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Home/ IT100_52/Fall 2009/ Contents contributed and discussions participated by Nia Reid

Contents contributed and discussions participated by Nia Reid

Nia Reid

Ovoo - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

shared by Nia Reid on 03 Dec 09 - Cached
  • An ovoo (Mongolian: овоо, heap) is a type of shamanistic cairn found in Mongolia, usually made from rocks or from wood
Nia Reid

Six degrees of separation - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • Six degrees of separation (also referred to as the "Human Web") refers to the idea that, if a person is one step away from each person they know and two steps away from each person who is known by one of the people they know, then everyone is at most six steps away from any other person on Earth. It was popularised by a play written by John Guare.
Nia Reid

Radio-frequency identification - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • Radio-frequency identification (RFID) is the use of an object (typically referred to as an RFID tag) applied to or incorporated into a product, animal, or person for the purpose of identification and tracking using radio waves.
Nia Reid

Becoming Screen Literate from the New York Times - 0 views

  • Gutenberg’s invention of metallic movable type elevated writing into a central position in the culture. By the means of cheap and perfect copies, text became the engine of change and the foundation of stability. From printing came journalism, science and the mathematics of libraries and law. The distribution-and-display device that we call printing instilled in society a reverence for precision (of black ink on white paper), an appreciation for linear logic (in a sentence), a passion for objectivity (of printed fact) and an allegiance to authority (via authors), whose truth was as fixed and final as a book. In the West, we became people of the book. Now invention is again
    • Nia Reid
       
      Gutenberg's invention helped createt he world we live in today. Due to his invention, we saved resources of ink but destroyed trees for paper. On the other hand, we do have books, testaments, verification due Gutenburg's invention. The people are able to see the bigger picture when written on paper.
  • In fact, the habits of the mashup are borrowed from textual literacy. You cut and paste words on a page. You quote verbatim from an expert. You paraphrase a lovely expression. You add a layer of detail found elsewhere. You borrow the structure from one work to use as your own. You move frames around as if they were phrases.
    • Nia Reid
       
      This is very true. It's basically describing the steps to a research paper. I never knew movies and papers were connected in this way. Both are styles of creativity if used differently.
  • It is a formidable task, but in the past decade computers have gotten much better at recognizing objects in a picture than most people realize. Researchers have started training computers to recognize a human face. Specialized software can rapidly inspect a photograph’s pixels searching for the signature of a face: circular eyeballs within a larger oval, shadows that verify it is spherical. Once an algorithm has identified a face, the computer could do many things with this knowledge: search for the same face elsewhere, find similar-looking faces or substitute a happier version.
    • Nia Reid
       
      I don't think having a computer memorize faces is a good thing. Some many things could go wrong. For example it could be used to still identity. However, the good thing is anyone can see what the world knows about them by looking up their own face.
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  • With our fingers we will drag objects out of films and cast them in our own movies. A click of our phone camera will capture a landscape, then display its history, which we can use to annotate the image. Text, sound, motion will continue to merge into a single intermedia as they flow through the always-on network. With the assistance of screen fluency tools we might even be able to summon up realistic fantasies spontaneously. Standing before a screen, we could create the visual image of a turquoise rose, glistening with dew, poised in a trim ruby vase, as fast as we could write these words. If we were truly screen literate, maybe even faster. And that is just the opening scene
    • Nia Reid
       
      Technology makes life easier. Movies are made in less amount of time through cut, copy, and paste of sounds and pictures. It allows the brain to be even more creative in placing the cut and paste objects together to form a story. Every resource is in the palm of the peoples' hands now.
Nia Reid

The Technium - 0 views

shared by Nia Reid on 21 Sep 09 - Cached
  • This is more clearly seen at the extreme. The difference between four bottles of amino acids on a laboratory self and the four amino acids arrayed in your chromosomes lies in the additional structure, or ordering, those atoms get from participating in the spirals of your replicating DNA. Same atoms, more order. Those atoms of amino acids acquire yet another level of structure and order when their cellular host undergoes evolution. As organisms evolve, the informational code their atoms carry is manipulated, processed, and reordered. In addition to genetic information, the atoms now convey adaptive information. Over time, the same atoms can be promoted to new levels of order. Perhaps their one cell home joins another cell to become multicellular — that demands the informational architecture for a larger organism as well as a cell. Further transitions in evolution — the aggregation into tissues and organs, the acquisition of sex, the creation of social groups — continue to elevate the order and increase the structure of the information flowing through those same atoms.
    • Nia Reid
       
      Atoms have more functions then originately discovered. Atoms started out as single cell. However as time progess, they are becoming multicellular.The transitions are acquisition of sex, creation of groups to keep order and increase in structure of information flow.
  • The technium can be understood as a way of structuring information beyond biology. Foremost among all inventions is language, and its kin writing, which introduced a parallel set of symbol strings to those found in DNA. But the grammar and syntax of language far outstrips the flexibility of the genetic code. Literary inventions like the book index, punctuation, cross-references, and alphabetic order permitted incredibly complex structures within words; printing broadcast them. Calendars and other scripts captured abstractions such as time, or music. The invention of the scientific method in the 17th century was a series of deepening organizational techniques. Data was first measured, then recorded, analyzed, forecasted and disseminated. The wide but systematic exchange of information via wires, radio waves and society meetings upped the complexity of information flowing through the technium. Innovations in communications (phonograph, telegraph, television) sped up the rate of coordination, and also added new levels of systemization. The invention of paper was a more permanent memory device than the brain; photographic film even better. Cheap digital chips lowered the barrier for storing ephemeral information, further intensifying the density of information. Highly designed artifacts and materials are atoms stuffed with layers of complex information. The most mechanical superstructures we've ever built - say skyscrapers, or the Space Shuttle, or the Hadron Supercollider — are giant physical manifestations of incredibly structured information. There are many more hours of design poured into them than hours in manufacturing. Finally, the two greatest inventions in the last 25 years, the link and the tag, have woven new levels of complexity into the web of information. The technium of today reflects 8,000 years of almost da
    • Nia Reid
       
      Over time information structured into various inventions. Some invetions being the calendar, books, and even DNA. Artifacts and materials are basically atoms filled with information. Every manifestation built or created by man contains structured atoms to help it function properly.
  • To explain the how our minds work, or how evolution advances, we apply the pattern of a very large software program processing bits of information. None of these historical metaphorical pictures are wrong; just incomplete. Ditto for computation. But extropy must be more than information alone. We have thousands of years of science ahead of us. Information and computation can't be the most complex immaterial entity there is, just the most complex we've discovered so far. We might eventually discover that extropy involves quantum dynamics, or gravity, or even quantum gravity. But for now, information (in the sense of structure) is a better analogy than anything else we know of for understanding the nature of extropy. Following information will reveal a larger pattern.
    • Nia Reid
       
      Evolution changes everything in the universe including atoms. The atoms contain alot of information. However, extropy involves more than information. It may contain quantum, gravity or both but it is not discovered on what is really in the extropy. All we know is more information will develop and the answers will soon be revealed.
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  • No one wants to see themselves as someone else's program running on someone else's computer. Put that way, life seems a bit secondhand. But doctrine of universal computation means all existing things — the made, the found and the born — are linked to one another because they share, as John Wheeler said, "at the bottom — at a very deep bottom, in most instances — an immaterial source." This commonality, spoken of by mystics of many beliefs in different terms, also has a scientific name: information, computation, extropy
    • Nia Reid
       
      Universal computation contains all existing things in the universe. From the time things or people are created to the time everything leaves this earth, there is universal computation. John Wheeler believes everything is connected in a unknown way. With this said, the scientific names such as information, computation and extropy developed.
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