both china and india have scientists at the top, not lawyers. what will happen once they collaborate?
Month: March 2008
Freestanding Turbines
Pico-projectors
The first commercial pico-projectors will probably appear in 2009-10, initially as stand-alone devices, and perhaps as plug-in accessories for mobile phones (rather like the plug-in cameras that predated full camera-phones). If they prove popular, projectors could then be incorporated into all kinds of devices. Will they be powered by DLP, single mirrors or holographic diffraction? Consumers will not be bothered by such details—they will be looking at the bigger picture.
for use in phones, etc
Cochlear implants
100s of people have had their implants replaced over the years, and so far there is no evidence that removing the electrodes and replacing them causes problems. But if the trend of innovation with these devices continues, people may have several replacements over the course of their lives.
on the challenges of upgrading yourself
2013-05-26: and then there are assholes out there against human augmentation.
EU Internet Nonsense
The EU takes money from the Microsoft ATM with one hand, and then invests it in a sure-to-fail “Google Killer” with the other. Of course, I’m stretching the facts here to make a point. The EU is simply allowing the French and German governments to make these investments with their own taxpayer’s money. There is no direct link between Microsoft fines and these subsidies. But the point is the same – the EU is not willing to let free markets determine winners and losers. The winners must be home grown, at any cost. And US companies that have too much success in Europe seem to face a bleak choice – massive fines or government-backed competitors. It’s absurd. And it’s no wonder that many of the best European entrepreneurs keep coming to the US to start companies.
i hate european industrial policy. so misguided.
2015-03-04: europe continues to be run by morons.
Just 1 week after the American government voted to enforce net neutrality, the European Union is considering plans allowing the opposite, permitting internet providers to create a tiered internet service with paid fast lanes.
2015-12-17: europe is working very hard to retain its top spot for the dumbest tech policies.
New European data protection rules would see companies require parental consent to handle data of those under 16, effectively blocking them from social media
2016-05-26:
But the much more concerning stuff involves the regulation of the internet. Now, yes, the EU Commission basically tries to bend over backwards to say that this isn’t about creating new regulations for the internet. And also to claim that they’re not changing the “intermediary liability” regime as laid out in the E-Commerce Directive that is a decent, if unfortunately weaker, version of US intermediary liability protections, saying that platforms aren’t responsible for actions of their users. But… there’s a big “but” after those claims, and it basically undermines those claims. You can read the following and see them swearing no new regulations and no changes, but the 4 bullet points and the details buried in them suggest something entirely different
one wishes that brexit happens so that the EU doesn’t have time for nonsense like this.
2018-09-18: how the latest internet nonsense coming out of the EU will only end up harming the EU.
If regulators, EU or otherwise, truly want to constrain Facebook and Google — or, for that matter, all of the other ad networks and companies that in reality are far more of a threat to user privacy — then the ultimate force is user demand, and the lever is demanding transparency on exactly what these companies are doing. To that end, were I a regulator concerned about user privacy, my starting point would not be an enforcement mechanism but a transparency mechanism. I would establish clear metrics to measure user privacy — types of data retained, types of data inferred, mechanisms to delete user-generated data, mechanisms to delete inferred data, what data is shared, and with whom — and then measure the companies under my purview — with subpoena power if necessary — and publish the results for the users to see.
VTD-XML
The world’s most memory-efficient (1.3x~1.5x the size of an XML document) random-access XML parser. The world’s fastest XML parser: VTD-XML outperforms DOM parsers by 5x~12x, delivering 150~250 MB/sec per core sustained throughput. The world’s fastest XPath 1.0 implementation.
claims to be way faster than SAX. need to check out
Max Mix
10s of maxmix
Facebook Messenger
Facebook has been testing a new instant messaging service and will be launching it to the public soon. Our understanding is that the service will be built into user’s Facebook pages and allow them to web chat with their Facebook friends.
we need new IM networks like we need cancer. just like we don’t need their sorry take on email.
Ad Spending by Medium

this fails to mention direct mail
Robot programming models
a model that deals with the inherent complexity of concurrency, and the coordination or orchestration of what’s going on. This was the whole reason for choosing the CCR and DSS pieces for robotics. This was actually an advanced programming model designed not for robotics per se, but as a general purpose programming model. We put it into the robotics SDK as a way to test this out, but now we’re seeing that people are lifting the hood on the engine inside this SDK and finding other uses for it. We have people who are using it to build trading systems, who are doing large data-set scientific modeling, the folks at MySpace are using it to manage their server farms.
need to check our the MSR robotics SDK