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Hyper-convergence paradigm


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Google Voice Pushes Free Phone-service Envelope

October 16, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

Google Voice, an ingenious use of web-based voice communications service, allows users to combine a range of phone numbers under one standard, permanent Google phone number. Any linked phone number can be removed or replaced, and the service is free. All domestic calls inside the US are free, and sms is free. The service even converts voicemail to readable transcripts in an online inbox.

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Comparing Kindle 2 & Kindle DX

October 16, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

The Amazon Kindle 2 is ideally sized for one-handed reading. In this category, it beats the traditional book, because it’s single pane is more ergonomic for the purpose of reading with one hand and seeing the text clearly at a consistent angle, than struggling to balance a side-bound traditional book.

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Social Networking Tools are Representative of Human Evolution

October 12, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

An attractive woman, 34-ish, drives a compact station-wagon, late model, over a still-cobblestone side street in the center of Madrid. She advances slowly, toward a red light, and talks on her cell phone. She seems equally concentrated on both activities. Driving an automobile is a potentially dangerous activity, in which one’s own life or the lives of others may be at risk, while a casual conversation is not so much that. Yet she seemed to give equal weight, her body, her manner, seemed to give equal weight to both activities.

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Access versus Control: DVR, eBooks & Online Reporting

October 8, 2009 :: admin :: No Comment Yet

DVR is an increasingly popular consumer-oriented technology which simultaneously liberates viewers from strict TV viewing schedules and also imposes new constraints on recording freedoms (including sharing). DVR is a concession by content providers, advertisers and infrastructure (connectivity) providers, to the advantages of digital technology, and to the common individual demand for more freedom to control [...]

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Apple Tablet to Revolutionize Print Media, News Publishing

October 8, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

Apple’s long-awaited tablet computer, likely to run a version of Mac OS X and to merge the touchscreen stylings of the iPhone and iPod Touch with the full functionality of the MacBook line, is expected to be aimed at revolutionizing the way print media deliver text to readers. If true, the device would again put Apple at the cutting edge of a field where Amazon, Microsoft, Sony and others, are trying to set the standards for e-book distribution and licensing.

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Artificial Intelligence: Will It Understand or Reject Our Human Qualities?

September 8, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

Is the very thing we demand of our computers the thing that will make them intolerant of our humanity, if and when they awaken to an artificial intelligence? One of the fundamental problems in achieving a state of computational agility and independence that would allow us to say a synthetic entity has acquired ‘artificial intelligence’ is the problem of autonomy. If we give real autonomy to artificially intelligent machines, can we trust them to cooperate with us, in the ways we, as human beings prefer?

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Sony advances touchscreen e-paper paradigm with Sony Reader Touch Edition

August 30, 2009 :: staff :: No Comment Yet

Like the Amazon Kindle family of e-readers, the Sony Reader Touch Edition uses an e-Ink e-paper display. But it’s interface works like a touchscreen. The advance is a major improvement for the standards of design in e-paper e-book readers. The touchscreen standard may be the most significant challenge Sony has put forth for the Amazon Kindle readers, none of which uses a touchscreen interface.

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Kindle DX: Beautiful, Focused, Comfortable, Imperfect, Inspired & Worth ‘Reading’

July 28, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: 2 Comments

The Amazon Kindle DX is a beautiful device. Its design is user-friendly, intuitive and cohesive. It is clean-edged, minimal and thinner than many major magazines. Its format size is comfortable and makes tactile sense; it feels like something you hold in order to read, giving it a useful aesthetic kinship to books or magazines, a vast improvement on smaller e-reading devices. It is, in point of fact, far more comfortable than planting yourself in front of a computer monitor to read large amounts of text.

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Apple Projected to Release 10-inch Touchscreen Tablet, September 2009

July 27, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: 2 Comments

The Financial Times is the latest publication to weigh in on mounting expectations that Apple will release a touchscreen tablet computer this fall. There are rumors the computer maker is hoping to counter the rise of cheap netbooks with something lower-cost than their standard Macs and with a larger screen based on the model of the iPod Touch and the iPhone. The news could mean a breakthrough in personal computing standards and even portability of the workplace.

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H1N1 Preparedness: Vaccines & Social Media, Tackling Pandemic on Multiple Fronts

July 16, 2009 :: staff :: No Comment Yet

The influenza A/H1N1 virus, popularly known as “swine flu” was officially declared a pandemic in June. Shortly after the pandemic declaration, it was confirmed that H1N1 was confirmed in human patients in 74 countries. In the 5 weeks since then, it has spread rapidly and is now confirmed to have caused human infection in 140 countries.

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Pentagon Cyborg-insect Program Could Save Quake Victims

July 14, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

The New Scientist magazine is reporting on an intriguing and brazen new Pentagon program that would create living “OrthopterNets”, communication networks made of insects implanted with special technologies to modulate their wingbeats. Crickets, cicadas and katydids, all use their wings to generate sounds, the patterns of which communicate information to others of their kind. The Pentagon wants to use this natural communications network to prompt the insects to emit specific sounds in the presence of specific chemicals.

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Airtight Online Security Against Identity Theft (discussion)

June 10, 2009 :: staff :: No Comment Yet

How can we reach the state of affairs in which online activity is entirely secure against identity theft? Hyper-convergence means media and services of all kinds will be increasingly integrated across a broad-spectrum multi-media fabric, where one’s actions and interests, private information and financial data, will be increasingly widespread.

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Transparency Network for Dispersed Persistent Examination of Financial Institutions (discussion)

June 9, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

The underlying problem in the financial system —which allowed banking institutions to hide bad debt in bundled assets, and resell it to trading partners who may not have been given full disclosure on the unsustainable nature of much of the underlying debt— is transparency. A fierce individualist ideology led to a convenient clouding over of the reporting mechanisms intended to make financial institutions more ethical, more stable, and more useful to those outside their walls.

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‘Wave’ May Achieve New Paradigm in Online Messaging (video)

June 6, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

Google Wave is a bold new open source project created by the web search and advertising colossus to overhaul the way messaging online works. It goes beyond what email or instant messaging is, to allow for interlaced discussions, characters updated in real-time, and the embedding and propagation of distinct waves across the web.

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The Internet’s Effect on the Human Mind (discussion forum)

May 31, 2009 :: admin :: No Comment Yet

Any communicative medium allows us to deliver cognitive information into a shared space of consciousness, and ideally, to deliver much of our “known” reality to another mind. Media shape information, decide how it can be delivered, and, how we receive and interpret it.
“Cognitive science has revealed a human brain notable for its plasticity. It is [...]

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Discussion forum on new publishing models to speed the spread of best ideas

May 24, 2009 :: staff :: No Comment Yet

Publishing models determine which texts are made available to a wide audience, and by what means. New media, like this social network, are providing new opportunities, but the crossover between print and digital media will provide bold new opportunities for making the best new ideas available to the people who can do the most with them.

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The Hot Spring Network opens discussion on whether it’s possible to achieve 100% organic products

May 23, 2009 :: staff :: No Comment Yet

It’s worth asking: how can we achieve products that are produced, packaged, distributed and brought to market, in such a way that they could achieve near 100% organic status? Are we counting the non-organic-quality industrial processes involved in burning fuel and creating plastics? Can we do without such processes? Would corn-based biodegradable plastics be a significant first step?

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‘On Thin Ice’ Tracks Glacial Melt, Indian Food Security

May 22, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

NOW, with David Brancaccio, travels to the Indian Himalaya, to examine the problem of persistent accelerating ice melt which is speeding the erosion of glaciers that feed the Ganges River, which in turn provides water for hundreds of millions of people and sustains a precarious but massive food economy.

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Scientists Have Built the World’s First ‘Invisibility Cloak’

May 8, 2009 :: Denver Lessing :: No Comment Yet

The tiny surface of the first effective ‘invisibility cloak’ allows light to bend around it in such a way that the optical density of an object underneath it is altered, generating the illusion of invisibility. There are ongoing efforts to build computerized overlays or built-in cladding that would allow even large vehicles like military tanks to appear invisible at a distance.

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Amazon Kindle DX: Big Screen for Textbooks, Newspapers, Magazines

May 6, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: 3 Comments

Amazon.com’s Kindle and Kindle 2 devices have revolutionized the market for electronic books. Wireless devices allowing download of new books in just minutes, for reading on a high-resolution e-paper screen, which reads much like real paper, they have made the experience of hosting and paging through e-books much more user-friendly. Now, Amazon has introduced the Amazon Kindle DX, which will ship this summer, with a screen 2.5 times larger, to make it possible to read magazines or PDF documents as designed.

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De-centralization New Rule in American Politics, New Media Key Empowerment Tool

April 30, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: One Comment

The election of 2008 is historic for a variety of reasons: it saw the election of the first African American president, a second consecutive “wave election” —not seen since 1930 and ‘32—, saw two women come very close to the most powerful job in the world, mobilized millions of voters and saw record amounts of fundraising from “small donors”. It was, however, also a watershed moment in the fundamental decentralization of the American political process.

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Electronic Medical Records Could Help Find Cures, Speed Progress, Cut Costs

April 16, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: 4 Comments

Electronic medical records (EMR), like health insurance, benefit from being spread over the widest pool possible. A system that aggregates and cross-references data from hundreds of millions of patients can find statistical evidence far more efficiently than today’s statistical modeling for health problems and solution improvement.

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Google Looks at Making Mobile TV for ‘Android’ Platform

March 9, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: One Comment

Google CEO Eric Schmidt told PBS’ Charlie Rose that the search juggernaut is looking at applying its mobile phone OS Android to enabling phones to act as mobile TVs. Noting that within years, up to 5.5 billion people may be using mobile phones, Schmidt told Rose that the technology now empowers people the world over with access to huge amounts of information, and that TV functionality will add transparency to the positive outcomes of this development.

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Page-perfect Touchscreen e-Reader will Revolutionize Mobile Computing

March 3, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: 5 Comments

The Amazon Kindle is a nice device, and it handles its job well, but it is just a very clumsy start to what will be a technological convergence few in mainstream media (and publishing) are anticipating, though it may not be far off. The page-perfect, for lack of a better term, e-reading device will make portable electronic reading easier and more comfortable than ever, packing huge amounts of data, as well as wireless downloading and even browsing capability, into an ultrathin tablet touchscreen.

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In Defense of Essay-length Online Writing

February 13, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

Brevity is the soul of wit. True enough. But, information that brings us to a more enlightened approach to understanding the world often needs to “play out” in a substantial interaction of ideas, a “testing” of logical thought-processes as relating to concept and interpretation, an essay. There has long been a presumption that online writing must be brief, due to the “above the fold” bias of attention-span deficient online readers, but I would argue that the medium is actually ideally suited to something very different.

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Recovery.gov to Track Recovery Spending, because “Sunshine is the Best Disinfectant”

February 8, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

Pres. Barack Obama announced, just one week after taking office, the creation of a new website, Recovery.gov, which will detail the manner in which all the money from his American Recovery and Reinvestment Plan, once passed by Congress and signed into law, is being spent. The website is another in a series of steps to create a far-reaching reform of the federal government’s reporting to the public about its activities, with the aim of achieving Obama’s promise of the “most transparent” government in US history.

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Resilient Complexity versus Exposure to Entropy

January 31, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

All systems fail, all organized interactions are vulnerable to entropy, ashes to ashes, dust to dust. And at best, we are but stardust, a beautiful yet haunting explanation of our origins. Infused with light. Doomed to shadow. Whatever your spiritual beliefs, in the mortal physical realm, entropy is always interfering. The intellect often uses convenient conceptualizations to feel it is better understood or more secure, more real and lasting, than it is.

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Toward a ‘Transactional’ Cosmology: Web Dynamics for the Information Age

January 6, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

Each information transaction, sometimes as exemplary, sometimes as single element added to a sweeping aggregate of historical sway, is a precedent, which can motivate, influence or redirect the push of future happenstance. And, we must take note, every transaction involving matter or energy contains information, traces of a history of its coming into being, and generates a “footprint”, a trace of its appearance and its transition into something beyond the transactional moment.

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Reverse Touchscreen Allows More Precise Manipulation of Graphics

December 18, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

A new reverse touchscreen, a ’see-through’ prototype that allows users to contact objects on-screen from behind the screen, mitigating the problem of hand or fingers blocking out part of the graphics. This makes the screen a more precise navigational interface for users and makes it easier to use multiple fingers at once. The new device will allow for much more agile use of personal electronic devices and possibly for further miniaturization of advanced graphics-intensive tools.

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Transparency Network as Means of Restoring Financial Confidence

December 10, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: 2 Comments

It may be that “a few bad apples” got the ball rolling on what has turned into a massive international financial disaster. Or, it may be that a few bad apples got their names in lights, while the entire system conspired unwittingly in a spectacular collapse. Either way, the best expression of the problem might be to say that markets have stopped working, in part, because they have been comprehensively modified to stop working like markets. An open banking transparency network would reduce the motivation for wrongdoing and privilege more reliable sources of information, creating confidence and motivating sound market dynamics.

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Conventional Hybrid Super-computer Reaches 1,000 Trillion CPS

December 8, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: 3 Comments

A hybrid super-computer has reached the astounding speed of 1,000 trillion calculations per second, termed a petaflop. The Roadrunner super-computer at Los Alamos National Laboratory operates on a conventional paradigm of computational mechanics — meaning it operates over semiconductors and established systems of computer circuitry, not quantum computing innovations or molecular processors.

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The Future is Not Simplicity, but Complexity, Better Understood & Managed

November 12, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

Complexity is not an outlandish tendency of troubled souls and pretentious intellects; it is the basic state of nature as we know it. The more we discover, the more certain we can be of this: even elemental particles are less solid than they seem, behaving like tightly bound arrangements of spherical bodies —irreducible monads—, they apparently achieve this physics by behaving like something they are not (now widely accepted in particle physics, “string theory” proposes that elemental particles are actually 2-dimensional vibrating “strings” whose vibration causes them to interact as if they were not strings at all).

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Zero-downtime Must Be a Standard of the Open Web

July 27, 2008 :: admin :: No Comment Yet

Freedom of information and the standard of net neutrality —connection providers not controlling content or access to content in any way— require that information posted online not be removed, blocked, or made unavailable to readers, so long as the publisher wishes to include that content. For content publishers and content consumers to shape the web experience they desire, not only do we need an ethical standard of total net neutrality, but we need a technical standard of zero-downtime bandwidth guarantees.

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FCC Chairman Says He Will Take Action to Prevent ISPs from Controlling Users’ Activities

July 12, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) will take regulatory action to prevent internet service providers (ISP) from blocking or controlling users’ access to online content. The announcement came from the FCC chairman after Comcast moved to manipulate internet access —limiting their freedom to navigate— who had engaged in file-sharing online services, presumably in an effort to control access to content for which the cable provider was not being paid per-content-access.

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Relational Data, the Semantic Web & Key Security Priorities

July 2, 2008 :: admin :: No Comment Yet

As the population of users on the world wide web expands at still astonishing rates, and “web 2.0″ —the social networking phenomenon, the integration of real open source innovation, and the free-services standard being pushed by Google— becomes the communicative norm, powerful new realms of innovation could be emerging that will become the third-generation Internet, or web 3.0. We need to understand fully how the interrelation of data and vital security interests can come together to give end-users the richest possible experience.

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Da Vinci’s Notebooks: Pushing the Limits of Intellectual Pursuit

May 18, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: One Comment

The complete notebooks of Leonardo da Vinci, as collected by the Project Gutenberg, are now available through Scribd iPaper, a unique new document format that allows for scrolling through book-length documents right on a static web page, without downloading. The service is a great complement to any project aimed at expanding knowledge, the free flow of information, and access to the great ideas of the past, present, and the future in progress.

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Ziggurat Century: Global Civilization as the New Babel, with Reason for Hope

May 17, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: 3 Comments

We are living in a time of unprecedented global integration, where economies, security interests, legal systems, and languages and systems of learning have been dispersed and interwoven across the globe. There are obvious positive effects to this integration, along with certain overarching and seemingly intractable problems that cause real worry for even the most hopeful or studied observers. Languages and cultures intermingle, yet seek to remain distinct and continuous, and individuals seek to enhance their own possibilities (requiring freedom of information, and freedom of movement), while seeking to prevent the corrosion of already structured social fabrics.

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Openness May Be New Gold-standard for Government, Business, Technology

May 8, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

The open-source movement has been a revolutionary phenomenon of startling proportions. It has changed the way software works for us in our daily experience, by bringing costs down far enough that now anyone with an internet connection can launch a web-based publication in literally seconds. Its efficiency, its appeal, its human element, make it a standard to watch as other sectors of economics and public life evolve to integrate the latest communications technologies, and aim for optimum end-user freedom and flexibility.

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The Commons May Eventually Replace the Firewall as Security Standard

May 2, 2008 :: admin :: No Comment Yet

As the world acclimates to digital technology, and its usefulness in everyday life becomes increasingly relevant to how we achieve a higher quality of life, higher quality of education, and more efficient means of deploying solutions to complex problems, the standard for securing data and ideas may shift from closed environments behind firewalls to a new open standard, where the commons guarantees provenance, and thereby, rights, when warranted.

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Taking the Plunge: into the Commons of Ideas & Invention

April 23, 2008 :: admin :: No Comment Yet

The digital age has brought the most potent test for the security of intellectual property, and thanks to the open source movement, has also shown that intellectual property is not always most productive or most valuable when kept under wraps. Increasing numbers of large firms and institutions are opting not only to use open source software —to avoid licensing fees—, but are also building their own products and services with open source code, meaning they cannot keep the contents safely secret.

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