"Open science": Humanity's best hope?

Photo: dno1967/Flickr CC

If we are to believe transhumanists, people who bill themselves as champions of superlongevity and artificial human enhancement, 2045 should be a very good year.

But we won’t get there by counting on the biopharmaceutical complex, said open and citizen science proponent, Joseph Jackson:

“Technologists extrapolate these trends from certain domains and completely overestimate the progress we’ll make,’’ said Jackson, a Harvard University graduate who is developing a low-cost device to help scientists study DNA outside major laboratories. “Twenty years will tick by, and we’ll still be waiting.’’

via Biotech movement hopes to spur rise of citizen scientists – The Boston Globe.

Singularity watch: Through computer, brain can direct a robot

From my Boston Globe column this week:

Wearing what looks like a swim cap wired with electrodes, you can “command’’ a robot to move left, right, and forward by looking at corresponding areas on a computer screen, the Northeastern researchers say.

Here’s how it works:

Each quadrant on the user’s computer screen represents a different command and flashes at a different frequency.

Staring at a particular quadrant causes the user’s visual cortex to emit a corresponding frequency, which a computer translates into a directional command.

The system then wirelessly transmits those commands to the laptop on the back of the robot. (The user can track the robot’s whereabouts by using a Skype video connection with the laptop.)

via Through computer, brain can direct a robot – The Boston Globe.

VTech makes fun stand-ins for pricey gadgets

Photo: tinkerbrad/Flickr CC

VTech is pitching its new $60 MobiGo and V.Reader devices as a means for Mom and Dad to get their iPads and Kindles back.

I am not quite sold on the idea, as I write in the Boston Globe this week (after the jump).

It is true that my 4-year-old daughter, Oona, seems almost as happy playing with the handheld LeapFrog Leapster2 toy (a similar education-and-play device) as she is with my iPhone or T-Mobile G1.

via The Boston Globe.

Swann’s latest security device has that sinister vibe – The Boston Globe

From my latest Boston Globe column, and the US Department of “Start Snitchin’”…

Swann made its name in the security business, with cameras designed to catch shoplifters and home invaders in the act.

But the company’s RemoteCam pinhole video camera, which will cost about $100 when it becomes available in a few days, is meant only for what I would classify as “offensive’’ purposes.

Journalists and police officers might find the RemoteCam handy for their undercover investigations. But so might perverts on the T, as well as private detectives spying on unfaithful spouses at North End restaurants.

via Swann’s latest security device has that sinister vibe – The Boston Globe.

Galactica actual: MMO version of hit sci-fi series due this winter

I have seen nothing about Battlestar Galactica Online (Winter, 2010) to suggest players will be able to build a trusting relationship with Laura Roslin, for example, by acquiring the hallucinogenic anticancer drug, chamala, for the dying president of the Colonies.

Like in “Star Trek’’ and other great sci-fi series, the storylines in “Battlestar Galactica’’ are allegories for the headline issues of our day. Its characters grapple mightily with conflicting personal loyalties, religious fanaticism, and terrorism.

But I am beginning to suspect that MMO players are a different breed altogether from fans of the best-written shows in science fiction, and that the former require very little in the way of story to become engaged in a game.

via MMOs: For fans of Adama and browser-based games, this fall it’s Galactica – The Boston Globe.

Gadgets: LG Aria is a delightful, wee songbird

The LG Aria Aria looks like a palm-sized version of HTC’s Incredible… Wonderful device, but another example of what my friend, Sean, calls “the poor man’s iPhone.”

You can support my work on this blog by reading my Globe column. Thanks so much!

via (after the jump) Boy Scouts bring ingenuity to EurekaFest – The Boston Globe.

Boy Scouts see merit in sci-tech

The Boy Scouts are working to stem America’s science and engineering brain drain.

Last week, 38 Scouts, most of them from Eastern Massachusetts, were among the first to receive the Inventing badge, the first merit badge introduced by the Boy Scouts of America since 1992.

The badge, developed by the BSA and the Lemelson-MIT Program, is awarded to Scouts who can create simple, but elegant, engineering solutions to everyday problems.

via Boy Scouts bring ingenuity to EurekaFest – The Boston Globe.

Waltham-based co. gives 3D peeks at Hub eateries

Photo: Stella Yodo/Flickr CC

From my Boston Globe column, User Friendly…

I’m told the decor at Abby Park in East Milton is enough to make it worth visiting.

But a new, free iPhone app might soon help you decide whether the place has enough booth seating, or if its Kobe beef burger is worth $11.

via The Boston Globe.

Wii Fit fries pacemakers?

Wii Fit making your defibrillator flutter? Balance Board taking your back out?

Some researchers suspect the video games industry, which touts the health benefits of so-called exergames, is paying little attention to the risks those games pose to players.

And the FDA is taking notice…

via Healthy games offer risks, too – The Boston Globe.

Smart appliances will tell Google when you rise, and hit the shower

Now that we know Google — the search engine giant and revolving door operation for CIA analysts — has been spying on Wi-Fi laptop users, we can expect corporations and governments to next target so-called smart appliances: toasters, clock radios (such as this prototype, left) and dishwashers connected directly to the Internet.

Add these gadgets to the smart meters being promoted by the likes of the Boston-based “consumer group,” ConsumerUnited.com (actually, the organization lists utility companies as its “partners”), and you will find it impossible to flip a switch in your house without someone knowing about it.

Here’s a bit from my column this week, below the fold, about a Wi-Fi (and therefore, apparently, vulnerable) alarm clock that factors-in your commute time, and the time it takes you to shave and shower before work, to calculate when you wake up:

“The Dynamically Programmable Alarm Clock will not make getting out of bed easier. But it will do a better job than your current bedside gadget to make sure you’re on time for that meeting.

The DPAC (egaertner.com/dpac), as its developers at Northeastern University call it, connects to Google Calendar via Wi-Fi. It then grabs your first task of the day as a starting point for its calculations.”

Note: Special thanks to Alan Watt (and his Cutting Through the Matrix listeners) for sharing your thoughts about my research, here.

via Power up, with juice from the yard – The Boston Globe.