Attention unimaginative bloggers: IBM app spits out topics to write about

Every writer could use a muse, sometimes. Photo: Ygor Oliveira/Flickr CC

You might think a roomful of monkeys could generate most of the blog posts you read.

But IBM Research has got it all down to a single program. Called Blog Muse, it generates topics for you to write about, based upon what audiences are asking for.

Blog muse isn’t an artificial brain. Rather than tapping that roomful of monkeys for raw material, however, it crowd-sources requests for stories from the naked apes in your community. (Read the paper about Blog Muse, which is being presented at computer conferences this winter and spring, below.)

IBMers Werner Geyer and Casey Dugan created Blog Muse.

Dugan studied at MIT, under the computer science giant, and Creative Commons founding director, Hal Abelson. She is working IBM’s Beehive Project, which aims to influence social networking behavior.

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Comic teaches you an esoteric thing, or two

Find your way to the whole comic, by Andy Carolan, at Binnall of America. (Click on the image to get to the BoA site. You will find a link to the column at the lower right-hand side of the page.)

The latest installment of Andy Carolan’s web comic, Disclosure,  is dedicated to Hub esotericist and podcasting sensation, Tim Binnall.

It tells the story of the discovery of an anomalous, narrow-beam radio signal detected by Earth-based observers in the early 1970s.

via binnallofamerica.com.

Pot scare of the week: "may cause psychosis"

Crazy, man. (Photo: Dana Ocker/Flickr CC)

Here’s your alarmist marijuana headline for the week (from Businessweek): “Marijuana Use Can Up Psychosis Risk”

What researchers found, actually, was an association between tokers who start blazing heavily at a young age, and an increased likelihood they will develop a serious mental illness.

And, of course, we’ve known about the comorbidity of substance abuse and psychoses for many years.

But you can’t blame the media for going overboard, this time: The Australian scientists who found the association between heavy, early use of pot and psychotic symptoms (such as hallucinations), themselves suggest a causal link:

“‘This demonstrates the complexity of the relationship: those individuals who were vulnerable to psychosis [i.e., those who had isolated psychotic symptoms] were more likely to commence cannabis use, which could then subsequently contribute to an increased risk of conversion to a non-affective psychotic disorder,’” wrote the study authors.

Another possibility, of course, is that young people, experiencing early psychotic symptoms, might be engaging in drug-seeking behavior to self-medicate, period.

via Marijuana Use Can Up Psychosis Risk – BusinessWeek.

Plug: Check out my Boston Globe personal technology column, User Friendly.

Binnall: 2009 a "down year" for UFO studies

A moment of excitement in an otherwise slow year. The Skeptic's Morristown, NJ, UFO hoax. (Photo:The Skeptic)

Hub esoteric expert and podcaster Tim Binnall steps back into 2009 with his  friends and leading UFOlogists Greg Bishop and Nick Redfern, in this two-parter:

Full Preview: We kick things off by getting Nick & Greg's general perspectives on the past year in Ufology and how it seemed like a particularly slow news year, with the exception of mostly unfortunate stories. Nick emparts some wisdom on how to look at these “down years” with proper perspective and Greg reflects on how, in the Internet age, perspectives on time are being altered as well as how the down cycle this year even affected his take on the UFO scene.

Note: For Greg Bishop’s take on the Google UFO logo hubbub (he calls it, “UFO porno”), hit the 79:30 mark in Part One of the 12.31.09 podcast.

via binnall of america : audio.


The Heretic's "10 New England Esotericists to Watch in 2010"

New England is home to some of the biggest brains in the businesses of esoterica and mad science.

But you knew that already.

Here then, is my list of the busiest folks we know in the worlds of offbeat science publishing, UFOlogy, cryptozoology and the occult — even comics. Ghost-hunting? That is sooo last decade. But keep these peeps on your radar in 2010. They make for an eclectic mix, alright, but I think the list somehow works:

Marc Abrahams announcing "The Penguin Prize" at the annual Ig Nobel Prizes ceremony, at Harvard U. (Photo: Courtesy of the Ig Nobel Prizes.)

1. Marc Abrahams. Few can match the wit, charm and energy of this singular Cambridge, Mass. personality. Abrahams is the publisher of the uproarious Annals of Improbable Research, and organizer of the annual Ig Nobel Prizes awards ceremony, which honors  “research that makes people laugh and then think.” He also writes a weekly column about wacky science (think bras that double as gas masks, and astrology charts for bacteria), for the UK Guardian.

Tim Binnall. (Photo: Courtesy of BoA)

2. Tim Binnall. Did you know that one of the planet’s fastest-growing podcasters to the “Coast-to-Coast AM” crowd is based right here, in the Hub? The young genius behind the whole thing, Tim Binnall, is relaunching his website, Binnall of America, with another season of podcast interviews with big-name UFOlogists and conspiracy researchers, from Texas to Sweden.

Binnall also organizes a successful paranormal confab in the Hub.

3. Loren Coleman. This legend in the world of cryptozoology (2010 marks his 50th year in the business) will be surprising us again with new insights, and new guests and events at his Portland, Maine-based International Museum of Cryptozoology.

A regular contributor to Coast to Coast AM, Boing Boing, and The Anomalist, Coleman is also the keeper of the world’s most popular cryptozoology blog, Cryptomundo.

Loren Coleman and friend. Photo: Loren Coleman (via Thomas Roche/Flickr CC

Coleman this year will be speaking at Bigfoot and “big cats” conferences — both at home and across the pond, in Glasgow, Scotland. This spring, he will also be lending his expertise to the ongoing search for the Loch Ness Monster.

In addition to his ongoing consulting work for History’s “MonsterQuest,” and Animal Planet’s “Lost Tapes,” Coleman will also be working on (we kid you not) five new books.

4. Stanton Friedman. I met Stanton Friedman at a UFO conference in Washington, D.C. a few years ago, and I’ve been trying to keep up his research ever since. But I only learned (after listening to Mr. Binnall’s interviews with this UFO luminary) that Friedman resides in the Northeast. Friedman jokes in his BoA interviews that he is one of the few surviving members of UFOlogy’s “old guard.” But I expect he’ll have a lot more to say at his conferences appearances this year.

5. Greg Kaminsky. If you like your occult podcasts served-up hot, and packaged with vintage Black Sabbath tracks, Beverly, Mass.-based Greg Kaminsky is your guy. Kaminsky is the host of the fantastic website and podcast, “Occult of Personality,” which — like BOA — is poised for big changes (including a subscriber section, with extended interviews) and breakout success in 2010. Kaminsky has landed interviews with leading occult scholars on both sides of the Atlantic since making his quiet start, just a couple of years ago. To taste some of that OoP magic I am talking about, check out this fascinating interview with Penguin’s occult books editor, Mitch Horowitz.

John Rozum and son, at the International Museum of Cryptozoology, in Portland, Maine. (Photo: Loren Coleman)

6. John Rozum. Scooby-Doo. The X-Files comics. The supernaturally-talented writer may be in the business of inventing things that go bump in the night, be he is also said to be living quietly on Cape Cod. One of Rozum’s latest creations, The Hangman, is fighting human trafficking in DC Comics’ just-released The Web #4.

7. Joe Moore. Commended to this list by OoP’s Kaminsky, Moore is a New Hampshire-based podcaster, a breathwork facilitator, and onetime Evolver spore group leader. (Click the links if you are as mystified by these terms as I was.) Not sure if magic is for you? Try the “Mr. Spock” ritual that Moore discusses in his latest podcast with chaos magic expert Andrieh Vitimus. (Skip to the 17-minute mark, if you can’t wait.) Next: Moore and Kaminsky in 2010 are collaborating on a documentary film.

8. Joseph Citro is sick of ghosts. Yeah, that’s right. Ghost-busting, the bane of Binnall and other esotericists — driven half-mad by hacks seeking quick paranormal fame — is tired. Citro made his break from the past last fall, with one of his latest titles, The Vermont Monster Guide, a roundup of the land, air and sea creatures haunting the North.

9. The guys behind NE FOR (the New England UFO Research Organization). When Tim Binnall hints at the political infighting within the New England UFO community, he might be referring in part to the guys who last year formed this New England MUFON splinter group. But more UFO researchers might mean more eyes on the sky, and more thorough documentation of sightings

10. Mr. Crowley. Just be sure you pronounce the first syllable of his name correctly, like the bird, while in Salem, Mass. (Not the way Ozzy Osbourne does in his classic song about the Beast.)

And yeah, I know the guy’s dead. But when the Heretic placed its call for nominees last weekend, a bunch of folks, from Salem and beyond, tapped their peers in magical orders that derive their inspiration from Crowley. Crowley-inspired authors and booksellers, too, all got a good talking-up.

So, stay tuned on this one, because I’m going to need a week-or-two to share with the rest of you, what our magician friends have been sharing with me.

Retribution Body shares his Rare Frequencies

Interesting cat, this Retribution Body. He’s Boston-area Buddhist with a synthesizer. (The fotos, above are from Susanna Bolle, who hosts the WZBC radio program, Rare Frequency.)

Bolle has published a great interview with the artist (link, below). Check-out one of the artist’s biggest influences:

IRON MAIDEN! Seriously. It was the first concert I saw, my dad took me and my two best friends when I was 12 or 13. It was a life-changing experience.

via Rare Frequency › Retribution Body.

Saturday space foto: The light o'er Kraken Mare

Kraken Mare. Sounds Gaelic enough. NASA snaps this pic of a 150,000 mile methane lake.

That’s about five times the surface area of Lake Superior.

From the space agency:

By comparing the new image to radar and near-infrared light images acquired from 2006 to 2008, Cassini scientists were able to correlate the reflection to the southern shoreline of a Titan lake called Kraken Mare. The sprawling Kraken Mare covers about 400,000 square kilometers 150,000 square miles. The reflection appeared to come from a part of the lake around 71 degrees north latitude and 337 degrees west latitude.

via Cassini Equinox Mission: Image Details.

Report: Acela's got a track-rager behind the wheel

Image: Bruce Tuten/Flickr CC

Universal Hub picks up on Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center chief Paul Levy’s post that the Acela — that laughingstock of the of the high speed train industry — is moving dangerously fast, on a section of its Boston-bound route.

I know, I know, sounds silly for a train that, at best, only gets to top speed on small sections of track in Rhode Island. But that’s exactly the problem, Paul Levy recently reported the driver of the 4 p.m. Boston-bound train always seems to go too fast on that stretch:

via Could Acela possibly be too fast? | Universal Hub.

Photo: SignalPAD/Flickr CC

I have experienced similar frightening moments on the lurching, loud-as-frak, 80-year old High Speed Trolley out of Mattapan.

At least the Mattapan Trolley is free. I can’t say I’ve ever come close to getting my money’s worth on the Acela.

Susanna Bolle's picks for 2009

From a June 04, 2009 Non-Event. (Photo: Susanna Bolle/Flickr CC

From a June 04, 2009 "Non-Event." (Photo: Susanna Bolle/Flickr CC

Susan Bolle, Boston’s premiere experimental music journalist and DJ (she hosts Rare Frequency on WZBC), lists ten albums that left an impression on her in 2009.

She calls them, “unexpected pleasures that drifted in like fog or, in one case, blasted through like mortar fire.”

Here’s one of Bolle’s, which is on my list:

Release Date: August 25 | Label: Finders Keepers

The German pair who brought the world “Dracula’s Music Cabinet” in the late 1960s top themselves – and how – with this collection of space rock silliness. Originally released in 1971, the album contains all manner of crazy alien-and-astronaut-themed songs. While it does contain some ferocious Saturnian monsters, ultimately, space is one groovy place.

via Dusted Features [ 2009: Susanna Bolle ].