Urban wireless to serve intel and PSYOP forces

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The government needs more nodes: Various agencies want to seed cities with wireless networking devices (image from a DOD document).

Despite the high costs and unproven social benefits for municipal broadband, dozens of U.S. cities are ignoring laws banning anti-competitive practices and getting into the internet business.

Meanwhile, the U.S. Department of Defense is planning to build robots that configure themselves into ad hoc wireless networks within urban areas.

City mayors claim they want to provide free and low-cost Wi-Fi access to the poor and attract business travelers. Defense planners say they need to have broadband capabilities in urban war zones.

But rather than closing the “digital divide” (which many academics admit is being exaggerated), or providing a redundant service to traveling salesmen, it appears that officials aim to seize control of internet communications and track individuals in urban areas.

Military and law enforcement agencies will also use the wireless networks to stage “hard PSYOP” attacks against a brain-chipped populace, according to historian and commentator Alan Watt, who specializes in secret societies and government intelligence operations.

Philadelphia, San Francisco, Houston, and Providence, R.I. are among the cities partnering with private companies and the federal government to set up public broadband internet access. Providence used Homeland Security funds to construct a network for police, which may be made available to the public at a later date.

None of the cities are expected to turn a profit anytime soon. Nor are the poor likely to benefit from the projects.

Subscribers to Philly’s “Wireless Philadelphia” service, for example, will pay up to 73 percent more than the rate promised to them two years ago.

“(Philadelphia) presented dangerously inaccurate estimates and figures for the costs and revenue” for its wireless network, according to a recent analysis by students at Harvard Law School. Continue reading

Helmet heads: devices connect AR with real world

Buggin’: One of the alternate reality headset designs at Holland’s AR+RFID Lab. The goal is to make the devices convenient and attractive enough to allow people to operate in both the real world and AR simultaneously.

IBM and Linden Labs (creators of the alternate reality Second Life) are developing headsets and other “wearable computing” devices to deliver humans into parallel realities, where they can control their experiences.Industrial designer's sketch from AR+RFID Lab

Linden Labs, for example, is developing a wearable speaker system that Second Lifers can use to communicate semi-privately in AR while continuing to function in the real world, at least at some basic level.

But at the moment, AR eyewear and headphones are typically bulky and expensive, and too distracting for the wearer.

Students at the AR+RFID Lab at the Royal Academy of Art in the Netherlands are shaping new designs for AR headsets (more below), to include cameras and projectors, and tracking devices. Continue reading

First steps toward a workout exoskeleton

It’s a start.

Strapping on a robotic knee brace at Northeastern University last week, I half expected the device to give me the strength to leap over a workbench or kick a hole in a concrete wall…Here’s a link and excerpt to my Boston Globe column this week.

clipped from www.boston.com

PERSONAL TECH

Robotic support for injured joints

Brian Weinberg, an associate research engineer at Northeastern, was only interested in making me work harder to move my knee.That is the point of the Active Knee Rehabilitation Orthotic Device (AKROD): It is a sophisticated rehabilitation device with a hinged aluminum frame that can strengthen the muscles around joints affected by stroke or trauma.

Think tank: depopulation, brain-chipping on the horizon

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One of the lucky ones, according to futurists.

An organization headed by a former World Bank president the author of “Future Shock” predicts a dismal future for Americans.

24 million disabled Americans, most suffering from diseases caused by excess consumption, will require special public transportation to go to treatment centers, according to the World Future Society.

The WFS, whose directors include former World Bank president and U.S Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara, and the futurist author Alvin Toffler, also predicts that the able-bodied will flee to other parts of the world, such as China and India, for work.

And healthy or not, young or old, most can look forward to being brain-chipped, and connected permanently to a global computer network, according to the WFS.

The WFS portrays the brain-chipping scenario as one of the few pluses on its list.

More of the WFS’s grim forecasts for the next 25 years: China’s drinking water supply will be virtually depleted, and global warming-generated super storms will cost hundreds of billions of dollars in damages annually.

Link and excerpt, to some of the predictions, are below.

clipped from www.wfs.org
WFS Image

Forecast #1: Generation Y will migrate heavily overseas.

#2: Dwindling supplies of water in China will impact the global economy.
#3: Workers will increasingly choose more time over more money.
#4: We’ll incorporate wireless technology into our thought processing by 2030.
#5: Children’s “nature deficit disorder” will grow as a health threat.

Blingplayer adds ice to your high-tech ensemble

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From my Boston Globe column this week, a glittering mobile media device. Also: My takes on the blogging tool Clipmarks, and the Nokia 5300 XpressMusic Phone.

clipped from www.boston.com
Your track suit and flashy pot leaf medallions say Ali G, but your flat, white iPod says Borat.Now you can add an iced-out MP3 Blingplayer, with a metallic chain, to your wardrobe. It may even get you noticed at the next BET Spring Bling show.Next month MediaReady Inc. (mediareadyinc.com) will release two “jeweled-out” versions of the 2GB media player, the Dogtag and Skull ‘N’ Bones.

With a suggested retail price of $200, I’m thinking faux jewels.

BioPatch + Treo “smartphone” = freedom for cardiac patients

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Phone can relay your cardiac data directly to the doc

Don’t let that bum ticker keep you off the links this summer!

Telzuit Medical Technologies has developed a patch that sends your vital signs to your doctor, via your cell phone.

From the Telzuit website:

The BioPatch system…combines powerful, state-of-the-art technology to transmit, receive, and store a patient’s biometric cardiac data.

Continue reading