Blog Archive for May, 02009



Live Twitter from Maker Faire

Published on Friday, May 29th, 02009 by Danielle Engelman

Maker Faire
We’ll be Twittering the Maker Faire this weekend from @longnowlive – Long Now staff and guest Twitterer @mikl_em will keep the updates coming all weekend long.Two of our Board Members will also be speaking at Maker this year, follow @longnowlive for live updates from their presentations.Esther Dyson:
Stage A , Saturday 1:00 PM – 1:30 PM, PST

Chris Anderson:
Stage A , Saturday 6:00 PM – 6:30 PM, PST

And if your coming to the Faire this weekend, stop by and see us at booth #121 in the Expo Hall, next to the Tesla Coils on the East side of the Hall – we’ll be demonstrating the first full sized Clock part – an 8′ wide Geneva Wheel.

FOXP2 human language gene changes mouse squeaks

Published on Friday, May 29th, 02009 by Laura Welcher

Lab Mice

What happens when you substitute the human FOXP2 gene for that of a mouse?  According to researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Biology, not much, except this interesting result — it changes their vocalizations.

While the FOXP2 gene is important in the development of many different tissues, in humans it affects the development of the basal ganglia, a region of the brain important for language.  When the human version of FOXP2 is introduced into mice, a measurable result is a change in their ultrasonic vocalizations – baby mice have deeper squeaks.  While this is interesting, and the kind of correlation one might expect, even more striking is what is going on in the brains of these mice — the mean length of dendrites in the basal ganglia region increased by 80% over mice without the human version of the gene.

Increased Dendritic Length

This groundbreaking study, with results recently published in the journal Cell, provides a new a model for research into how speech and language evolved in humans.

77 Million Goes Big Down Under

Published on Thursday, May 28th, 02009 by Alexander Rose - Twitter: @zander

 

 This week Brian Eno transformed Sydney Opera House with mega projections of his 77 Million Paintings… (Stunning images from this DailyMail piece)  Here is a note from Brian on how it was achieved:

They’re enormous projectors – 14 on that side alone – and very carefully masked so there’s no fringing. And the image is double projected – so every area is covered by two identical images carefully registered on top of each other to boost power. The projectors are 3000 watts each, and they project from across the other side of the harbour – a throw of about 500 metres.

It was done by first of all photographing the building from each projector position, using a lens identical to that in the projector – and then cutting precise masks based on the photos.

 

 

 

One Billion Years of Memory

Published on Thursday, May 28th, 02009 by Bryan Campen - Twitter: @cyrusbryan

Last week Kurzweilai.net ran a clip of this post from Nanowerk (a more complete report will be available here June 10th):

“A new experimental computer memory device that can store 1 terabyte per square inch… with an estimated lifetime of more than one billion years has been developed by Alex Zettl of UC Berkeley and colleagues.”

This is possible through a series of lab tests and theoretical studies that show the device has “temperature stability in excess of one billion years,” an estimate that appears to be the maximum thermal read on the life of the device.

The first thought I had on reading this, aside from Douglas Adams’s “Deep Thought” (the computer that takes several million years to solve the riddle to life, the universe and everything), were the words of Jeff Rothenberg: “Digital documents last forever—or five years, whichever comes first.” Even several decades is an accomplishment. The article itself gives a nod to the virtues of paper by way of William the Conqueror’s Domesday Book, a model of data preservation. The Domesday Book has lasted 900 years compared to its digital counterpart, recently expired at twenty.

But this puts a lot of interesting questions to the issue of the digital dark age: how would we carry out the task of movage, porting data from one medium to the next as new systems appear? And how to avoid the billion-year legacy system from hell?

It also says a lot about us. Like the old joke in Austin Powers, the numbers in which we traffic have spiked over the past half century. Where one million used to do the trick, one billion commands attention and is now much more attractive. The range of numbers we tend to see as audacious but imaginable–though we have a hard time grasping them at all–are in the billions and now low trillions. This is the language of hard drives, moguls, world population and public debt. It is a language already on our minds.

Now if only someone would frame this billion year storage claim as a long bet.

(thanks to @DerekLerner for the original link via twitter)

Multi-millennial brain teasers

Published on Wednesday, May 27th, 02009 by Laura Welcher

Linear A

Put down your crosswords, cryptograms and sudoku.  Instead try boosting your brain power by deciphering an ancient script.  In case you have forgotten which ones are still available and want to stake your claim, here is a catalog with difficulty ranking based on two important criteria:  language (known/unknown) and script (known/unknown).  All have teased many a brain for many an age.

Other things you might want to consider when selecting your brain challenge:  is the script artifact a hoax (see Phaistos Disk)?  Does it even represent spoken language (see recent work and controversy over the Indus Valley Script)?  Also, beware of the possibility of unleashing an army of undead if you actually do figure out the script and recite it (for a vision of this scenario, see Evil Dead II).

The Analog of Digital

Published on Tuesday, May 26th, 02009 by Alexander Rose - Twitter: @zander

Swedish design group Humans Since 1982 created this digital readout called The Clock Clock made of 24 analog clocks.  Notice the time reads 09:25 digitally above.  You can go to their website to see an animation of the clocks in action as well as download the font they create. Thanks to Creobic for this link where you can find other analog digital clocks.

What 13,500 pages micro-etched into nickel looks like

Published on Thursday, May 21st, 02009 by Alexander Rose - Twitter: @zander

 

The good folks over at the Jet Propulsion Labs in Pasadena who organized the Data and Art show that the Rosetta Disk was in, were kind enough to get some really nice photos taken of the micro-etched data side of the disk.  What you are looking at is over 13,000 tiny pages describing over 1,500 languages.  To see each page you would need a 500x microscope.

Many thanks to Dan Goods at JPL and especially Spencer Mishlen for this gorgeous work.  I really love how the page rows start to look like the Matrix as you zoom in…

 

 

 

 

 

 

Paul Romer, “A Theory of History, with an Application”

Published on Wednesday, May 20th, 02009 by Stewart Brand

Paul Romer

New Cities with New Rules

This talk was the first in a series of public discussions of an idea that Romer has been working on for two years.

His economic theory of history explains phenomena such as the constant improvement of the human standard of living by looking primarily at just two forms of innovative ideas: technology and rules.

Technologies rearrange materials with ingenious recipes and formulas. More people create more technologies, which in turn generates more people. In recent decades technology has enabled the “demographic transition” which lowers birthrates and raises income per person even higher as population levels off…

Read the rest of Stewart Brand’s Summary

The human side of climate change

Published on Tuesday, May 19th, 02009 by Kirk Citron

The Long News: stories that might still matter fifty, or a hundred, or ten thousand years from now.

slums

There have been a flurry of reports in the last few weeks which try to anticipate how climate change may impact human populations.

1. Two trends (urbanization and global warming) seem to be on a collision course: UN: Growth of slums boosting natural disaster risk

2. A first step towards further regulation, at least in the US: EPA declares fossil fuel emissions a health threat

3. A study from the Institute for Global Health: Doctors’ health warning on climate change

4. And from the World Wildlife Fund: Climate change threatens millions who live off sea

Live Twitter from Paul Romer Seminar

Published on Monday, May 18th, 02009 by Danielle Engelman

Follow @longnowlive on Twitter for live updates from Long Now events, including tonight’s Paul Romer Seminar which starts at 7:30 PST. Our special guest live Twitterer today is @mikl_em.

We encourage anyone else who would like to live twitter about the event to use the #longnow tag on their posts so that anyone can track the aggregate postings.

If you’d like to send in questions to @longnowlive, we’ll try to get them into the mix.

Please note that all the pre-sale tickets are sold out for the Romer talk, but we will have a walk up line that will be first come first serve to try and fill as many un-claimed seats as possible.  There is also room for 100 walk-ups for the free simulcast in the Lobby – this is a separate line, so get there early!

Feel free to comment on this post with your twitter handle if you want others to know about your live twittering of this event…

PS: For those those of you wondering what Twitter is… here is a video that explains it.

Looking for more blog articles?



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