ViewSonic: immersive 3D under $1,000

From my Boston Globe column this week…

“I expect that ViewSonic’s PJD5352 projector (about $749) (www.viewsonic.com/products) and its PGD-150 Active Stereographic 3-D shutter glasses ($99) will be a hit not only with engineers and industrial designers, but with new-media professionals and artists, for whom expensive, high-maintenance, 3-DVR “caves,’’ with their Linux servers and projectors and IR tracking hardware, might be impractical.”

via Processing power, OLED touch screen shine on Incredible – The Boston Globe.

Gene Roddenberry's Trek vision: androgynous uniforms for all

Photo: ThinkGeek.com

ThinkGeek — in yet another funny, cheeky, product description (J. Peterman’s got nothing on these guys) — says that Star Trek creator Gene Roddenberry wanted to see women and men wearing the same style of uniform.

But what what might be good for unit cohesion, might also be bad for ratings:

“The uniforms he originally envisioned for females looked exactly like the men’s uniforms, but were likely changed due to network pressure to something a bit more feminine. Despite the objectification, it worked – women could still be feminine, but maintain positions of authority and showed strength.”

via ThinkGeek :: Star Trek Original Series T-Shirt Dress.

OLED Android device is iPhone without the cool

Important note to Heretic readers: I receive no compensation  for maintaining this blog. I do, however, get paid to write this column (below). Please click, read and comment, to support my work!

Thanks! — MB

“Last week, I showed my buddy Sean, a plain-spoken woodworker from Westwood, the soon-to-be released Droid Incredible. He immediately noted the red screen covering the phone’s speaker and its garishly bright, white, touch-sensitive control buttons.”

‘It’s like the iPhone without the cool,’’’ Sean said.

via Processing power, OLED touch screen shine on Incredible – The Boston Globe.

Singularity watch: US Airmen to serve in parallel universe

Now in Second Life. Photo: US National Guard

The US Air Force, which already owns 12 regions in the virtual world, Second Life, now plans to give each new recruit a duplicate copy of himself to manage for the rest of his career.

The Airman in the first run of a proposed, permanent shift by the US military into virtual reality, will be assigned to a base that matches the one he has outside of Linden Lab’s servers, almost exactly.

The Airman’s avatar, meanwhile, will have a face that crinkles with age. His avatar will also rack up kills, and receive medals, in parallel with his real world rewards.

From a story about the proposal:

“This would take place in simulated worlds that mirror the service’s actual facilities. ‘Everyone who comes into the Air Force will be given an avatar, and that avatar travels with them, grows with them, changes appearance with them,’ said Larry Clemons, of the Air Education and Training Command. ‘It will provide them a history of where they’ve been and a notion of where they’re going.’”

The experiment also reiterates the US military’s commitment to mastering virtual reality — after most people are unable to distinguish between their first and second lives.

That’s what will happen in the Singularity, a forthcoming period of advanced technological development, in which genetics, nanotechnology and robotics converge, and humans achieve immortality.

The Singularity has been explored and described by Ray Kurzweil and others in the transhuman movement.

And only two years ago, the US Army attempted to define what it might mean to be a leader in the Singularity.

via Airmen to Live Out Their Careers In Cyberspace.

Block the rain with blinking Blade Runner umbrellas – The Boston Globe

From my Boston Globe column this week: LED umbrellas and tougher OLEDs… — MB

“The Blade Runner Style LED Umbrella is my new favorite for, as ThinkGeek’s brilliant copywriters put it, staying dry on my “walk to the noodle shop.’’Evocative of Ridley Scott’s rain-soaked, futuristic Los Angeles, the Blade Runner umbrella has a pushbutton, light-up shaft. The umbrella comes with three button batteries that will probably outlive its fabric, if this spring’s rains are a sign of things to come.”

via Block the rain with blinking Blade Runner umbrellas – The Boston Globe.

Popular Science makes pitch for "Mark of the Beast"

Microsoft proposes tattooing patients. PopSci appears to like the idea. — MB

Photo: Yuichiro C. Katsumoto/Flickr CC

You might take this PopSci bit about an “invisible,” ultraviolet tattoo ID system, for another inconsequential workup of an industry press release.

But what bothers me about this webby, is that it uncritically pushes the RFID industry’s latest, dubious storyline: that the only way to be “truly safe” (from phantom villains, hacking into pacemakers) is with “permanent,” implanted devices and IDs.

This graf, for example, exemplifies the imprecise prose George Orwell describes, in Politics and the English Language. Rather than encouraging critical thinking, it conceals and prevents it:

“More and more implantable devices, like pacemakers or defibrillators, are turning to wireless signals as a means to communicate with external devices, but in doing so they open themselves to security breaches. Several solutions are in the works that tackle this problem by upping device defenses, but by piling on security measures, yet another risk emerges: that at a critical time an authorized physician might not be able to access the device.”

The graf — as does the rest of the piece — tosses up unspecified threats, against which it proposes tattooing patients (i.e., everyone). In all that vagueness, the vulnerabilities posed by implanted devices become infinitely vast and dark.

Without those threats, the RFID industry will have a tough time tattooing serial numbers on people for whom the tagging, tracking, and tracing of humans remains a bitter, and fresh, memory, and Christian end-timers, for whom the Mark of the Beast is a very real fear.

via Tattooing Patients With UV Ink Could Protect Pacemakers From Hackers | Popular Science.

The PopSci piece uses this Microsoft paper, proposing the tattoos, as its primary source.

US Government to Scrutinize Patriot Radio

Alan Watt makes the MSM, again, this time for hosting his show on RBN. Also, a prediction: By 2011, the federal government will confirm that it is directly investigating RBN, or another underground radio network. — MB

Photo: Kyle May/Flickr CC

John Stadtmiller’s Republic Broadcasting Network is taking heat in the Christian Science Monitor, for broadcasting a show hosted by the head of the Guardians of the Free Republics.

Stadtmiller, a competent broadcaster, appears to be getting out in front of this week’s story, about the Guardians’ apparently clumsy attempt to get dozens of US governors to step-down. (The word “investigation” alone is enough to make a broadcaster’s heart skip a beat.)

RBN also broadcasts Alan Watt’s Cutting Through the Matrix. The weeknight show features excellent insights — often on science and technology news stories — from Watt, one of the underground’s best-known conspiracy historians. (Watt’s commentary has informed my MSM reporting on RFID technologies, for example.)

But the network also airs a show by one, rabid anti-Semite, along with other voices that might not otherwise find a significant audience. And it runs ads from Holocaust-denying publishers:

“Republican Broadcasting Network is a satellite, shortwave, and Internet radio station that features 31 shows with names like ‘Cutting Through the Matrix, ‘Govern America,’ and ‘Road Warrior Radio.’ It has loose ties to the American Free Press newspaper, which Michael calls “the most important newspaper of the radical right.’”

Watt receives no money from RBN for his show, which is supported by direct book sales and donations to his website.

via Guardians of the free Republics tied to Texas radio station / The Christian Science Monitor – CSMonitor.com.

Needles no more: Proteins slip vaccines under skin

Photo: Skedonk

Prediction: By 2015, vaccines will become available “off the shelf” (image, “now available without a prescription”), thanks to needle-free delivery. — MB

Some Americans will receive dozens of vaccines in their lifetimes.

That’s a lot of shots, and boosters, for doctors and patients to keep track of.

Adding to the confusion, University of Michigan scientists say we will soon be able to inoculate ourselves, at home, by applying vaccines to their skin.

The researchers have devised a “non-invasive” way to use a specific protein to help vaccines pass through the skin’s outermost layers.

Making vaccines easier to administer, the Michigan scientists say, should boost patient compliance.

From a report, today:

“One particularly interesting aspect of this new non-invasive method is that the ‘boosters’ required for many vaccination protocols could be administered by the patients themselves. This could increase the success of vaccination campaigns in poor and remote regions of the world, where medical facilities are scarce.”

via Angewandte Chemie International Edition – Wiley InterScience.

Must have for the iPad: ThinkGeek's iCade Arcade Cabinet

Too good  to be true (Happy April 1), but oh, what a great idea:

“When the iPad was announced, we all crammed into a conference room to watch live and drool over every shiny corner and reflecty icon. After the glow of the initial announcement wore off, many of us came to the conclusion that the iPad was actually pretty useless. ‘It’s a giant iPhone!” some said. Others exclaimed, ‘WTF, no Flash!?’. Still, we knew that most Apple fanbots (us included) would have to have one anyway.”

via ThinkGeek :: iCade – iPad Arcade Cabinet.

In US "water wars," industry is the aggressor

Water shortages won't be her fault. Photo: D Sharon Pruitt/Flickr CC

270 gallons of H2O = 1lb of processed sugar. — MB

Think about this, the next time a TV actor implores you to skip shaving, or fix a leaky faucet: The US energy industry hogs almost half of country’s water supply each year for its largely inefficient plants.

And, for those of you seeking a “gotcha” on this one, the figure — from a first-of-its-kind study, looking at industrial water consumption — does not include hydroelectric power.

Agribusiness wastes water like crazy, as well. From the new report, an example:

Manufacturers, farmers, shippers and others in the ‘supply chain’ use almost 270 gallons of water to put $1 worth of sugar on supermarket shelves, according to a new study documenting American industry’s water use.”

Direct and Indirect Water Withdrawals for U.S. Industrial Sectors – Environmental Science & Technology ACS Publications.

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