Category Archives: Blog

A new use for satellite imagery: boosting sales!

Sample GeoPrism Data

New technologies have a tendency to develop unintended side effects, for both good or ill–just look at how automobiles changed society. Satellite imaging gave us better weather forecasts and more accurate military surveillance–and now, stronger sales leads for home contractors!

A company called Geosemble is using artificial intelligence combined with satellite imagery to direct companies toward local residents whose houses and grounds are in need of repair. The National Science Foundation in the U.S. has given them a Phase I grant to further develop the process.

Now if you’ll excuse me, I think I’ll go wrap my house in aluminum foil.

(Via Gizmag.)

(Photo from Gizmag, too.)

[tags]satellite, satellite imagery, privacy[/tags]

Podcasting for the next 10,000 years

podcast logoSo you really want to know how come I’m so informed about the challenges facing us in the future? How I can tell you what the ‘long tail’ is and why it works, when Bruce Sterling thinks the singularity will hit, or how I smell so darn good? Well folks, I’ll let you in on my little secret.

The Long Now Foundation is a group of people dedicated to fostering responsibility in humanity over the next 10,000 years. They go for the slow and better, rather than the faster and cheaper that we’re used to. There’s a section I came across called Seminars for Long-Term Thinking, that has roughly one speaker a month come and give a talk. Everything from long-tail sales of books via the internet to philanthropic investment over the next fifty years is covered. Between this and a few science/news podcasts, my daily commute has been covered for over a year. The seminars are available via iTunes or whatever your favorite podcasting program may be. Some of my favorites are Jared Diamond, Bruce Sterling (though I honestly didn’t get much of it – but it was fun!), and Robert Neuwirth. Subscribe to the podcasts, but also check out the website for slideshows and occasionally video presentations. Or, if you’re in the Bay area, attend the seminars.

Moore’s Law to end in fifteen years?

microchip Gordon Moore has predicted the expiry of the "Law" that bears his name to occur within the next ten to fifteen years. Moore’s Law is a rule of thumb that states that the number of transistors that can be inexpensively placed on an integrated circuit doubles every two years (or thereabouts), and it has held up remarkably well since Moore coined it in the mid-sixties.

Indeed, this isn’t the first time Moore has sounded a death-knell for the Law, but as conventional electronics is inherently limited by the laws of physics, it’s plausible that it has to stop at some point. So what does this mean for the exponential theories of Singularitarians like Ray Kurzweil? Or will technologies like quantum computing pick up the ball before semiconductors drop it? [Via SlashDot][Image by oskay]

[tags]Moore’s Law, computing, electronics, futurism[/tags]

The Brain from Planet X

The Brain from Planet X CD cover In my initial post, did I not threaten you with promise you the occasional post combining my love of SF and musical theatre?

Behold (and listen to excerpts from) The Brain from Planet X. It is, indeed, an SF (well, sci-fi) musical! It invaded Los Angeles last year, and now it’s invading New York.

Read about the creator’s, um, brainwave, here.

(Via BroadwayWorld.)

UPDATE: Also playing at the New York Musical Theatre Festival: a musical version of the 1980s SF flick The Last Starfighter!

[tags]science fiction, music, musical theatre[/tags]

Manufacturing2.0 – Ponoko’s personal manufacturing community

When Bruce Sterling spots something and considers it worthy of note, you can assume he knows what he’s on about – especially if it’s connected to his spimes idea.

But it doesn’t take a genius to see the huge disruptive potential of the "personal manufacturing network" business model behind Ponoko. I’ll simply quote their site, because I couldn’t put it more succinctly than this:

"Ponoko is the world’s first personal manufacturing platform. It’s the online space for a community of creators and consumers to use a global network of digital manufacturing hardware to co-create, make and trade individualized product ideas on demand.

The ponoko.com marketplace connects creators, consumers, digital manufacturing hardware and service providers to promote, make and trade products on Ponoko and social networking websites."

Poke around the site, and think about it. One of the few things I’ve seen recently where the tired cliche "this could change everything" really does apply.

[tags]fabbing, design, manufacture, social networking, spimes[/tags]