Berlin Brain Computer Interface is a video of two people playing pong with a brain interface of some sort. It was posted to YouTube – Broadcast Yourself. by Andreas who has also posted a neat video of a Mixed Reality Interface. Thanks to Alex for this.
1968 Engelbart Demo
Doug Engelbart 1968 Demo is a page that walks through the historic 1968 live presentation of the online system, NLS that showed augmented computing, a mouse, video-conferencing and outlining. There are short streaming clips of the parts of the presentation with an outline.
Bar Code Art by Scott Blake
Bar Code Art by Scott Blake is a site with art and interactive toys around the theme of barcodes. Lots of links to resources.
What is it about the barcode and other types of codes like the QR Code? Does it bother us to have these texts in view that are designed for other eyes? Is such art a way of responding to living with code?
Eugene Roman
Eugene Roman, the Group President of Bell Canada Systems & Technology, came to talk to a Communication Studies class about The Digitization of Everything: The MODern Era. In his talk and conversations after he asked us to look up and think about Holons. He asked us to think in the inverse – ie. not to ask how to make a better Google, but what an anti-Google would be like. He also talked about viral thinking and how to “infect” others. When we got talking about wireless (and he sees it all going wireless) he made the interesting observation that a barcode is a form of wireless communication, even if the distance is not great. What will we be able to do with barcodes if taking a picture of a barcode with a wireless camera-phone can trigger things?
Open Research
Open research is defined on the Wikipedia as research whose “sources and methodologies are open to scrutiny and the results are publicaly provided…” This blog is an attempt at that.
How does Open Research connect with Open Access and, for that matter, Open Learning initiatives?
Continue reading Open Research
Brown Virtual Humanities Lab
The Brown Virtual Humanities Lab is up and usable. It is an environment for annotation and discussion built on medieval Italian texts like the Decameron. This project, directed by Vika Zafrin (of words’ end), and led by Massimo Riva was funded by the NEH.
Riva organized the Brown Resources for the Humanities Conference I went to in 2004.
Animated Alphabet
alphabet.gif (GIF Image, 988×200 pixels) is an animation of the evolution of the Latin alphabet from its Phoenician roots. Neat use of animatiion to make a point. Thanks to Alex for this.
The end of modem pools
McMaster is ending its dialin modem service as of May 2006. (See McMaster Dial-Up Internet Services.) It is the end of an era of connectivity. Not that I use it or know anyone who does. How many people still use modems, I wonder?
Too Much to Read: Science and City
McMaster has a great lecture series supported by the Hamilton Spector called “Science in the City”. Yesterday I gave one of the talks on “Too Much To Read: Using Computers to Cope With Information Overload” (see the Spectator article beforehand, Spectator interviews Prof. Geoffrey Rockwell.) It was encouraging how many people are interested in a topic like this. There really is broad interest in questions around information, reading, and the Internet. The questions at the end ranged from “should I switch to Firefox?” to “how can I use a concordancer on the information I have?”
Declassification in Reverse
Declassification in Reverse: The Pentagon and the U.S. Intelligence Community’s Secret Historical Document Reclassification Program is a page edited by Matthew M. Aid that discusses the extraordinary reclassification program by the U.S. intelligence community. Previously declassified (public) documents are being withdrawn from public view in addition to the exploding amount of information that is not being reviewed and declassified in the first place.
The National Security Archive is a non governmental non-profit institution that documents and advocates for freedom of information.