Blog Archive for May, 02008



Long Now Media Update

Published on Monday, May 12th, 02008 by Danielle Engelman

Long Now Podcast
The latest Seminars About Long-term Thinking are now available as audio downloads or podcasts and in hi-res video for Long Now members.

* Niall Ferguson & Peter Schwartz on “Historian vs. Futurist on Human Progress” – audio up, video coming soon

* Video is up of the discussion between Alexander Rose the Director of The Long Now Foundation and Carlo Petrini the Founder of Slow Food, entitled “Why Time” (presented by The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation.)

The Birth Clock

Published on Friday, May 9th, 02008 by Kevin Kelly

A nice piece of time art.   

Prot 02 Large-1

It’s a clock that is dead, until you break its glass case. Then it begins ticking. You are now committed to whatever. The artist, Alex-vf, says “it helps you make up your mind.” Here is the official description (via Seth).

The “Birth Clock” is a fragile glass object containing a digital clock that is not working; it is designed to help you to come to a decision when you’re stuck at a specific point in life. Smash the glass, and the clock will start to work, leaving you with the broken object as a reminder of your dramatic decision.

Babbage Difference Engine No.2

Published on Thursday, May 8th, 02008 by Alexander Rose - Twitter: @zander

Our good friends from The Science Museum in London (which houses our first clock prototype) have recently completed and shipped over their historic construction of Charles Babbage’s Difference Engine No.2 to the Computer History Museum here in California. There is a great video of it working and an explanation at Wired.com (also above, sorry about the advertisement). They are having a public opening on May 10th.

The very Long Now of 01922

Published on Thursday, May 8th, 02008 by Alexander Rose - Twitter: @zander

The good folks over at Paleo Future published this great nugget from the 01922 Ogden Standard predicting what the world might be like in 10,000 years (click image above for a large version). While they seem to have nailed a few things that have already come about like solar power, chemical re-breathers, and strong clear plastics, we are still clearly working on the anti-gravity floating cities. Perhaps most disturbing is this illustration of a flying person in the year 11,922, where the author failed to grasp the inevitable advancements in hair loss treatment:

The strangest part is the reasoning around why we might live in cloud cities Lando Calrissian style. The author seems to think that while humans could easily adapt to the lower atmospheric pressure, that (what we now know are very hardy) microbes would not, and we would therefore no longer have to worry about disease. The other interesting assertion as to why we might live above the clouds is that “Sunlight, as we know, is most beneficial to humans beings, and having a 100 percent of it all the time we naturally shall be far better off.”

Archiving TV… the old fashion way

Published on Wednesday, May 7th, 02008 by Alexander Rose - Twitter: @zander

This is a wonderful find by “America Found: A Snapshot History” blog. It is someone’s snap shots they took of their TV as one of the Apollo missions took place. There is something quaint and lovely about taking pictures of your television to document an important moment. Pre VCR, pre DVD, pre TiVo but still captures the essence of the broadcast.

History Flow

Published on Tuesday, May 6th, 02008 by Alexander Rose - Twitter: @zander

Ben Keating sent me a link to this nifty IBM project called History Flow for tracking community edited documents on line life. My bet is that time-line projects like this are going to become more commonplace in the web 2.0 world.

history flow is a tool for visualizing dynamic, evolving documents and the interactions of multiple collaborating authors. In its current implementation, history flow is being used to visualize the evolutionary history of wiki* pages on Wikipedia.

 

1 Millennium for €18,000?

Published on Monday, May 5th, 02008 by Alexander Rose - Twitter: @zander

(olive tree photo by CorinthianGulf on Flickr)

 

Joseph Holsten (Charter Member #637) sends in this interesting yet troubling piece from the Wall St Journal on the market for very old trees:

Nick Lloyd, who edits the online Spanish environmental journal iberianature.com, says the market in ancient olive trees is growing, despite the naturally limited supply of the commodity and mounting opposition from conservation groups. “Ten years ago the starting price was €2,000 for a thousand-year-old tree,” Mr. Lloyd says. “Now it’s €18,000.” (continue to the article)

Maker Faire Bay Area – 02008

Published on Thursday, May 1st, 02008 by Austin Brown

Come visit the Long Now table this weekend at Maker Faire in San Mateo!

We’ll be in the Expo Hall at booth #294.

Maker Faire

Saturday May 3rd, 10-6
Sunday May 4th, 11-6
San Mateo Fairgrounds

Long Now had a table at Maker Faire last year and we had a blast!

This is a huge event put on by O’Reilly Media Inc., who also created Make Zine and Craft Zine, with everything from steam powered robots, a craft pavilion, outdoor entertainment and food, to propane cannons mounted on vintage fire trucks. It’s family friendly too with a whole area just for kids.

Long Now will be there both days, and we’ll be demonstrating the new Walking Bearing Prototype and selling our brand new “Prototypes” T-Shirts!

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