“Videri quam esse” (“To seem to be, rather than to be”)
I'm strange but i like to be a good strange, My name is Clarence, born in 1988, Pisces and I'm a student of Sociology and the child of the internet. I usually feel like my life has no meaning and i want to die but sometimes it seems like life is worth living for and i love everything in it. If it seems odd to read think what it might be like living it. I like reading philosophy, fiction and tech news.
This Blog is where i collect all the the weird and interesting links from around the net, its not meant to be that serious and just fun. If you stop by here you can enjoy comics, tech, current events, sociology, a little pornography (or erotica if you prefer to call it that) and more weird stuff. Please feel free to tell he what you like and dislike about the site and more of what you want to see.
Please feel free to talk to me by letter in my ask or by following me on other social networks but please just throw me a message WHO YOU ARE.
By the By it goes without saying you should make sure children don't read most of this.
Catching Elephant is a theme by Andy Taylor
Want to stay technologically innovative? Want a vibrant, adaptive economy full of workers unafraid to start businesses & explore their full potential? Free college. Hell, go one step further & pay students to study.
List of countries with free post-secondary education
- Argentina
- Brazil
- Denmark
- Finland
- Greece
- Hungary
- Malta
- Morocco
- Norway
- Scotland
- Sri Lanka
- Sweden
- Trinidad and Tobago
- Barbados
- Kenya
[Incomplete list; Germany also has extensive free college education, for example.]
Not at all universities though. Some do charge tuition, but it’s only around $1000. They do have American-style universities too, which are really expensive.
Syria: Songs of Defiance
Al Jazeera will begin airing a documentary on the Syria uprising that was shot entirely on an iPhone. According to the network, Al Jazeera cameras are banned in Syria and their correspondent went undercover to meet “resistance fighters, protesters, Syrian army deserters, footballers-turned-revolutionaries and cigarette smugglers who have joined the fight.”
Journalism.co.uk adds the following from an Al Jazeera press release:
I can’t tell you my name. I’ve spent many months secretly in Syria for Al Jazeera.
I cannot show my face and my voice is disguised to conceal my identity, because I don’t want to endanger my contacts in Syria.
Because carrying a camera would be risky, I took my cell phone with me as I moved around the country and captured images from the uprising that have so far remained unseen.
Songs of Defiance begins airing this Wednesday and will run through next week. Al Jazeera has posted its schedule here.
(Source: futurejournalismproject)
Augmented reality promises astronauts instant medical knowhow | Physorg.com
The Computer Assisted Medical Diagnosis and Surgery System, CAMDASS, is a wearable augmented reality prototype. Augmented reality merges actual and virtual reality by precisely combining computer-generated graphics with the wearer’s view. CAMDASS is focused for now on ultrasound examinations but in principle could guide other procedures. Credits: ESA/Space Applications Service NV
A new augmented reality unit developed by ESA can provide just-in-time medical expertise to astronauts. All they need to do is put on a head-mounted display for 3D guidance in diagnosing problems or even performing surgery.
(via smarterplanet)
High-powered plasma turns garbage into gas
Recycling is all well and good.But it hardly addresses the real problem we have with our household waste: We throw two-thirds of it in landfills while somehow managing to feel virtuous that we put last night’s empty wine bottle in the recycling bin. Surely we could do better, environmentally and economically.
There is, in fact, value in trash—if you can unlock it. That’s what this facility in northern Oregon is designed to do. Run by a startup called S4 Energy Solutions, it’s the first commercial plant in the US to use plasma gasification to convert municipal household garbage into gas products like hydrogen and carbon monoxide, which can in turn be burned as fuel or sold to industry for other applications.
Photo: Kevin Van Aelst
How the U.S. Lost Out on iPhone Work
“Not long ago, Apple boasted that its products were made in America. Today, few are. Almost all of the 70 million iPhones, 30 million iPads and 59 million other products Apple sold last year were manufactured overseas”
Full Story: New York Times
Over the last couple of decades, technology has evolved beyond belief and has transformed the lives of consumers. Who in the world of the 1990’s could envision the world of the present, as we become increasingly connected by a global information system that is completely integrated into our everyday lives.
Brain-Controlled Computing
From a desktop to a laptop to a handheld phone, computing has transformed beyond recognition in the decades since it first emerged. So what will it look like in 2021? According to U.S computer expert Ray Kurzwell, the computer of the naer future will be so advanced that it will be rival the intellect of humans. He, along with other computer engineers, foresees a future in which computers will be controlled by the human mind. Recently, an Intel researcher named Dean Pomerleau alluded to these possibilities, stating, “Eventually people may be willing to be more committed… to brain implants. Imagine being able to surf the Web with the power of your thoughts”.Luxurious Air Travel
Though time travel and teleportation are still a distant pipe dream, there are several air travel innovations set to change the future of air travel. While you will probably still have to rely on old fashioned planes to get you around, it doesn’t mean you can’t do it in style:
New conceptual art for the Airbus envisions a future where the planes are equipped with holograms, a sunroof and see through-walls, touch-screen TVs and self-cleaning cabins.Hologram Games
Just last week in Tokyo, the most discussed prediction was that gaming would soon involve holograms being projected into one’s living room. Moving beyond the motion sensor technology, companies are developing a means to project virtual objects for gamers to interact with:
Earlier in the year, Sony discussed these advancements, noting technologies that would project light beams to make an image float in a room. Sony even managed to have 3D images float outside and in front of television screens earlier this year and projected a hologram of a dog in a jar. More recently, Apple patented a technology that would project a 3D image and allow people to play with virtual objects in their hands which could be implemented for use in personal computers and movies.Motion-Operated Cell Phones
Think your touch screen phone is impressive? The cell phone of the future will forgo the tedium of using your hands and is expected to operate solely on gestures — think Kinect for your handheld phone.
Just last month, designers Pilotfish and sensor maker Synaptics released the prototype of a cell phone without any buttons. Dubbed the Onyx device, the phone is operated solely by signs and gestures. Just swiping the screen opens and closes applications, and lifting the phone to your cheek automatically answers calls. Additionally, the designs are being revamped including origami cell phones, foldable phones and even a wristwatch cell phone.Cardless Credit Cards
Earlier this month, MasterCard Labs unveiled their prototype for mobile credit cards. Among their prototypes, various methods of card-less payments were revealed which allow for the ability to purchase items directly from television..
Similarly, Google is developing its own innovative credit card application. Google Wallet allows people to merely tap their phones at the counter to make a purchase. These new innovations will potentially make credit cards obsolete.
(Source: all-thats-interesting)
Late last night the Senate voted to pass the most significant patent reform bill in 60 years. Here’s what the new Patent Reform Act will mean for innovation.
Was just about to answer an Ask about this! This is significant legislation for the “discoverers” of the world.
Japanese breakthrough will make wind power cheaper than nuclear
A surprising aerodynamic innovation in wind turbine design called the ‘wind lens’ could triple the output of a typical wind turbine, making it less costly than nuclear power.via mothernaturenetwork:
wow a simple design improvement can really change an entire industry
How Tablets Looked Before and After the iPad
Since Apple introduced the iPad in January of 2010, the rest of its competition has been trying desperately to play catch-up. If you’re curious, here’s how tablet design looked before and after the iPad was introduced. As you can see it’s pretty self-explanatory. Apple innovated, everyone else reiterated.
(via: iDownloadBlog)
that’s actually frightening in a way that a single company can completely reshape the esthetics of a type of product permanently. It’s game theory in action one successful mutation and it overtakes the entire environment