Sep 29

Via Charlie Kravetz.

Via Charlie Kravetz.

Originally shared by Alfred Poor

The #FDA has approved #human trials of a #brain #implant that could restore #vision for the #blind. #healthtech #wearables

Losing one’s sight has profound impact on a person’s life, not the least of which is a loss of independence and mobility. Many researchers are working on ways to restore vision, using strategies ranging from replacement implants for damaged retinas to…

http://healthtechinsider.com/2017/09/20/retina-implant-receives-fda-approval-human-trials/

Sep 27

I listened to this very moving podcast on my way home yesterday.

I listened to this very moving podcast on my way home yesterday.

It’s about a Somali main who becomes a political prisoner of the regime and is kept in solitary confinement. His only human contact is when his friend in the next cell teaches him how to tap out code, letter by letter, on their shared wall.

Then his friend gets a book. Anna Karenina. And he reads it to the guy. All 800 pages. By tapping it out, letter by letter, on the wall.

And it helps him in completely unexpected ways that are thought-provoking from a writer’s POV.

http://www.radiolab.org/story/radiolab-presents-rough-translation/
Sep 27

FanLit occasionally (by arrangement) republish my reviews. This was a book I particularly liked.

FanLit occasionally (by arrangement) republish my reviews. This was a book I particularly liked.

Unfortunately, I couldn’t finish the sequel, which was all the angst all the time. Maybe I just wasn’t in the right mood for it.

Originally shared by Fantasy Literature (FanLit)

Magonia: What YA should be like – Readers’ average rating:  Magonia by Maria Dahvana Headley Come for the wonderful voice (and attitude) of Aza Ray, the teenage narrator. Stay for a suspenseful plot, vivid characters, and fantastical worldbuilding. Magonia (2015) is one of those books that, while still partway through the sample, I knew I wanted to buy. It’s difficult to create a truly original character voice, but Maria Dahvana Headley pulls it off with Aza Ray. She even pulls it off again…

http://ow.ly/w9hY50ehKWU

Sep 24

A friend of mine complained the other day on Facebook (in a joking context, but knowing his politics he was…

A friend of mine complained the other day on Facebook (in a joking context, but knowing his politics he was semi-serious) about not getting anything for his rates (city taxes).

This is an otherwise highly intelligent man who drives every day on roads that are not flooded, not full of potholes, and not wandered by stray dogs, leading past buildings that are earthquake-safe, food businesses that won’t give him food poisoning, well-stocked libraries, well-kept parks, clean public toilets, thousands of street trees, and well-used community centres, to give a non-exhaustive list of what he gets for his rates.

The thing is, unless you’ve worked in among that infrastructure, as I have, it tends to be invisible. Nobody thinks about stormwater until it’s flooding their house – nobody, that is, except the stormwater engineers whose daily job is to stop it from flooding your house.

This article reminds us of that.

https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2017/05/gratitude-for-invisible-systems/526344/
Sep 23

As soon as you see “autonomous wheelchair” you think, “Well, of course.”

As soon as you see “autonomous wheelchair” you think, “Well, of course.”

Originally shared by Wayne Radinsky

“Lidar-equipped autonomous wheelchairs roll out in Singapore and Japan.” The first is the Singapore-MIT Alliance for Research and Technology, or SMART wheelchair. “The robot’s computer uses data from three lidars to make a map. A localization algorithm then determines where the smart chair is on the map. The chair’s six wheels lend stability, and the chair is designed to make tight turns and fit through normal-size doorframes.”

“A second autonomous wheelchair recently premiered at Haneda Airport in Tokyo, designed by Panasonic and Whill, creator of the Model A Whill wheelchair, a sleek, high-tech wheelchair now on the market in Japan and the United States.”

https://spectrum.ieee.org/transportation/self-driving/lidar-equipped-autonomous-wheelchairs-roll-out-in-singapore-and-japan

Sep 22

There’s a great short story by Paolo Bacigalupi called “The Gambler” about this exact phenomenon of “news” being…

There’s a great short story by Paolo Bacigalupi called “The Gambler” about this exact phenomenon of “news” being diluted and diverted from stories that actually matter by the economics of clickbaiting.

Originally shared by Jennifer Ouellette

Thought-provoking. We can do better. http://idlewords.com/2017/09/anatomy_of_a_moral_panic.htm

“The real story in this mess is not the threat that algorithms pose to Amazon shoppers, but the threat that algorithms pose to journalism. By forcing reporters to optimize every story for clicks, not giving them time to check or contextualize their reporting, and requiring them to race to publish follow-on articles on every topic, the clickbait economics of online media encourage carelessness and drama. This is particularly true for technical topics outside the reporter’s area of expertise.”

“And reporters have no choice but to chase clicks. Because Google and Facebook have a duopoly on online advertising, the only measure of success in publishing is whether a story goes viral on social media. Authors are evaluated by how individual stories perform online, and face constant pressure to make them more arresting. Highly technical pieces are farmed out to junior freelancers working under strict time limits. Corrections, if they happen at all, are inserted quietly through ‘ninja edits’ after the fact.”

“There is no real penalty for making mistakes, but there is enormous pressure to frame stories in whatever way maximizes page views. Once those stories get picked up by rival news outlets, they become ineradicable. The sheer weight of copycat coverage creates the impression of legitimacy. As the old adage has it, a lie can get halfway around the world while the truth is pulling its boots on.”

http://idlewords.com/2017/09/anatomy_of_a_moral_panic.htm
Sep 20

Writing a culture without writing?

Writing a culture without writing? How do they hold onto their cultural knowledge and transmit it from one generation to the next?

Originally shared by Jennifer Ouellette

This ancient mnemonic technique builds a palace of memory https://aeon.co/ideas/this-ancient-mnemonic-technique-builds-a-palace-of-memory

https://aeon.co/ideas/this-ancient-mnemonic-technique-builds-a-palace-of-memory