Blog Archive for November, 02011



Time

Published on Tuesday, November 22nd, 02011 by Alexander Rose - Twitter: @zander

click image above to enlarge

The 10,000 Year Clock is mentioned on the November 28th cover and listed as one of the 50 best inventions of the year by Time Magazine.

Long Now Media Update

Published on Monday, November 21st, 02011 by Danielle Engelman

Podcasts

WATCH

Alexander Rose’s “Millennial Precedent”

There is new media available from our monthly series, the Seminars About Long-term Thinking. Stewart Brand’s summaries and audio downloads or podcasts of the talks are free to the public; Long Now members can view HD video of the Seminars and comment on them.

Rick Prelinger Ticket Info

Published on Thursday, November 17th, 02011 by Austin Brown

The Long Now Foundation’s monthly

Seminars About Long-term Thinking

Rick Prelinger on Lost Landscapes of San Francisco, 6

Rick Prelinger on “Lost Landscapes of San Francisco, 6″

TICKETS

Thursday December 8, 02011 at 7:30pm The Castro Theater

Long Now Members can reserve 2 seats, join today! • General Tickets $10

 

About this Seminar:

Rick Prelinger, a guerrilla archivist who collects the uncollected and makes it accessible, presents the 6th of his annual Lost Landscapes of San Francisco screenings. You’ll see an eclectic montage of rediscovered and rarely-seen film clips showing life, landscapes, labor and leisure in a vanished San Francisco as captured by amateurs, newsreel cameramen and studio filmmakers.

New material this year (presented for the first time in HD) will include San Francisco’s lost cemeteries in color, unique drive-through footage of the Produce Market (now Embarcadero Center and Golden Gateway), rides along the newly constructed Embarcadero Freeway, back streets in working-class North Beach, new film showing the sandswept Sunset before its dunes were covered, wild automobile rides through downtown in the 1920s, newly-rediscovered Kodachrome Cinemascope footage of Playland and the Sky Tram, and much more.

The Future According to Films

Published on Tuesday, November 15th, 02011 by Alex Mensing

We found this wonderful visualization of future events from the world of film on infographipedia, courtesy of Tremulant Design. Most of the occurrences on the timeline take place during this millennium, though a few producers have ventured multi-millennial forecasts.

Long Now in Space

Published on Sunday, November 13th, 02011 by Alexander Rose - Twitter: @zander

STS-134_EVA1sm.jpg(Astronaut removing the MISSE-7 Experiment with our sample on EVA1 on the STS-134 mission)

Back in 02009 through a partnership with Applied Minds, and in turn the Air Force Research Lab (who generously invited us to include a sample), we sent one of our Rosetta materials on an experiment called MISSE-7 (pronounced “missey”), which flew on the International Space Station.  This experiment is a shorter term version of the material research begun in 01984 with the Long Duration Exposure Facility.  We sent a sample of commercially pure titanium, that was black oxide coated, and laser marked (pictured below left). This is the same material and oxide process that was used to create the front of the original Rosetta Disk. However we used a much lower power laser than was used on the Rosetta disk so the marking was not very deep.  The sample was just returned to us (below right) after its stint outside the ISS and looks no worse for wear at all except for a slight fade in the clarity of the etching.

sample   returned sample
(Sample before it was sent on left and after returning on right)

This marks our second space rated Rosetta Disk material,  the first one was the nickel material that is currently on the ESAs Rosetta Mission.  Below is all the info I have found out about the MISSE-7 mission so far.  I am trying to locate the section of the EVA videos where the experiment gets installed and removed.  Any help is appreciated.

  • Samples went up on STS 129 (Atlantis) on Nov. 16, 2009
  • Samples were placed on the back side (wake) of the ISS on Nov. 23, 2009
  • Samples orbited Earth at ~8km/s
  • Samples returned to earth on STS-134  June 1 02011

INSTALLATION:
MISSE-7 installed during  EVA 3 on shuttle Atlantis flight STS 129
Video CG Simulation of EVA 3
, MISSE-7 at 2min, and 3:22

RETREIVAL:
MISSE-7 removed during EVA 1 on Shuttle Endeavors last mission STS-134.
Timelapse CG Video and description, opens with MISSE 7

Some great shots of it on the ISS:

Brian Eno on Colbert Nation

Published on Friday, November 11th, 02011 by Alexander Rose - Twitter: @zander

The Colbert Report Mon – Thurs 11:30pm / 10:30c
Brian Eno
www.colbertnation.com
Colbert Report Full Episodes Political Humor & Satire Blog Video Archive

Founding Long Now board member Brian Eno was on Colbert last night and he got a chance to discuss Long Now and Clock Project.  Also not to be missed is the end segment where Brian, Steven and Michael Stipe sing a-cappella.

Healthy Urbanization Requires Long-term Planning

Published on Monday, November 7th, 02011 by Alex Mensing

Urban Renewal #4, by Edward Burtynsky

Researchers at the McKinsey Global Institute have been studying the process of urbanization – what works and what doesn’t – and argue in this article that the detrimental effects of rapid city growth are not directly the result of insufficient resources. Rather, they stem from management that is neither comprehensive enough nor farsighted enough.

Does this imply that the future will be one of massive megalopolises spread across the globe? Theoretically, the answer is yes—there is no limit to the size of cities. In practice, however, the growth of most urban centers is bound by an inability to manage their size in a way that maximizes scale opportunities and minimizes costs. Large urban centers are highly complex, demanding environments that require a long planning horizon and extraordinary managerial skills. Many city governments are simply not prepared to cope with the speed at which their populations are expanding.

Theoretical physicist Geoffrey West spoke at The Long Now Foundation’s SALT series in July of 02011 and discussed how cities tend to become more efficient and productive as they grow, and that they do so at an exponential rate. The challenge, as he described it, is that cities have to innovate faster and faster in order to keep up with superlinear growth. So how can city governments cope? The authors of the McKinsey Global Institute article, Richard Dobbs and Jaana Remes, outline four principles to guide the leaders of quickly growing metropolises:

First, successful cities need sufficient funding to finance their running costs and new infrastructure. Sources of funding could include monetizing land assets and levying property taxes, sales taxes, or user charges. Second, cities need modern, accountable governance; many large successful cities, including London and New York, have opted for empowered mayors with long tenures and clear accountability. Third, cities need proper planning that spans a 1- to 40-year horizon. Finally, all cities should craft dedicated policies in critical areas such as affordable housing.

Long Now Media Update

Published on Wednesday, November 2nd, 02011 by Austin Brown

Podcasts

WATCH

Laura Cunningham’s “Ten Millennia of California Ecology”

There is new media available from our monthly series, the Seminars About Long-term Thinking. Stewart Brand’s summaries and audio downloads or podcasts of the talks are free to the public; Long Now members can view HD video of the Seminars and comment on them.

Dr. Laura Welcher at Berkeley Language Center, November 9th

Published on Tuesday, November 1st, 02011 by Austin Brown

The Berkeley Language Center will be hosting a talk by Long Now’s Dr. Laura Welcher on November 9th. The talk is open to the public and starts at 3:00pm in Dwinelle Hall B-4.

The Rosetta Project at The Long Now Foundation is working to build an open public digital collection of all human language as well as an analog backup that can last for thousands of years–The Rosetta Disk. In the “long now,” the goal is long-term storage and access to information–on the scale that both supports and transcends individual human societies and civilizations. In the “here and now,” the project serves to support and amplify the importance of the world’s nearly 7,000 human languages, the vast majority of which are endangered and, if current trends continue, likely to go extinct in the next 100 years. I’ll present our current work on the Rosetta Project Collection and Disk as well as some new initiatives including the “Language Commons” where we are working to help build the multilingual Web.

There will be a reception afterwards; come say Hello.

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