One for the fantasy crowd.
Category Archives: SFF Thought Starters
Via Karen Conlin. I love this kind of stuff when it comes up in SFF.
Via Karen Conlin. I love this kind of stuff when it comes up in SFF.
Originally shared by Able Lawrence
Wearable robotics toolkit of powered prosthetic limbs and exoskeletons. On #Hackadayio http://bit.ly/1URDa7k
Originally shared by HACKADAY
Wearable robotics toolkit of powered prosthetic limbs and exoskeletons. On #Hackadayio http://bit.ly/1URDa7k
Waste reduction tends to be a smart move.
Waste reduction tends to be a smart move.
Originally shared by David Brin
A new kind of coating… made from banana peels and such… may delay fruit ripening much better, allowing it to be picked later and yet be stored longer. Ripening can even be timed so one banana of that bunch you bought will be ready each day of the week.
“By listening to everything that is happening in your house, as these bots do, they learn how we think, live, work…
Originally shared by Singularity Hub
“By listening to everything that is happening in your house, as these bots do, they learn how we think, live, work and play. They are gathering massive amounts of data about us. And that raises a dark side of this technology: the privacy risks and possible misuse by technology companies.”
These challenges include “write a song that listeners are unable to distinguish from a new song by Taylor Swift” and…
These challenges include “write a song that listeners are unable to distinguish from a new song by Taylor Swift” and “write a novel that reaches the New York Times bestseller list”. But there are also some, earlier in the list, that humans currently find relatively easy but machines find hard.
Originally shared by Kevin Kelly
After it beat the champs of chess, Jeopardy, and Go, what’s the next test for AI? Here is a list of 32 challenges: http://aiimpacts.org/concrete-ai-tasks-for-forecasting/
“I’m also certain that 99.99% of humanity doesn’t understand or appreciate the ramifications of what is coming.”
Originally shared by Singularity Hub
“I’m also certain that 99.99% of humanity doesn’t understand or appreciate the ramifications of what is coming.”
–Peter Diamandis
Sustainability and self-sufficiency are themes for our future, I believe.
Sustainability and self-sufficiency are themes for our future, I believe.
Originally shared by Greg Batmarx
Two acres of land is enough to farm a sustainable food supply for as many as 150 people, and now a San Francisco startup is making it even easier to get that farm growing. Farm From a Box is a shipping container kit that holds all the essentials for setting up a two-acre farm (except the land, of course).
Founders Brandi DeCarli and Scott Thompson got the idea after working on a youth center in Kenya where shipping containers were being used to substitute where infrastructure lacked.
That project didn’t address food insecurity, though, which led DeCarli and Thompson to found their own venture specifically for that purpose.
Farm From a Box is a kit designed to make it easier for all types of organizations to start growing sustainable food. Nonprofit humanitarian agencies, schools, community groups, and even individuals can buy a $50,000 kit, which comes with a complete water system including a solar-powered pump and drip irrigation system.
Together, those features help conserve water by using it more efficiently, delivering water directly to the roots of growing plants.
All of the kit’s components are solar-powered, so the kit also includes 3 kW of solar energy capacity which is enough to power the water pump as well as WiFi connectivity that makes it possible to monitor the farm conditions remotely. Because the built-in solar power technology generates more than enough energy to power the farm’s equipment, the farm is suitable to run completely off the grid.
All the prospective farmer needs to have is viable land, of course, and seeds. Luckily, the Farm From a Box team realizes that farming is largely about skill and science, so the kit also includes three stages of training materials on sustainable farming, farm technology and maintenance, as well as the business of farming.
In a recent interview with Smithsonian Magazine, DiCarli explained that the farm kit was designed to “act as a template” and that it’s possible to “plug in” components that specifically fit the farm’s local climate and the farmers’ needs. Those options include internal cold storage, to help preserve crops between harvest and consumption or sale, and a water purification system, if needed.
So far, Farm From a Box has deployed one prototype at Shone Farm in Sonoma County, California.
A project of Santa Rosa Junior College, the farm is part of a larger outdoor laboratory in which students learn how to cultivate crops in drought conditions, and then the harvest is used to supply the farm’s own community-supported agriculture (CSA) program as well as the college’s culinary arts program.
DiCarli said the Shone Farm prototype turned out to be “more efficient than we had even planned,” with “really high” production and energy output. Farm From a Box has a number of other potential sites lined up already, in Ethiopia, Nepal, Bhutan, and Afghanistan, as well as additional test farms in California and a veteran-partnered site in Virginia.
http://inhabitat.com/solar-powered-farm-from-a-box-is-a-compact-farm-kit-that-feeds-150-people/
My first thought was book covers.
My first thought was book covers.
Originally shared by Bojan Ploj
Text to picture
http://www.digitaltrends.com/cool-tech/ai-generates-images-based-on-text/
This is an excellent example of a mundane murder by a conspiracy of terrified incompetents which became magnified…
This is an excellent example of a mundane murder by a conspiracy of terrified incompetents which became magnified into a legend by various interested parties – a legend which persists in the popular consciousness today, despite the facts having been known for many decades.
One of the things you can do if you have a generational jump in your series is to turn the earlier events, and characters, into legend. Sherri S. Tepper does it in Raising the Stones, and Brandon Sanderson does it between the first and second Mistborn trilogies. But it doesn’t need to take generations; the legend of Rasputin was well established within ten years of his death.
Originally shared by Jennifer Ouellette
The Murder of Rasputin: The 100th Anniversary of a Mystery That Won’t Die https://shar.es/1DJUYH