June 2012
162 posts
Up, not North - Automatypewriter →
The Automatypewriter is a typewriter that can type by itself:
It can also detect what’s being typed on it. It can be used to send text to and/or receive text from a computer via USB. It was designed as a platform for playing interactive fiction games
If we want robots to be successful in healthcare, we’re going to need to think...
– How Do People Respond to Being Touched by a Robot? | ScienceBlog.com
1 tag
Step 1: Define your perfect girlfriend. Step 2: We bring her into existence....
– Cloud Girlfriend, the stalking has just begun - Infocult: Uncanny Informatics
Really, social networking is just another salient venue where problematic...
– ‘Facebook depression’ claim is research-challenged | NetFamilyNews.org
1 tag
there is a mental condition to accept the loss of data as the price of doing...
– “epidemic mental condition” | One Terabyte of Kilobyte Age
if stories themselves are universal, the way we tell them changes with the...
– The Art of Immersion: Why Do We Tell Stories? | Wired Business | Wired.com
Unlike a mirror, which reminds us of who we really are and may have a negative...
– Visiting your Facebook profile boosts your self-esteem | ZDNet
The impact of narratives on human psychology ranges widely from what events we...
– Narrative Networks (N2): The Neurobiology of Narratives - DARPA-SN-11-25 (Archived) - Federal Business Opportunities: Opportunities
the iPad’s release takes us one step closer towards our complete abdication of...
– Surface Residue
How can a simple, autonomous object with a universal form become...
– Troblion, affective silicon sphere - Neural.it :: media culture, hacktivism
Pope Benedict XVI has recently encouraged priests to blog and promoted Christian...
– Confession: There’s an iPhone App For That - Slashdot
Creating an Echograph (by Nick Alt)
We design our world, while our world acts back on us and designs us (6). This is...
– hauntedGeographies: Ontological Design
Zoom blur - 03 →
Javascript eclipse
We pile up digital possessions and expressions, and we tend to leave them piled...
– Cyberspace When You’re Dead - NYTimes.com