Posts Tagged "fiction"
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Oh send in the trolls. Oh where are the trolls? There aren’t any trolls….
Send in the trolls…. Oh where are the trolls…. (With apologies to Stephen Sondheim) Our Miley Cyrus SQL Server Hadoop article got trolled on Twitter today. And we thought ‘yes! Finally! A troll.’ Then it turned out he had no Twitter readership. We admit there was a problem with the article. We didn’t list the fact that some people think Miley Cyrus and using SQL Server together with Hadoop are both somewhat messed up. Mea culpa. (Also, we did not come down nearly hard enough on Microsoft. The article goes on endlessly with its tepid praise for SQL Server. If you can’t afford Oracle and need an top-of-line SQL solution it is actually quite a cost effective solution. If you can afford the risk of running Windows, that is. Mainly we attack MySQL. We thought that we’d at least get some MySQL fans trolling us. No, some random Microsoft type apparently thought their honor had been grievously offended with our insufficient praise of Redmond.)… Read the restGoogle Glass: Confessions of a New Cyborg
Google Glass, Cyborgs, and the Singularity Does Google Glass turn you into an awesome Terminator-like Cyborg with a web browser inside of your brain? Or does it just frighten the horses? Will you become a so-called “Glasshole”? Is the software still limited and flawed? Or is the built-in Chrome browser all the Cyborg software you need? In this article, we take a look at some of the pluses and minuses of Glass. #Glass turns you into an awesome Cyborg with an in-brain browser? #throughglass Click To Tweet Frequent readers of this blog will note our fascination with theory of the Singularity, as exemplified in Ray Kurzweil’s series of books. (We’ll note that the forthcoming science-fiction movie Transcendence is one way the Singularity might play out. That is, if it actually happens in the first place.) At least two decades ago, Kurzweil and others predicted Google Glass (“special glasses” as Kurzweil called them) would hit the market right about now.… Read the restCrowdsourced seismic sensors might save your life someday.
Crowdsourced Seismic Sensors? A frequent topic on this blog is the use of Arudino and crowdsourced technologies to address air quality issues. Can similar technologies be used adopted from air quality technologies to improve seismic predictions? It turns out the answer is yes. Unless you’ve been living under a large rock these last few days, you’ve probably heard that Los Angeles was struck in the last two weeks by what the USGS describes as a “moderate” 5.1 earthquake with “light” fore and aftershocks of around 4.5. (The Saint Patrick’s Day foreshock trembler prompted our earlier article on robot-written newspaper articles , music, and movies.) During that same period, there were similar or slightly quakes in Chile, Alaska, Greece, and Japan. And let’s not forget the 5.7 quake that struck DC back in 2011 to much mirth on Facebook. There was a significant difference between these quakes and the ones in Los Angeles: (1) they didn’t occur underneath a megapolis of some 13+ million people, and (2) they didn’t occur under one of the world’s major media capitals, where celebrities and publicists are conditioned, like Pavlov’s dog, to associate earthquakes with the salivating opportunity to tweet against a trending hashtag, emergency smartphone power at the ready, and (3) they didn’t have 100 aftershocks within a 24 hour period.… Read the restRecent Posts
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