Cyborg Lives
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Understanding our Cyborg lives, redescribing our reality
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A Light Bulb with a Computer and Projector Inside from the MIT Media Lab Augments Reality | MIT Technology Review

A Light Bulb with a Computer and Projector Inside from the MIT Media Lab Augments Reality | MIT Technology Review | Cyborg Lives | Scoop.it

Powerful computers are becoming small and cheap enough to cram into all sorts of everyday objects. Natan Linder, a student at MIT’s Media Lab, thinks that fitting one inside a light bulb socket, together with a camera and projector, could provide a revolutionary new kind of interface—by turning any table or desk into a simple touch screen.

The LuminAR device, created by Linder and colleagues at the Media Lab, can project interactive images onto a surface, sensing when a person’s finger or hand points to an element within those images. Linder describes LuminAR as an augmented-reality system because the images and interfaces it projects can alter the function of a surface or object. While LuminAR might seem like a far-fetched concept, many large technology companies are experimenting with new kinds of computer interfaces in hopes of discovering new markets for their products (see “Google Game Could Be Augmented Reality’s First Killer App” and ”A New Chip to Bring 3-D Gesture Control to Smartphones”).

Linder’s system uses a camera, a projector, and software to recognize objects and project imagery onto or around them, and also to function as a scanner. It connects to the Internet using Wi-Fi. Some capabilities of the prototype, such as object recognition, rely partly on software running on a remote cloud server.

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Kim Solez The Singularity Explained and Promoted January 2013

Dr. Kim Solez presents "The Technological Singularity Explained and Promoted" on January 10th, 2013 in the Technology and Future of Medicine course LABMP 590 http://www.singularitycourse.comat the University of Alberta in Edmonton Canada.


Via Szabolcs Kósa
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Using virtual worlds to 'soft control' people's movements in the real one

Using virtual worlds to 'soft control' people's movements in the real one | Cyborg Lives | Scoop.it
Computer science researchers at Northwestern University have developed a way to exert limited control on how people move, pushing them out of their regular travel patterns. The key: tapping into some of their cell phone applications.

Via Sakis Koukouvis
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Rescooped by Wildcat2030 from Technoscience and the Future
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Transfer Data Through The Human Body To Your Devices

Transfer Data Through The Human Body To Your Devices | Cyborg Lives | Scoop.it
Ericsson aims to turn our anatomy into a USB key -- a bridge between gadgets with its 'Connected Me' technology.

Via brianlmerritt, Sakis Koukouvis, ABroaderView, olsen jay nelson
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