/gamelife/2012/11/curiosity/
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    I think the "essence" of the game is its uselessness... workers need exactly the inverse, to find a meaning in what they do !
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    I love the linked article provided by Johannes! It expresses very elegantly why I still fail to understand even extremely smart and busy people in my view apparently waiting their time in playing computer games - but I recognise that there is something in games that we apparently need / gives us something we cherish .... "In fact, half a million players so far have registered to help destroy the 64 billion tiny blocks that compose that one gigantic cube, all working in tandem toward a singular goal: discovering the secret that Curiosity's creator says awaits one lucky player inside. That's right: After millions of man-hours of work, only one player will ever see the center of the cube. Curiosity is the first release from 22Cans, an independent game studio founded earlier this year by Peter Molyneux, a longtime game designer known for ambitious projects like Populous, Black & White and Fable. Players can carve important messages (or shameless self-promotion) onto the face of the cube as they whittle it to nothing. Image: Wired Molyneux is equally famous for his tendency to overpromise and under-deliver on his games. In 2008, he said that his upcoming game would be "such a significant scientific achievement that it will be on the cover of Wired." That game turned out to be Milo & Kate, a Kinect tech demo that went nowhere and was canceled. Following this, Molyneux left Microsoft to go indie and form 22Cans. Not held back by the past, the Molyneux hype train is going full speed ahead with Curiosity, which the studio grandiosely promises will be merely the first of 22 similar "experiments." Somehow, it is wildly popular. The biggest challenge facing players of Curiosity isn't how to blast through the 2,000 layers of the cube, but rather successfully connecting to 22Cans' servers. So many players are attempting to log in that the server cannot handle it. Some players go for utter efficiency, tapping rapidly to rack up combo multipliers and get more
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    why are video games so much different than collecting stamps or spotting birds or planes ? One could say they are all just hobbies
Luís F. Simões

Mars Code | Communications of the ACM - 1 views

  • As can be expected, all functions on the rover, and on the spacecraft that brought it to its destination 350 million miles from Earth, are controlled by software. This article discusses some of the precautions the JPL flight software team took to improve its reliability.
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    Interesting read if you're interested on the kind of coding that goes into something like the Curiosity rover. :) btw.. nice fill-packet being sent by Curiosity: "Elvis has Spirit. The answer is 42....END\r\n"
Marcus Maertens

Google AI Blog: Curiosity and Procrastination in Reinforcement Learning - 2 views

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    What happens if you put a TV in the maze your robot is supposed to navigate (driven by curiosity)?
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    Does the fact that I follow this process of learning, make me a meta-learner? Or a pre-robot?
LeopoldS

Track Curiosity Rover's Entire Mission With This Incredible Image From Space | Wired Sc... - 1 views

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    impressive
Ma Ru

Curiosity at Rocknest Gigapano - 3 views

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    Billion-Pixel view from curiosity at Rocknest...
Marcus Maertens

Mars Curiosity Descent - Ultra HD 30fps Smooth-Motion - YouTube - 3 views

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    Interpolation of the images of the curiosity landing. Very nice work!
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    this is fantastic!!!
Lionel Jacques

Mars Curiosity Rover successfully launched - 0 views

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    On Saturday at 10:02 a.m. EST an Atlas V rocket carrying its precious cargo, the Mars Science Laboratory and Curiosity rover, took off successfully from Space Launch Complex 41 at Cape Canaveral. A statement from NASA Project Manager Peter Theisinger confirmed that all had gone according to plan.
Athanasia Nikolaou

Science on Mars and Mars on Science - 0 views

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    Some sort of organic carbon has been detected by the sampling of Curiosity; the contamination source was isolated and the signal persists. The scientists suggest as a source meteorites transporting interstellar matter, or maybe some sort of ancient life whose biomass production only survived cosmic radiation as it was buried underground. a big deal: six relevant articles were published simultaneously online: http://www.sciencemag.org/site/extra/curiosity/index.xhtml?utm_content=&utm_medium=Facebook&utm_campaign=Science&utm_source=shortener
LeopoldS

Personal values colour sentence comprehension within milliseconds - MPI Website - 0 views

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    interesting research - could we put this in context with curiosity cloning? 200 ms is probably measurable ....
ESA ACT

This Is a Computer on Your Brain - 0 views

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    Curiosity Cloning? This is 2006 but are there any publication related? Can someone track the results of this research?
ESA ACT

Home | Galaxy Zoo - 0 views

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    An alternative to curiosity cloning: Let millions of people have a look at the pictures...
Ma Ru

Meantime, on Mars - 1 views

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    Curiosity suffered from BSoD...
Isabelle Dicaire

Object likely benign plastic from Curiosity rover - 5 views

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    Rover Curiosity finds man-made shiny material on Mars. It seems the rover is littering plastic on the planet!
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    Their planetary protection officers will have some interesting questions to ask ...
Francesco Biscani

NASA Will Crowdsource Its Photos of Mars | Motherboard - 4 views

  • Researchers hope that crowdsourcing imaging targets will increase the camera’s already bountiful science return.
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    Here we go, material for curiosity cloning, life detection via image compression, etc. etc.
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    tar cvfz compressed.tgz MarsImages/ Love it!
Francesco Biscani

Can Curiosity Be Programmed? - 4 views

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    Deja-vu?
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    He talks on "Singularity Summits" of good ol' Kurtzweil? Surprised?
ESA ACT

ImageJ 1.41g - MacUpdate - 0 views

shared by ESA ACT on 24 Apr 09 - Cached
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    of interest to us (Marek?) for the curiosity cloning image preparations? (LS)
johannessimon81

Methane fluctuations on Mars - 1 views

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    Localized high concentrations of methane have been discovered by the Curiosity rover. This points to localized sources of methane of yet unknown nature. Maybe the ACT's odor source localization should be resurrected!
Christophe Praz

Curiosity Rover Sees a Pixel's-Worth of Comet Siding Spring - 3 views

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    It's something...
mkisantal

Reinforcement Learning with Prediction-Based Rewards - 3 views

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    Prediction-based method for encouraging reinforcement learning agents to explore their environments through curiosity (reward for unfamiliar states). Learns some games without any extrinsic reward!
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    Fun failure case: agent gets stuck in front of TV.
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    Not read this article but on a related note: Curiosity and various metrics for it have been explored for some time in robotics (outside of RL) as a framework for exploring (partially) unfamiliar environments. I came across some papers on this topic applied to UAVs when prep'ing for a PhD app. This one (http://www.cim.mcgill.ca/~yogesh/publications/crv2014.pdf) comes to mind - which used a topic modelling approach.
LeopoldS

Decreasing human body temperature in the United States since the industrial revolution ... - 1 views

shared by LeopoldS on 11 Jan 20 - No Cached
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    Nice paper and linked to so many other factors.... curious "The question of whether mean body temperature is changing over time is not merely a matter of idle curiosity. Human body temperature is a crude surrogate for basal metabolic rate which, in turn, has been linked to both longevity (higher metabolic rate, shorter life span) and body size (lower metabolism, greater body mass). We speculated that the differences observed in temperature between the 19th century and today are real and that the change over time provides important physiologic clues to alterations in human health and longevity since the Industrial Revolution."
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