Tag: youtube
Saturday, April 7, 2012
Google’s ‘Project Glass’ Augmented Reality Glasses Are Real And In Testing
Chris Velazco in TechCrunch:
After weeks of speculation and rumors, Google has officially pulled back the curtain on what they have come to call Project Glass — a pair of augmented reality glasses that seek to provide users real-time information right in front of their eyes.
“We think technology should work for you — to be there when you need it and get out of your way when you don’t,” wrote Babak Parviz, Steve Lee, and Sebastian Thrun, three Google employees who are part of the Google X skunkworks. “We’re sharing this information now because we want to start a conversation and learn from your valuable input.”
Something tells me that they won’t be hurting for feedback.
To call these things glasses may be a bit of a stretch — early rumors noted that glasses bore a striking resemblance to a pair of Oakley Thumps, but the demo images on Project Glass’s Google+ page (one of which can be seen above) don’t look a thing like them. Rather, they appear to be constructed of a solid metal band that runs across the brow line, with a small heads-up display mounted on the right side.
Also see this post by Joseph Stromberg in the Smithsonian blog.
Tuesday, April 3, 2012
Levinas: The Right To Be (English Subtitles)
Monday, March 26, 2012
“To Commute,” by the Way, Can Mean to Transform (as in from Base Metal to Gold), or, The Banality and Sublimity of the Mundane
“To Commute,” by the Way, Can Mean to Transform (as in from Base Metal to Gold),
or,
The Banality and Sublimity of the Mundane
by Tom Jacobs
Each morning the day lies like a fresh shirt on our bed; this incomparably fine, incomparably tightly woven tissue of pure prediction fits us perfectly. The happiness of the next twenty-four hours depends on our ability, on waking, to pick it up.
~ Walter Benjamin
Consider how the lilies grow. They do not labor. Neither do they spin.
~ Luke 12:27
Depending on whether one has ever felt the vaguely incarceral character of everyday life, the following scene may or may not resonate. The term “everyday life” is tossed around quite a bit by cultural/critical theorists and philosophers, and it’s not always clear just what the hell they mean by it. And I will try to explain what I think it means in a moment, but first, this scene. It’s about a guy who comes to understand that the life he’s been inhabiting is not actually his own, but has yet to figure out how to create a new one. No doubt you’ve seen it, but it’s good enough to warrant watching again.
It is worth noting that this conversation takes place in the context of an emergent love that, even here, clearly begins to be felt by the two characters. And also that it takes place in something like an Applebee’s. Even in an Applebee’s, it seems, the source of true love and real hope may lie. Strange to consider.
Sunday, March 25, 2012
Margarethe von Trotta On Her Movie Rosa Luxemburg
How Simple Ideas Lead to Scientific Discoveries
An Antimatter Breakthrough
From Liz Mermin's documentary in progress: “On 7 March, the journal Nature published the latest results from the ALPHA experiment at CERN. The findings were called “historic.” ALPHA first made science history in 2010, when they created atoms of anti-hydrogen; in 2011 they succeeded in trapping and holding these atoms for an astonishing 1000 seconds. In these three short films, members of the ALPHA collaboration explain their latest triumph, revealing the excitement behind this extroardinary scientific process.”
Saturday, March 24, 2012
Synchronization Of Metronomes
Friday, March 23, 2012
“Sentimental Walk” by Vladimir Cosma (from the film Diva)
Thursday, March 22, 2012
Men stealing meat from lions
Wednesday, March 21, 2012
A Boston Review Forum on The Future of Black Politics
Man Successfully Flies With Custom-Built Bird Wings
Daniela Hernandez in Wired:
Using videogame controllers, an Android phone and custom-built wings, a Dutch engineer named Jarno Smeets has achieved birdlike flight.
Smeets flew like an albatross, the bird that inspired his winged-man invention, on March 18 at a park in The Hague.
“I have always dreamed about this. But after 8 months of hard work, research and testing it all payed off,” Smeets said on his YouTube page.
Smeets got the idea from sketches of a futuristic flying bicycle drawn by his grandfather, who spent much of his life designing the contraption but never actually built it.
When Smeets began studying engineering at Coventry University in England, he realized the physics of a flying bicycle just didn’t pan out. Instead, he drew inspiration from Leonardo da Vinci’s wing drawings to build his flying machine. Along with neuromechanics expert Bert Otten, Smeets brought his design into reality
The design is based on mechanics used in robotic prosthetics. The idea is to give his muscles extra strength so they can carry his body weight during the flight.
Smeets (and his arms) did just that today with the help of a pair of 37-ounce wings made out of fabric, according to a press release.
More here.
Sunday, March 18, 2012
street of crocodiles (brothers quay)
jupiter
love songs in age
Friday, March 16, 2012
The Faithful Hussar Scene from Kubrick’s Paths of Glory
Tuesday, March 13, 2012
Not Just the Higgs Boson
Tom Feilden over at the BBC:
Physicists at CERN are powering up the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) again, ready for a final push to confirm the discovery of the Higgs boson – the final piece of the jigsaw known as the Standard Model of Particle Physics.
So what then? Such a fuss has been made about finally nailing down the Higgs you could be forgiven for thinking that – once the champagne had been quaffed and the Nobel Prizes handed out – we could all pack up and go home.
Not a bit of it. Only two of the four main experimental detectors straddling the 27km ring of the LHC are even looking for the Higgs and both are interested in much, much more.
The mission statement for the Atlas experiment – titled Mapping the Secrets of the Universe – makes no mention of the Higgs, preferring to focus on the forces that have shaped our universe, extra dimensions of space, the unification of fundamental forces and evidence for dark matter candidates.
“We're all very excited about finally sorting out the Higgs hypothesis one way or the other,” says Professor Andy Parker, head of high energy physics at the Cavendish Laboratory in Cambridge and a senior member of the Atlas team.
“But that is just one part of a great process, and we have a huge number of other things we're also looking for. There's no pause in the march of science in this case.”
KONY 2012
If you haven't seen this video yet, you might as well join the 75 million+ people who have:
Saturday, March 10, 2012
David Chang Talks Honest Cooking, Thoreau, and Failure
Larissa MacFarquhar in The New Yorker:
There are two things the chef David Chang works very hard at and gets very, very anxious about, and in both cases the hard work and extreme anxiety have paid off. One is, obviously, his food, and the other is not becoming a pretentious idiot. Considering how much deserved acclaim has come his way—for his Momofuku restaurants, for his cookbook, and, most recently, for his magazine, Lucky Peach—it’s amazing that he has not permitted even a scrap of pretentious idiocy to stick to him. He’s not quite as neurotic as he was a few years ago, which is good, but he is still excellent company. If you’ve never seen him talk, you should, and here’s your chance: an interview on Paul Holdengraber’s new TV show (on YouTube’s The Intelligent Channel), in which Chang talks about failure, Thoreau, religion, and the honesty of cooking. Holdengraber is the impresario of the “Live” events at the New York Public Library, and when he thinks someone is worth interviewing, he’s always right.