Neurosphere

The Human-Human Interface

Stardust


Wholeness and Virtual Communities

Another grid computing project.

“Finding the incredibly tiny interstellar dust impacts in the Stardust Interstellar Dust Collector (SIDC) will be extremely difficult. Because dust detectors on the Ulysses and Galileo spacecraft have detected interstellar dust streaming into the solar system, we know there should be about 45 interstellar dust impacts in the SIDC. These impacts can only be found using a high-magnification microscope with a field of view smaller than a grain of salt. But the aerogel collector that we have to search enormous by comparison, about a tenth of a square meter (about a square foot) in size. The job is roughly equivalent to searching for 45 ants in an entire football field, one 5cm by 5cm (2 inch by 2 inch) square at a time!”

http://stardustathome.ssl.berkeley.edu/


Global Environmental Outlook


The World Right Now

Among the treaties leading to information in this data source are the Basel Convention, the Ramsar Convention on Wetlands, Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants. Why isn’t there ever a Pittsburgh Convention?

“The GEO Data Portal is the authoritative source for data sets used by UNEP and its partners in the Global Environment Outlook (GEO) report and other integrated environment assessments. Its online database holds more than 450 different variables, as national, subregional, regional and global statistics or as geospatial data sets (maps), covering themes like Freshwater, Population, Forests, Emissions, Climate, Disasters, Health and GDP. Display them on-the-fly as maps, graphs, data tables or download the data in different formats.”

geodata.grid.unep.ch


Pangea Cinema


Wholeness and Virtual Communities

Pangea? I thought it was Gondwanaland.

“In her moving acceptance speech, TED Prize winner, Jehane Noujaim described her wish for using film to bring people together in a more meaningful way. Jehane is the award-winning filmmaker behind Control Room and Startup.com. Jehane’s wish is to create a worldwide cinema event for one day each year with programming that highlights the themes of unity, the common ties that bind us into a global culture, a film festival called “Pangea Cinema, the day the world comes together.” “Pangea” refers to the single land mass that broke up millions of years ago to create the disparate continents we know today.”

http://www.worldchanging.com/archives/004189.html


MicroCheap


Personal Infrastructure

Bill Gates is still ridiculing the idea, but the cheap computer is gaining steam.

“A Chinese company has claimed to have developed the nation’s first

low-cost computer priced at 125 US dollars, using an indigenous central

processing unit and the new product will hit the market in June, a

report said today…

The performance of Longmeng, or Dragon Dream, is equivalent to a 1G

Pentium III desktop, according to Zhang. It is a computer, a DVD player

and also a video game player. The computer, equipped with standard PC accessories,

is portable as it is the size of a textbook and weighs 500 grams.”

http://onlypunjab.com/fullstory2k5-insight-news-status-10-

newsID-90664.html


Brain Computer Interface


Personal Infrastructure

For a more grounded view of the electric brain, here’s a year-old article from Science.

“This fall, surgeons implanted 100 electrodes into the brain of a 25-year-old quadriplegic man and connected them to a computer that enables him to check his e-mail and choose a television channel with his thoughts alone. And monkeys with similarly implanted electrodes have used brain signals to move cursors or robotic arms in two dimensions (Science, 24 January 2003, p. 496). Now, in a groundbreaking development, two neuroscientists from the Wadsworth Center, part of the New York State Department of Health in Albany, have shown that similar feats may be possible without the dangers of inserting electrodes into the brain. This week, in the online Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Wadsworth’s Jonathan Wolpaw and Dennis McFarland demonstrate a brain-computer interface (BCI) that can translate externally detected brain signals into both horizontal and vertical movement of a computer cursor.”

http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/306/5703/1878a


Good Vibrations


Personal Infrastructure

I believe there’s a lot to be learned about the electrical nature of the brain and body. I’m not sure this device reflects much in the way of learning, but hey, they have an office just down the street from my house. Maybe I’ll drop in. Lord knows my cells have not been “vibrating at their optimal frequency” in years.

The VIBE Machine – (Vibrational Integration Bio-Photonic Energizer) It uses the principle that life forms can absorb radio wave energy to strengthen the cells of the body against physical imbalances and infection. The device creates a strong electromagnetic field that raises the vibration of your cells to their optimal frequency. By sitting next to the machine, one receives the benefits of this energy field.

http://www.vibemachine.com/

A related product is Lifewave.

“The LifeWave Energy Enhancer patches contain the LifeWave technology. The patches are constructed from a patent pending blend of water, stabilized Oxygen, amino acids and sugars sealed inside of a plastic shell. These materials are put through a proprietary process and applied to a substrate so as to form a nano-scale organic antenna. This organic antenna is then “programmed” like a computer chip. When properly assembled, these LifeWave antennas are capable of passively communicating with the user to instruct the body to improve energy and stamina. Endorsements from Olympic swimming coach Richard Quick and LPGA Hall of Fame golfer JoAnne Carner.”

http://www.lifewave.com/


Brain Fingerprinting


Personal Infrastructure

This one sounds borderline crackpot, but it doesn’t seem that far from the realm of biometrics generally. It would be a subtler investigation to correlate a brain “fingerprint” with personality, memories, consciousness, but surely an interesting one.

“The Colorado House Judiciary Committee Hearing on Brain Fingerprinting Testing will take place Thursday, March 9, at 1:30 p.m., in Colorado State Capitol, Room 0112. This is a critical bill that the DaVinci Institute has been working towards for the past two years. The impact of Brain Fingerprinting will be global as a valuable tool for more efficient and cost-effective justice and increased public safety.

The inventor of Brain Fingerprinting testing, Dr. Lawrence Farwell, caught a last minute flight into Colorado and is scheduled to offer expert testimony at the hearing. Other stakeholders in criminal justice and corrections are invited to attend either to just observe and learn, or to offer comments on the technology.”

www.brainwavescience.com


Catastrosphere


The World Right Now

This site, from Hungary, tracks disasters of all shapes and sizes, daily. Know how many volcanoes are erupting today in the world? Would you believe 53? Or just track the spread of bird flu.

http://visz.rsoe.hu/alertmap/woalert.php?lang=eng


Grid Acquisition


Wholeness and Virtual Communities

Grid computing technology provider Kontiki purchased by Verisign to power Verisign’s entry into entertainment video delivery. Seems funny to me that a premier security company does not have all the business it can handle in homeland security. Further, like the West Corp. acquisition of Intrado, I’m not sure Verisign is a company with an appreciation of the revolutionary nature of the core competence of the business they are acquiring. But I guess in both cases, the value is evident, if maybe a little subconscious.

“VeriSign, a provider of network infrastructure services, said on Monday that it will pay $62 million to acquire Kontiki, a Silicon Valley-based provider of managed peer delivery systems for video, software and digital content. VeriSign said that Kontiki’s system will form the cornerstone of its platform to enable the delivery of rich media, with far greater efficiency and lower costs than traditional media distribution services.”

http://www.verisign.com/press_releases/pr/page_037168.html

http://www.kontiki.com


Gluco Watch


Personal Infrastructure

Posting about implants reminded me to check in on how medical technology is moving the personal interface to technology over and under the skin in interesting ways.

“The monitor measures glucose from interstitial fluid located just underneath the skin by sending a tiny electric current through the skin. The Glucose Watch has a 3-hour warm-up period and could provide painless, noninvasive measurements of blood sugar every 20 minutes for up to 12 hours. The Glucose Watch is not intended to replace traditional finger stick glucose monitoring, instead it should be used to supplement monitoring.”

http://www.diabetesinmichigan.org/Archived/Glucosewatch.htm