Category Archives: Blog

Jamais Cascio on Microsoft’s ‘Surface’

The technological wings of the blogosphere are all of a flurry about the revealing of Microsoft’s new touch-based interface technology, known as ‘Surface’ – and from looking at the footage, it’s easy to see why. It looks a whole world more fun and friendly than mouse and keyboard. Futurismic essayist Jamais Cascio* believes that this sort of new interface will have it’s biggest impact not in the document-based applications that computers are used for, but in the ‘metaverse’ applications like augmented reality, where the more intuitive mechanism of hand gestures will enable greater control over large flows of data.

 

*Yeah, I know – we’ve not had an essay from Jamais or anyone else for a long time, thanks to ongoing technical issues. We’re still working hard on a new iteration of Futurismic which should be not just more enjoyable for you the reader, but easier for us to maintain and keep filled with quality content. Don’t think we’ve forgotten you – we’re just trying to fit it all in between our other commitments in the world outside the internet!

Russia fears genotyped bioweapons?

I think this is probably a front-runner for the “massive knee-jerk technophobic reaction by a major nation’s goverment” award for this week; there are reports that Russia has suspended the export of human tissue samples for fear that genetic material could be used to make biological weapons tuned specially to attack people with Russian DNA. Now, I’m not a genetic scientist (nor do I play one on television), but while it strikes me that such a thing is probably possible, it certainly doesn’t strike me as being very likely. But who knows? Maybe the new Mutually Assured Destruction scenarios will be based on biological weapons, not nuclear.

Neurons mimicking silicon; silicon mimicking neurons

There’s a strange technological yin-yang to these two stories. First, scientists at Tel-Aviv University have discovered that artificial cultures of live neurons can be used to store data in the form of coordinated firing patterns in a similar manner to silicon chips. Second, an international team of boffins have started the Sensopac Project, a program intended to develop an ‘artificial cerebellum’, a device that will be installed in robots to enable them to move more like living creatures. Can anyone else spot a convergence of ideas happening here?

The center cannot hold – politics and moral reasoning

A forthcoming psychology paper is bound to provoke some lively debate on matters political. In researching the way people reach moral judgements (and finding in the process that an awful lot of it boils down to subsequent justification of instinctive decisions), the psychologists have concluded that people with conservative political attitudes have more subsystems in their moral processing brain centres than their liberal equivalents. Ample opportunity for spin from both sides with those results, I’d say. Watch closely for the first salvoes!