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As a cyborg, eccentric professor tailors reality







As a cyborg, eccentric professor tailors
reality

As a cyborg, eccentric professor tailors
reality
01/11/2004 03:45 PM

Canadian Press via Canada.com Jan 11 2004 2:03PM ET




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As a cyborg, eccentric professor tailors reality

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Professor lives life as a cyborg


Professor lives life as a cyborg 01/10/2004 04:32 PM
Boston Globe Jan 10 2004 3:19PM ET

Professor Lives Life As a Cyborg (AP)


Professor Lives Life As a Cyborg (AP) 01/10/2004 04:29 PM
AP - When you first meet Steve Mann, it seems as if you've interrupted him appraising diamonds or doing some sort of specialized welding. Because the first thing you notice is the plastic frame that comes around his right ear and holds a lens over his right eye.

Professor Lives Life As a Cyborg


Professor Lives Life As a Cyborg 01/10/2004 04:32 PM
AP via Newsday Jan 10 2004 3:22PM ET

"Peter Ludlow is not just a computer
gaming enthusiast. He's also a
philosophy professor, with an abiding
interest in the relationship between the
real and the virtual worlds. So when the
world's most successful virtual-reality
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"Peter Ludlow is not just a computer
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philosophy professor, with an abiding
interest in the relationship between the
real and the virtual worlds. So when the
world's most successful virtual-reality
game, the Sims, launched an ..."
01/17/2004 11:07 PM

Microsoft tailors software for
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Microsoft tailors software for
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Eccentric diner-menu infodesign


Eccentric diner-menu infodesign 08/09/2004 04:19 AM
Kottke's got a great, long post on Shopsin's, the "eccentric" NYC diner with a long menu that reads like the label on a bottle of Dr Bonner's soap. Kottke links to lots of great supplementary material but the gem is the PDF of the menu itself. Link

Now that's mobile entertainment:
eccentric dude's piano bar on wheels


Now that's mobile entertainment:
eccentric dude's piano bar on wheels
07/13/2004 12:23 PM
Following up on yesterday's post about the ice cream truck converted into a reggae dub soundsystem on wheels, Bill Pollock says: "Harrington King (whose business cards read "Spiritual Optimist") regularly parks his custom piano bar on wheels at various places down midtown [Sacramento, California] most weekend nights. Its cozy inside, appropriately piano bar-y with assorted bongos for those who feel moved to play. An awful photo but decent writeup avaialble via the News & Review (L ink) and the traveling piano bar has its own website (Link)."

On the piano bar website, an archived interview in the Sacramento Bee, in which the eccentric dude says:

(Reporter) Do you have a favorite weekend song to play?
(King) I've got a Sacramento song that people like.
(Reporter) What's that?
(King) I don't know. I guess it's called "Sacramento Song."
(Reporter) You go to any music spots around town?
(King) I am a music spot around town.
Link

Virtual reality calms the chemo reality


Virtual reality calms the chemo reality 08/01/2004 08:03 AM
Chicago Tribune Aug 1 2004 12:13PM GMT

I, Cyborg


I, Cyborg 08/01/2004 08:03 AM
Chicago Tribune Aug 1 2004 12:13PM GMT

Why life as a cyborg is better


Why life as a cyborg is better 01/16/2004 10:57 AM

Cyborg Technology


Cyborg Technology 03/27/2005 08:10 AM
Cyborg Technology

1) UC Santa Barbara Department of English: Cyborg Resources
http://transcriptions.english.ucsb.edu/research/topics/cyborg/
2) Helsinki Institute of Technology: Brain-Computer Interface
http://www.lce.hut.fi/resea rch/bci/
3) USC: Neural Engineering Lab
http://neural-eng.no-ip.info/
4) Discovery School: Future Body
ht tp://school.discovery.com/lessonplans/programs/futurebody/
5) NPR: Thinking Is Doing With Cyborg Technology
ht tp://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=4533546
6) Kevin Warwick: Project Cyborg
http://www.kevinwarwick.org/
Discussions of cyborg technology tend to be relegated to science fiction literature and TV programs like Star Trek. This Topic in Depth looks into current issues and developments in the area of cyborg technology. The first website, from the UC Santa Barbara Department of English, (1) lists a variety of resources on cyborgs, from philosophical articles and literary criticism to current scientific practices. A related area of research is brain-computer interfacing (BCI), which is described on this website from the Helsinki Institute of Technology (2). Research on neural engineering, which combines work in electrical and computer engineering, tissue engineering, materials science, and nanotechnology, is also described on this website from USC (3). The Discovery School (4) suggests this lesson on technology for grades six through eight, in which students explore how the human body uses electric signals to send messages to and from the brain, and then how the nervous system uses those signals, with the option for additional discussions regarding the potential for cyborg technology. The next website from National Public Radio (5) provides a current look at applications of cyber technology, most of which are in the area of healthcare. For example, this program reports on how "scientists make it possible for quadriplegics to control a television, play simple computer games and check e-mail... by just thinking about it." Another interesting experiment--Project Cyborg--involves the neuro-surgical implantation of a device into the median nerves of this researchers' left arm and is described this website (6).[From The NSDL Scout Report for Math, Engineering, and Technology, Copyright Internet Scout Project 1994-2005. http://scout.wisc.edu/

Cyborg Cockroach


Cyborg Cockroach 09/15/2004 03:30 PM
Bill Christensen of Technovelgy.com submitted a story about a cockroach-controlled mobile robot. Built by Garnet Hertz, the robot is controlled by a giant Madagascan hissing cockroach. The roach is suspended above a sensor similar to a trackball. As the roach runs, the sensor ball moves, causing the robot to move in the same direction. Impact sensors on the robot flash LEDs arranged in front of the roach, prompting it to move away from the obstacle. For a more detailed account of the project, see Garnet's thesis, Control and Communication in the Animal and the Machine.

Captain Cyborg


Captain Cyborg 08/02/2004 05:32 PM

Direct and Related Links for 'Captain Cyborg'

Common sense is apparently not the name of the game for Prof. Kevin Warwick, who the UK tabloid “The Sun” allegedly describes as; “the first person in the world to have a computer chip implanted successfully into his body”. As if this was not insane enough, The Register has stated that Warwick is planning on having a chip implanted into his brain sometime within his lifetime….

CybOrg. The CyberCafe Organizer


CybOrg. The CyberCafe Organizer 11/06/2003 01:54 AM
Initial development release

Are You Ready For The Cyborg Consumer?


Are You Ready For The Cyborg Consumer? 02/07/2005 01:30 AM

The iPod is a great example of what happens when consumers unite with technology that fits their lives. By Sean Carton, ClickZ


Cyborg Geologists Take the Red Pill


Cyborg Geologists Take the Red Pill 01/16/2004 11:01 AM
A new research paper (PDF format) suggests that astrobiologists and geologists should work in a virtual world that extends their senses rather than using traditional approaches. The paper presents the argument using the Matrix films as an analogy. As an example, they offer the idea of a human with ViA wearable computer equipment that interfaces via neural network software to the vision system of a Mars probe. (the software is named, appropriately, the Neural EditOr or NEO). The human and the computer each provide the types of image processing they're good at resulting in some interesting views. See the Cyborg Astrobiologist project website for more information.

Steve "Cyborg" Mann on NPR


Steve "Cyborg" Mann on NPR 07/18/2004 08:45 AM
Infogargoyle sez, "NPR has just done an audio interview with the ever evolving cyborg, Steve Mann. He talks about his body's "dashboard" monitor on his head mounted display, eyetap. Mann also describes sousveillance - "the people watching the powers that be". Available in both RealAudio & Windows Media Player 9." What a pity that NPR insists on limiting the availability of its programmes to proprietary, streaming formats that can't be saved or shifted to an MP3 player, and require proprietary players to use. Link,/a> (Thanks, infogargoyle!)

Cyborg celebrities photoshopping


Cyborg celebrities photoshopping 05/14/2004 03:28 AM
More science-fictional photoshopping on Worth1000's daily contest: "Cyborg Celebs." Nice robot Tyra Banks. Link

Captain Cyborg: 'I know Kung Fu!'


Captain Cyborg: 'I know Kung Fu!' 05/14/2004 07:36 AM
Letters Plus Linspire and geek sexual equality

Captain Cyborg to risk all for science


Captain Cyborg to risk all for science 08/02/2004 12:17 PM
Heroic sacrifice to advance humanity

Captain Cyborg terrorises UK conference


Captain Cyborg terrorises UK conference 05/12/2004 09:44 AM
Gives speech on, er, speechless communication

AP Article On Cyborg Steve Mann


AP Article On Cyborg Steve Mann 01/10/2004 09:01 PM

Captain Cyborg is back: official


Captain Cyborg is back: official 04/29/2004 10:44 AM
So says The Guardian

Cyborg Rats vs. Rescue Robots


Cyborg Rats vs. Rescue Robots 09/22/2004 04:50 PM
A lot of work has been put into robots designed for search and rescue over the last few years. The challenge is making robots small enough to crawl down into rubble carrying sensors, such as artificial noses, that can detect survivors. A NewScientist.com article reports that, for several years, a DARPA-funded project has been working on a better way to do it. They've implanted electrodes in a rat's brain that can directly read the neural responses from the rat's nose. The rats can be trained to sniff out humans and even explosives and their findings would be transmitted directly to a human search and rescue team. For more information, visit the project's website.

Humanist transhumanism: Citizen Cyborg


Humanist transhumanism: Citizen Cyborg 04/11/2005 11:03 PM
Cory Doctorow: I've just finished a review copy of James Hughes's "Citizen Cyborg: Why Democratic Societies Must respond to the Redesigned Human of the Future." I was skeptical when this one arrived, since I've read any number of utopian wanks on the future of humanity and the inevitable withering away of the state into utopian anarchism fueled by the triumph of superior technology over inferior laws.

But Hughes's work is much subtler and more nuanced than that, and was genuinely surprising, engaging and engrossing.

A couple years ago, my friend John Gilmore -- who advocates for marijuana law reform -- introduced me to the idea of "cognitive liberty," the freedom to choose your state of mind. The cognitive liberty cause encompasses the movements to legalize "recreational" drugs and to limit the power of the state to subject "mentally ill" people to involuntary pharmaceutical therapy (and, when it is still practiced, involuntary physical therapies such as lobotomies and electroshock).

Cognitive liberty resonates strongly for me. Like other forms of personal liberty, it is not without its perils -- when friends of mine were involuntarily medicated during acute incidents of schizophrenia, mania or depression, the interventions seemed like a good trade-off at the time (rampaging, irrational, out of control friends who are treated with meds that make them capable of reasoning with those around them are good poster children for "cognitive coercion"), and friends who've fallen down the well of addiction and ended up with ruined lives or even lives cut short are a strong warning against unbridled cognitive liberty.

But then there are friends whose touch of madness sends them on flights of brilliance, friends whose casual glass of wine, joint or hallucinogen use have made them happier, better adjusted, and more creative and fulfilled. What's more, my friends who've ODed, been committed, or who live with addiction haven't been helped by prohibition -- far from it. Some are in jail, some are medicated insensible, some are living lives of dangerous poverty.

The idea of cognitive liberty is very tempting, but I have an instinct that there's an approach to it that is grounded not in libertarianism, but in Canadian/European-style social democracy.

"Citizen Cyborg" takes the social democratic approach not just to cognitive liberty, but to the parcel of questions that follow on from it as technology allows us to charge our minds and bodies. When we can choose our children's' sex, modify our genomes to eliminate some forms of mental and physical disability, when we can modify our bodies and minds to improve them beyond the normal human baseline , when we can even use technology to make dolphins and great apes as smart as precocious children, what then?

Surely the ability to determine your own genome, the ability to choose to modify your physical self and to make the choices for your children are as fundamental civil liberties as the right to speak and assemble and otherwise author your own destiny.

But the traditional "transhumanist" movement has come out of the libertarian right, advocates of an unbridled market without government intervention. And much of the opposition to transhumanism hasn't just come from the religious right, but from the left, too -- lefties who see transhumanism as likely to produce a troubling, divisive caste system, or to make us all beholden to corporate interests like Monsanto who bind us to subscribing to patented GM lifeforms that we require to sustain our lifestyles.

Hughes's remarkable achievement in "Citizen Cyborg" is the fusion of social democratic ideals of tempered, reasoned state intervention to promote equality of opportunity with the ideal of self-determination inherent in transhumanism. Transhumanism, Hughes convincingly argues, is the sequel to humanism, and to feminism, to the movements for racial and gender equality, for the fight for queer and transgender rights -- if you support the right to determine what consenting adults can do with their bodies in the bedroom, why not in the operating theatre?

Much of this book is taken up with scathing rebuttal to the enemies of transhumanism -- Christian lifestyle conservatives who've fought against abortion, stem-cell research and gay marriage; as well as deep ecologist/secular lefty intelligentsia who fear the commodification of human life. He dismisses the former as superstitious religious thugs who, a few generations back, would happily decry the "unnatural" sin of miscegenation; to the latter, he says, "You are willing to solve the problems of labor-automation with laws that ensure a fair shake for working people -- why not afford the same chance to life-improving techno-medicine?"

The humanist transhuman is a political stance I'd never imagined, but having read "Citizen Cyborg," it seems obvious and natural. Like a lot of basically lefty geeks, I've often felt like many of my ideals were at odds with both the traditional left and the largely right-wing libertarians. "Citizen Cyborg" squares the circle, suggest a middle-path between them that stands foursquare for the improvement of the human condition through technology but is likewise not squeamish about advocating for rules, laws and systems that extend a fair opportunity to those less fortunate (say, by offering special patent rules to the developing world allowing poor nations' scientists to freely reuse the patented pharmaceutical inventions of the rich north to solve local needs.)

Hughes is a Buddhist whose children struggle with genetically-influenced disorders like ADD and Tourette's, and his life seems much taken-up with the cause of transhumanist humanism. He is the executive director of the World Transumanist Association, and he teaches health policy at Hartford, CT's Trinity College. The work is sprinkled with references to science fiction and is very concerned with the way that transhumanist ideas were prefigured in the genre and have leaked back into modern sf. I don't know that he's convinced me to become a transhumanist activist -- I feel like the work I do with EFF works to safeguard a lot of rights dear to the transhumanist heart anyway -- but the analytical tools this book has provided me with have made me re-examine my own political identity. Book Link, References Link

Labour MP backs Captain Cyborg shocker


Labour MP backs Captain Cyborg shocker 03/24/2005 08:28 AM
Vote Tory before it's too late

Cyborg Mann at forefront of wearable
computer technology


Cyborg Mann at forefront of wearable
computer technology
01/22/2004 04:21 AM
Singapore Business Times Jan 22 2004 8:11AM GMT

professor in Singapore


professor in Singapore 06/12/2004 08:11 AM
Miss Chew Shit Fun .. unfortunate name .. her

ns.nie.edu.sg/faculty/chewsf.htm
track this site | 6 links


Professor Bainbridge


Professor Bainbridge 02/05/2005 09:55 PM
Bainbridge's take: .. agreeing

professorbainbridge.com/2005/02/voltaire_and_wa.html
track this site | 3 links


"Professor Reynolds"


"Professor Reynolds" 07/31/2004 08:44 PM

The NetEase Professor


The NetEase Professor 08/03/2004 09:25 AM
China continues to produce some intriguing bargains in the equity bin.

"Professor Bainbridge"


"Professor Bainbridge" 06/24/2005 09:49 PM

"Professor Lessig is no longer ok with
that"


"Professor Lessig is no longer ok with
that"
03/17/2005 02:50 AM

Professor Gets Job Counting Frogs (AP)


Professor Gets Job Counting Frogs (AP) 05/18/2004 11:43 AM
AP - Eldon Enger is all ears when he's looking for frogs. The retired biology professor is a volunteer frog counter for the Michigan Department of Natural Resources.

Bioterrorism Charges Brought Against
Professor


Bioterrorism Charges Brought Against
Professor
06/04/2004 09:59 PM

Is the Video Professor scamming people?


Is the Video Professor scamming people? 04/15/2004 02:28 AM
I'll let you all be the judge but their is no way I would allow my mom to order one...

Make Fun Of A Professor, Lose Your
Computer


Make Fun Of A Professor, Lose Your
Computer
01/09/2004 09:50 PM
A student at the University of Northern Colorado created a silly little online newsletter about things happening at the university, where he made fun of a certain professor in a very over-the-top and satirical manner. The apparently thin-skinned professor complained to the police, who have charged the student with libel, and taken away his computer. This seems to be going way too far. First, the piece is obvious satire (he has a morphed picture of the professor making him look like he's a member of the band KISS and calling him a former roadie). Even if, in some weird part of the world, such obvious satire was considered libel, there's no reason to take this guy's computer away. More importantly, though, this is yet another example of what happens when you complain about something appearing on the internet that you don't want people to see. Until today, this random picture and story of the professor was only appearing on some lightly visited Geocities page and getting no attention. Today, the picture is in USA Today. You can try to legally force people to take something off the internet, but be warned that it's only likely to give it much more attention.

Professor Arrested on Software Suspicion


Professor Arrested on Software Suspicion 05/10/2004 02:46 PM
AP via Newsday May 10 2004 6:23PM GMT

Professor Arrested on Software Suspicion
(AP)


Professor Arrested on Software Suspicion
(AP)
05/10/2004 10:02 AM
AP - A Japanese professor who advocates free file sharing on the Internet was arrested Monday on copyright-related charges for developing and offering software that lets people swap movies and video games, police said.
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