
culture clash
Tag: culture
Google Maps Shoutout
Paleo-Future
so much aspiration. i frankly prefer aspiration to the tired pomo malaise of today
Humans 2.0
A science is emerging that combines a new understanding of how humans work to usher in a new generation of machines that mimic or aid human physical and mental capabilities. Some 150M of us are over the age of 80, while 200M of us suffer from severe cognitive, emotional, sensory, or physical disabilities. Giving all or even most of this population a quality of life beyond mere survival is both the scientific challenge of the epoch and the basis for a coming revolution over what it means to be human. To unleash this next stage in human development, our bodies will change, our minds will change, and our identities will change. The age of Human 2.0 is here.
in typical media lab fashion, a bit over the top. but remarkable nonetheless. a couple years ago they would have been laughed off the stage
Bot Docs
Japanese people don’t want their robots repaired, they want them treated
James Randi Foundation
debunking all the crap people believe these days
Earth viewed from books
nice visualization of all books talking about a particular region.
Transparent Kids
As younger people reveal their private lives on the Internet, the older generation looks on with alarm and misapprehension not seen since the early days of rock and roll. The future belongs to the uninhibited.
it was about time for a discontinuum
Today’s social technologies are creating the biggest generation gap since rock and roll — with younger people having radically different ideas than their parents about what’s public and what’s private
Premature Aperturation
Premature Aperturation or Pre-Flickr: Being overzealous in trying to get a FirstFlickr such that the event has not actually started yet.
Poverty tourism
travelers are taken on guided tours through impoverished areas such as Rio de Janeiro’s favelas
i think this is a net plus. more awareness of what the world is really like outweighs the entertainment factor