Embodied Zeitgeist
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Exploration of The Zeitgeist as embodied in Humans
Curated by Xaos
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Off the Grid : Eric Valli

Off the Grid : Eric Valli | Embodied Zeitgeist | Scoop.it

Off the Grid
There are growing number of people
who have decided to live light on the earth
to not be a part of problem anymore
I spent the last few years with four of them
striving for harmony with nature
in the most pristine corners of United States.

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Will 'Digital Ethnic Cleansing' Be Part of the Internet's Future?

Will 'Digital Ethnic Cleansing' Be Part of the Internet's Future? | Embodied Zeitgeist | Scoop.it
Eric Schmidt, Jared Cohen, and Steve Clemons discuss the political limitations of the Internet.
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People need to think about ethics of bringing back Ice Age animals - Telegraph

People need to think about ethics of bringing back Ice Age animals  - Telegraph | Embodied Zeitgeist | Scoop.it
People should start ‘grappling with’ the idea of bringing Ice Age animals back from the dead because scientists are on the brink of achieving it, says TV presenter Alice Roberts.
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Bluescape, the Touchscreen That Covers a Wall

Bluescape, the Touchscreen That Covers a Wall | Embodied Zeitgeist | Scoop.it
Haworth and Obscura Digital's digital whiteboard can hold 160 acres of virtual space
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Why Teaching a Robot to Fetch a Cup of Coffee Matters - IEEE Spectrum

Why Teaching a Robot to Fetch a Cup of Coffee Matters - IEEE Spectrum | Embodied Zeitgeist | Scoop.it
In robotics, as in life, it often takes small steps to reach a big goal
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3D-Printed Rocket Parts Will Take NASA to Mars

3D-Printed Rocket Parts Will Take NASA to Mars | Embodied Zeitgeist | Scoop.it
NASA engineers are building the largest rocket ever constructed -- one that will eventually take us beyond the moon -- using 3D-printed materials.
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PR2 Fetches Sandwich from Subway

Autonomous Subway sandwich delivery by a PR2 robot, from the University of Tokyo and TUM
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Do these startling longevity studies mean your lifespan could double?

Do these startling longevity studies mean your lifespan could double? | Embodied Zeitgeist | Scoop.it
Biologists have successfully extended the life spans of some mice by as much as 70%, leading many to believe that ongoing experimentation on our mammalian cousins will eventually lead to life-extending therapies in humans.
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Google Glass: An Etiquette Guide

Google Glass: An Etiquette Guide | Embodied Zeitgeist | Scoop.it
These high-tech specs with a built-in computer have the geek world abuzz, but wearing them in polite society requires decorum. Here, an open letter to very early adopters.
luiy's curator insight, May 6, 5:46 AM

DEAR GOOGLE GLASS WEARER,

 

Congratulations! You're one of the privileged few who've scored a pair of GoogleGOOG +1.90% Glass, the futuristic eyewear that puts a tiny, voice-controlled, Wi-Fi-enabled computer on your face. It's the most anticipated gadget since the iPad, iPhone or iAnything, really. And the best part? You members of Google's "Explorer Program"—mostly app developers and supernerds—will be testing Glass in the wild months before the general public will get to wear it, fingers crossed, at the end of the year. 

 

Soon you'll be able to view emails, text messages and maps on a translucent screen hovering in the upper-right corner of your peripheral vision. Breaking news alerts will appear right before your eyes. You'll snap photos just by saying, "OK Glass, take a picture." In other words, you'll be able to perform tasks everyone else has to do with their grubby hands and filthy smartphones—what Neanderthals!...

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SOINN artificial brain can now use the internet to learn new things

A group at Tokyo Institute of Technology, led by Dr. Osamu Hasegawa, has succeeded in making further advances with SOINN, their machine learning algorithm, which can now use the internet to learn how to perform new tasks. The system, which is under development as an artificial brain for autonomous mental development robots, is currently being used to learn about objects in photos using image searches on the internet. It can also take aspects of other known objects and combine them to make guesses about objects it doesn't yet recognize.


Via Szabolcs Kósa, Wildcat2030
Miro Svetlik's curator insight, May 3, 4:23 AM

Once that all AI's will be able to not only parse and recognize data from internet but also efficiently communicate with each other and share the results programmers will become obsolete. Well let's have a good time while it lasts.

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How capitalism is turning the internet against democracy, and how to turn it back | openDemocracy

How capitalism is turning the internet against democracy, and how to turn it back | openDemocracy | Embodied Zeitgeist | Scoop.it
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3D printer makes tiniest human liver ever | KurzweilAI

3D printer makes tiniest human liver ever | KurzweilAI | Embodied Zeitgeist | Scoop.it
Cross-section of multi-cellular bioprinted human liver tissue, stained with hematoxylin & eosin (H&E) (credit: Organovo) Lab-grown livers have come
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The Reading Brain in the Digital Age: The Science of Paper versus Screens: Scientific American

The Reading Brain in the Digital Age: The Science of Paper versus Screens: Scientific American | Embodied Zeitgeist | Scoop.it
E-readers and tablets are becoming more popular as such technologies improve, but research suggests that reading on paper still boasts unique advantages

Via FastTFriend
FastTFriend's curator insight, April 21, 3:01 AM

As digital texts and technologies become more prevalent, we gain new and more mobile ways of reading—but are we still reading as attentively and thoroughly? How do our brains respond differently to onscreen text than to words on paper? Should we be worried about dividing our attention between pixels and ink or is the validity of such concerns paper-thin?

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A Mind-World Correspondence Principle

This is a crude video of one of the two talks I gave at the IEEE Symposium on Computational Intelligence for Human-Level Intelligence in Singapore in April 2...
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Scientists unravel the mysteries of the teenage brain - Telegraph

Scientists unravel the mysteries of the teenage brain - Telegraph | Embodied Zeitgeist | Scoop.it
Teenage mood swings were immortalised in Harry Enfield’s comedy character Kevin, but now scientists are researching exactly why he and his real-life peers feel everything is “so unfair.”
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The Zeitgeist Movement Interview

The Zeitgeist Movement Interview | Embodied Zeitgeist | Scoop.it
Cenk Uygur (The Young Turks) sits down with Peter Joseph, founder of the Zeitgeist movement and creator of Zeitgeist, The Movie. The Zeitgeist movement's g
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Conscious computing: how to take control of your life online

Conscious computing: how to take control of your life online | Embodied Zeitgeist | Scoop.it
Twitter, Facebook, Google… we know the internet is driving us to distraction. But could sitting at your computer actually calm you down? Oliver Burkeman investigates the slow web movement

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Back in the summer of 2008 – a long time ago, in internet terms, two years before Instagram, and around the time of Twitter's second birthday – the US writer Nicholas Carr published a now famous essay in the Atlantic magazine entitled Is Google Making Us Stupid? The more time he spent online, Carr reported, the more he experienced the sensation that something was eating away at his brain. "I'm not thinking the way I used to think," he wrote. Increasingly, he'd sit down with a book, but then find himself unable to focus for more than two or three pages: "I get fidgety, lose the thread, begin looking for something else to do. I feel as if I'm always dragging my wayward brain back to the text." Reading, he recalled, used to feel like scuba diving in a sea of words. But now "I zip along the surface like a guy on a jetski."

In the half-decade since Carr's essay appeared, we've endured countless scare stories about the life-destroying effects of the internet, and by and large they've been debunked. No, the web probably isn't addictive in the sense that nicotine or heroin are; no, Facebook and Twitter aren't guilty of "killing conversation" or corroding real-life friendship or making children autistic. Yes, the internet is "changing our brains", but then so does everything – and, contrary to the claims of one especially panicky Newsweek cover story, it certainly isn't "driving us mad".


Via Wildcat2030
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Singularity University's Salim Ismail on the Age of Technological Disruption

"All of the structures that we use to run the world today— our civics, our politics, our legal systems, healthcare, education— are all structured for a world...
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Beyond Banks? Peer-to-Peer Lending Is On the Upswing, Google Dives In

Beyond Banks? Peer-to-Peer Lending Is On the Upswing, Google Dives In | Embodied Zeitgeist | Scoop.it
Lending Club, the peer-to-peer loan firm, recently announced Google and Foundation Capital bought $125 million of the firm’s shares on secondary markets (that is, from previous investors—not newly issued stock) for three times the stock’s valuation...

Via Spaceweaver
Víctor Farré's curator insight, May 10, 4:14 AM

Un alternativa a la banca. Los prestamos P2P.

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The First 3-D-Printed Gun: Cody Wilson and the Dark Side of the Maker Movement

The First 3-D-Printed Gun: Cody Wilson and the Dark Side of the Maker Movement | Embodied Zeitgeist | Scoop.it
Like other advocates of 3-D printing, Cody Wilson foresees a world in which anyone can make almost anything at home. It’s just that for Wilson, this extends beyond toys, musical instruments, and glasses to drugs, guns, and advanced electronics.
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The Transhumanist Delusion

The Transhumanist Delusion | Embodied Zeitgeist | Scoop.it
An emerging tech-driven industry is trying to merge man and machine. Yet we have barely begun to understand what constitutes our humanity.
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Genetic Architecture of Intelligence

Seminar at Michigan State University Cognitive Science Forum, 2/15/13.
Wildcat2030's curator insight, May 3, 7:06 AM

The Audio not amazing but worthwhile listening

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The Meaning of (Making) Life

The Meaning of (Making) Life | Embodied Zeitgeist | Scoop.it
A synthetic biologist explores the intersection of culture, art, and microbes -- and cheese too.
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Humans feel empathy for robots: fMRI scans show similar brain function when robots are treated the same as humans

Humans feel empathy for robots: fMRI scans show similar brain function when robots are treated the same as humans | Embodied Zeitgeist | Scoop.it
From the T-101 to Data from Star Trek, humans have been presented with the fictional dilemma of how we empathize with robots.
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Human extinction warning from Oxford

Human extinction warning from Oxford | Embodied Zeitgeist | Scoop.it
What are the greatest global threats to the future of humanity? An international team from Oxford University's Future of Humanity Institute is investigating the biggest dangers.
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About A Big Project

About A Big Project | Embodied Zeitgeist | Scoop.it
This project is building on the momentum for change by uniting people all over the world around four questions to explore a global vision for a new way forward. We will then use art and music to share that vision with the world.

Via jean lievens
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