Sunday, July 31, 2005

Paleotechnology

From somewhere off the Internet or maybe from CNN...

After digging to a depth of 100 meters last year, Russian scientists found traces of copper wire dating back 1000 years, and came to the conclusion that their ancestors already had a telephone network one thousand years ago.

So, not to be outdone, in the weeks that followed, American scientists dug 200 meters and headlines in the US papers read: "US scientists have found traces of 2000 year old optical fibers, and have concluded that their ancestors already had advanced high-tech digital telephone 1000 years earlier than the Russians."

One week later, the Israeli newspapers reported the following: "After digging as deep as 5000 meters, Israeli scientists have found absolutely nothing. They have concluded that 5000 years ago, their ancestors were already using wireless technology."

ARTICLE

Tuesday, July 26, 2005

Ooops, you died...play again?

Pentagon Targets Clueless Xbox Gamers To Enlist


by URI DOWBENKO

Pentagon Targets Clueless Xbox Gamers To Enlist The Pentagon isn't targeting trailer trash like West Virginia's soldier- convict Lyndie England anymore.

The Pentagon is using PlayStation and Xbox to lure hapless twenty- something gamers to enlist in the US Army to fight Bush's illegal war on Iraq, reports Government Executive Magazine (July 15, 2005).

Games like "Close Combat: First to Fight" have been enormously successful in convincing gullible young people into believing that fighting the unpopular War on Iraq is just like playing Xbox.

CIA front company In-Q-Tel is using the same strategy to enlist the new generation of killer spooks for the Agency, by contracting Destineer Studios to develop a game to seduce new recruits for the CIA.

The new game is supposed to be a "spy training simulation."

It's not known if the game simulation includes CIA favorites like narcotics trafficking, weapons sales or financial fraud.

It's also not known if you get to torture ragheads at Gitmo or rape Iraqi civilians in the Pentagon version -- to prepare the youngsters, of ocurse, for actual field conditions.

The Pentagon needs new cannon fodder. The CIA needs a fresh crop of killer spooks.

And twenty- somethings are the obvious target...

Friday, July 22, 2005

Data At Your Fingertips


Secure optical data storage could soon literally be at your fingertips thanks to work being carried out in Japan. Yoshio Hayasaki and his colleagues have discovered that data can be written into a human fingernail by irradiating it with femtosecond laser pulses. Capacities are said to be up to 5 mega bits and the stored data lasts for 6 months - the length of time it takes a fingernail to be completely replaced.

FULL STORY

Thursday, July 21, 2005

Download files via flesh

F you spend hours downloading songs to your iPod, the days of fiddling around with wires are coming to an end.A Japanese company has discovered that the best cables may be your arms and legs.

According to NTT Laboratories, your whole body is the perfect conductor for electronic data, meaning that information such as music and films could be downloaded in seconds via your elbow.


NTT, and the team of scientists that invented the "Red Tacton" system, envisage a future in which the human body acts as a non-stop conduit for information.

Wireless networks and devices, often hampered by intermittent service, will eventually be replaced, NTT says, by "human area networks".

The developers are convinced the new technology will be "highly disruptive" - undermining existing wireless industries.

Field tests are under way, and the first commercial appearance of Red Tacton is expected next year.

The Red Tacton chips will be embedded in machines and contain a transmitter and receiver built to send and accept data stored in a digital format.

The chip then takes any type of file, such as an MP3 music file or email, and converts it into a format that takes the form of digital pulses that can be passed and read through a human being's electric field. The chip in the receiving device reads these tiny changes and converts the file back into its original form.

With Red Tacton sensors miniaturised and built into every type of device and product, the list of potential uses is endless, said Hideki Sakamoto of NTT.

By simply touching an advertising poster, for example, product information and an order form could be sent to your laptop.

Shake hands with a new contact, and every detail that would normally appear on a business card will leap across your arms and download itself to your mobile phone.

Because the data transfer between Red Tacton machines involves no dial-up or logging-in, the transfer of information is virtually instantaneous.

http://www.news.com.au/story/0,10117,15933077-13762,00.html

Mind May Affect Machines



By Kim Zetter


For 26 years, strange conversations have been taking place in a basement lab at Princeton University.

No one can hear them, but they can see their apparent effect: balls that go in certain directions on command, water fountains that seem to rise higher with a wish and drums that quicken their beat.

..............



Using random event generators -- computers that spew random output -- they have participants focus their intent on controlling the machines' output. Out of several million trials, they've detected small but "statistically significant" signs that minds may be able to interact with machines. However, researchers are careful not to claim that minds cause an effect or that they know the nature of the communication.

.........

The first REG that researchers used produced high-frequency random noise. Researchers attached circuitry to the device to translate the noise into ones and zeroes. Each participant, following a prerecorded protocol, developed an intention in her or his mind to have the generator alternately spew out more ones, then more zeroes, and then do nothing at all.

The effects were small, but measurable. Since then, the same results have occurred with other experiments, such as one involving a pendulum connected to a computer-controlled mechanism. When the machine releases the pendulum to swing from a set position, participants focus on changing the rate at which the pendulum slows to a stop.

Other experiments involve a drum machine that participants try to control and a mechanical cascade machine, in which a large device drops thousands of small, black polystyrene balls to fall around pegs in a wall and settle into a row of slots at the bottom. Participants try to direct the balls to fall to one side of the row or another.

Participants have been able to direct one out of every 10,000 bits of data measured across all of the tests.

......

There is very little that the researchers understand about the phenomenon, but they do know that results aren't affected by distance or time. Participants, for example, can have the same effect on a machine from outside the room or across the country. They can also have the same effect if they have the intention before the REG is turned on or even if they read a book or listen to music while the machine is running.

.......

Gender matters as well. Men tend to get results that match their intent, although the degree of the effect is often small. Women tend to get a bigger effect, but not necessarily the one they intend. ......Results are also greater if a male and female work together, but same-sex pairs produce no significant results. Pairs of the opposite sex who are romantically involved produce the best results -- often seven times greater than when the same individuals are tested alone.

........

"It's almost as if there were two styles or two variables and they are complementary," Dunne said. "(The masculine style) is associated with intentionality. The (feminine style) seems to be associated more with resonance."

...........

Radin said the phenomenon could be similar to quantum entanglement -- what Einstein referred to as "spooky action at a distance" -- in which two particles separated from each other appear to connect without any apparent form of communication.

Or the effect could be caused by something similar to what occurred in experiments conducted in 1963 by neurophysiologist W. Grey Walter. In those experiments, researchers implanted electrodes in participants' motor cortices and sat them next to a carousel slide projector. Participants were told to advance the slides by pressing a button. What they weren't told was that the button was a dummy. The slides actually advanced in response to an amplified signal sent from the participants' brains.

"(The difference is) we're not talking about sending signals from the brain to the machine through a circuit," Jahn said about the Pear experiments. "Whatever is going on, is going by some anomalous route. We don't know the carrier of this information. We only know something about conditions that favor it."

.............

Jahn thinks that critics err in expecting the phenomena to follow the usual rules of cause and effect. Instead, he thinks they belong in the category of what Carl Jung called "acausal phenomena," which include things like synchronicity.

"They play by more complicated, almost whimsical, elusive rules," Jahn said, "but they play."

........

FULL STORY

Saturday, July 09, 2005

Jacking In


(Thanks to Nik for the heads-up.)

BrainGate' Brain-Machine-Interface takes shape

December 7, 2004 An implantable, brain-computer interface the size of an aspirin has been clinically tested on humans by American company Cyberkinetics. The 'BrainGate' device can provide paralysed or motor-impaired patients a mode of communication through the translation of thought into direct computer control. The technology driving this Brain-Machine-Interface breakthrough has a myriad of potential applications, including the development of human augmentation for military and commercial purposes...