Create an Account
username: password:
 
  MemeStreams Logo

Post Haste

search

possibly noteworthy
Picture of possibly noteworthy
My Blog
My Profile
My Audience
My Sources
Send Me a Message

sponsored links

possibly noteworthy's topics
Arts
Business
Games
Health and Wellness
Home and Garden
(Miscellaneous)
  Humor
Current Events
  War on Terrorism
Recreation
Local Information
  Food
Science
Society
  International Relations
  Politics and Law
   Intellectual Property
  Military
Sports
Technology
  Military Technology
  High Tech Developments

support us

Get MemeStreams Stuff!


 
Current Topic: Miscellaneous

challenging times ahead
Topic: Miscellaneous 6:33 am EST, Jan 27, 2016

danah boyd:

We must learn how to ask hard questions of technology and of those making decisions based on data-driven tech. And opening the black box isn't enough. Transparency of data, algorithms, and technology isn't enough. We need to build assessment into any system that we roll out.

How do we get people to look beyond their hopes and fears and actively interrogate the trade-offs?

P.W. Singer:

The word 'cyber' appears in the Congressional record 715 times in October alone, 5 times the number for all of 2014.

Michael Burry:

It will always be seductive, but that's the devil that wants your soul.

Mike Rogers:

We've got some challenging times ahead of us, folks.

Brad Smith:

This issue is about the future of technology.

Mark Warner:

Let's get the experts in the room.

An exchange:

David Perrera: There are federal officials who say they believe a technological solution can be found -- something that keeps our devices secure while allowing law enforcement to get access when they need it. You're saying there's absolutely none?

Matt Blaze: I appreciate their faith in my field, but I don't share it.

Corinne Purtill:

Corporate boards, the US Congress, and global gatherings like the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, are all built on a simple theory of problem solving: Get enough smart and powerful people in a room and they'll figure it out.

This may be misguided.


what's wrong with the world as it is
Topic: Miscellaneous 6:30 am EST, Jan 27, 2016

Tim O'Reilly:

We have to understand what's wrong with the world as it is, because only then can we envision the world we want to create, and think about how to get there.

Ta-Nehisi Coates:

Our current sprawling megapolis of prisons was a bipartisan achievement. Obamacare was not. Sometimes the moral course lies within the politically possible, and sometimes the moral course lies outside of the politically possible.

Zygmunt Bauman:

Our democratic institutions were not designed for dealing with situations of interdependence. The current crisis of democracy is a crisis of democratic institutions.


the project of history and remembering
Topic: Miscellaneous 6:29 am EST, Jan 27, 2016

David Lowenthal:

History is often hard to digest. But it must be swallowed whole to undeceive the present and inform the future.

Ta-Nehisi Coates:

I have spent the past two years somewhat concerned about the effects of national amnesia, largely because I believe that a problem can not be effectively treated without being effectively diagnosed. I don't know how you diagnose the problem of racism in America without understanding the actual history.

Andrew G. Celli Jr.:

We are not limited to a choice between celebrating historical figures uncritically and adding names and stories to the mix for "balance." There is always the option, indeed the obligation, of more speech about the people we have decided, for better or for worse, are worth remembering.

Why not leave the names of such "great Americans" on the buildings, but find the ways and means to tell the fuller, darker story as well? Every such building should include, in its lobby or near its entranceway, a prominent and well-sourced exhibit that explains -- not as a historical footnote, but as central to the story -- how and why the person honored with a naming failed to live up to our nation's highest ideals. No one should enter the Washington Monument, for example, and not be confronted with the fact that George Washington -- the "indispensable man" of the early Republic, and almost certainly our greatest president -- bought, sold, and owned human beings. Visitors need to know who those human beings were, what they suffered, and what Washington had to say about it. It is core to the project of history and remembering.

C.S. Lewis:

If we do not believe in decent behaviour, why should we be so anxious to make excuses for not having behaved decently? The truth is, we believe in decency so much -- we feel the Rule of Law pressing on us so -- that we cannot bear to face the fact that we are breaking it, and consequently we try to shift the responsibility. For you notice that it is only for our bad behaviour that we find all these explanations. It is only our bad temper that we put down to being tired or worried or hungry; we put our good temper down to ourselves.

David Cole:

It is disappointing, if not surprising, that [James Comey and Robert Hannigan] see a need for public debate only when new technologies may impair their ability to monitor us, and not when such technologies enhance their monitoring.


what do you do?
Topic: Miscellaneous 6:29 am EST, Jan 27, 2016

Barack Obama:

Will we respond to the changes of our time with fear, turning inward as a nation, and turning against each other as a people? Or will we face the future with confidence in who we are, what we stand for, and the incredible things we can do together?

Changes in our political process -- in not just who gets elected but how they get elected -- that will only happen when the American people demand it. It will depend on you. That's what's meant by a government of, by, and for the people.

I see you. I know you're there. I see your quiet, sturdy citizenship all the time.

I believe in you.

Rave Sashayed:

"What do you do?" "What do you do?" "What do you do?" "What do you do?" The question haunts you. Everywhere you go. Outside a brunch place you've never seen before, an infant in a $6000 stroller turns its giant head to you. What do you do? it asks with its eyes. Its mother gives it a piece of organic Swedish flatbread to gnaw on. "What do you do?" she asks you, tilting her head slowly like a bird. Her tone holds no real interest. It is as dead as the flatbread.

"What do you do?" you ask a baby. "Policy," it says in a grown man's deep voice.


our sense of our place in the world
Topic: Miscellaneous 7:20 am EST, Jan  8, 2016

Pagan Kennedy:

How do we cultivate the art of finding what we're not seeking?

String is everywhere for the taking, if you have the talent to take it.

Gene Tracy:

Technology is simply a tool that can open a new window. What we see while peering through the window, how we absorb it into our internal sense of things, how it shifts our sense of our place in the world, that fuller act of seeing with new eyes requires a lively imagination.

John Clare:

The simple catalogue of things
That reason would despise
Starts in the heart a thousand springs
Of half-forgotten joys.


A Christmas Present, Or Two, Or Ten
Topic: Miscellaneous 8:09 pm EST, Jan  8, 2014

"It's okay, you can admit it ..."

A Christmas Present, Or Two, Or Ten


Midday Traffic Time Collapsed and Reorganized by Color: San Diego Study #3
Topic: Miscellaneous 8:09 pm EST, Jan  8, 2014

Cy Kuckenbaker:

The San Diego Studies is a series of short videos that collapse time to reveal otherwise unobservable rhythms and movement in the city.

The source footage for this video is a 4-minute shot from the Washington Street bridge above State Route 163 in San Diego captured at 2:39pm Oct 1, 2013.

My aim is to reveal the color palette and color preferences of contemporary San Diego drivers in addition to traffic patterns and volumes. There are no CG elements, these are all real cars that have been removed from one sample and reorganized.

Midday Traffic Time Collapsed and Reorganized by Color: San Diego Study #3


Data Portraits: Connecting People of Opposing Views
Topic: Miscellaneous 7:43 am EST, Dec  3, 2013

Eduardo Graells-Garrido, Mounia Lalmas, Daniele Quercia:

Social networks allow people to connect with each other and have conversations on a wide variety of topics. However, users tend to connect with like-minded people and read agreeable information, a behavior that leads to group polarization. Motivated by this scenario, we study how to take advantage of partial homophily to suggest agreeable content to users authored by people with opposite views on sensitive issues. We introduce a paradigm to present a data portrait of users, in which their characterizing topics are visualized and their corresponding tweets are displayed using an organic design. Among their tweets we inject recommended tweets from other people considering their views on sensitive issues in addition to topical relevance, indirectly motivating connections between dissimilar people. To evaluate our approach, we present a case study on Twitter about a sensitive topic in Chile, where we estimate user stances for regular people and find intermediary topics. We then evaluated our design in a user study. We found that recommending topically relevant content from authors with opposite views in a baseline interface had a negative emotional effect. We saw that our organic visualization design reverts that effect. We also observed significant individual differences linked to evaluation of recommendations. Our results suggest that organic visualization may revert the negative effects of providing potentially sensitive content.

Data Portraits: Connecting People of Opposing Views


Murmuration
Topic: Miscellaneous 7:37 am EST, Nov  7, 2011

Sophie Windsor Clive:

A chance encounter and shared moment with one of nature's greatest and most fleeting phenomena.

Michiru Hoshino:

Oh! I feel it. I feel the cosmos!

From the archive:

Three-dimensional mapping of starling flocks could shed light not only on the birds' collective behavior but also on a broad range of other aggregate systems.

Freeman Dyson:

I happen to be a frog, but many of my best friends are birds.

Jonathan Franzen in The New Yorker:

Masafuera, in the South Pacific, five hundred miles off the coast of central Chile, is a forbiddingly vertical volcanic island, seven miles long and four miles wide, that is populated by millions of seabirds and thousands of fur seals but is devoid of people, except in the warmer months, when a handful of fishermen come out to catch lobsters.

Murmuration


Explosive Breach of Condit Dam
Topic: Miscellaneous 7:37 am EST, Nov  7, 2011

Andy Maser:

On October 26th, a hole was blasted in the base of 125' tall Condit Dam on the White Salmon River in Washington. In less than 2 hours, the reservoir behind the dam drained completely and the White Salmon flowed unimpeded by a dam for the first time in 100 years.

Lucas Foglia:

Rewilding: the process of creating a lifestyle that is independent of the domestication of civilization.

Dan Kildee:

Much of the land will be given back to nature. People will enjoy living near a forest or meadow.

Explosive Breach of Condit Dam


<< 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5 ++ 15 >> Older (First)
 
 
Powered By Industrial Memetics
RSS2.0