“Form Follows Data,” or generative + paradigm + complex + adaptive + responsive + modelling, etc

*Well, that’s pretty much got the wunderkammer thing going on. Look at that multidisciplinary heap of, uh, stuff.

*”Where’s the off-button on this cockamamie generative thing?” “I dunno sir, we wound it up and now it seems to be growing itself!”

http://programmingnature.wordpress.com/2012/07/03/generative-systems-a-paradigm-for-modelling-complex-adaptive-architecture-by-httpresponsiveenvironments-es/

The Journal of Peer Production, issue #2 Bio/Hardware Hacking

http://peerproduction.net/issues/issue-2/

(…)

“But first, a few words about the multiple sites of do-it-yourself biology. (((Gets the anthrax-tainted popcorn.))) There is quite a diverse set of places in which laboratories, associations, and networks around do-it-yourself biology have emerged. DIYbio, created in the Boston area in 2008, describes itself as an “Institution for the Amateur Biologist”. It now counts around 2000 members and has a website (www.diybio.org) which is arguably the worldwide focal point for people interested in DIY biology.

“Associations like DIYbio are today present in many countries across the globe: in European countries like Denmark, the UK, Spain, France, Germany, in Canada and in India and, above all, in the US. The emergence of do-it-yourself biology is mainly located in the Western world, especially in major US and European cities. Beyond these territorial aspects, the more distributed geographies of protocols, ideas and objects that circulate via Internet forums and collaborative platforms play a key role in the emergence of do-it-yourself biology.

“In fact, the various communicative devices that do-it-yourself biologists use – i.e. the diybio.org website, the blogs, open source tools, forums, videos, etc. – are part and parcel of the material infrastructure that allows for the circulation of knowledge to take place and for collectives of do-it-yourself biologists to emerge.

“2. LA PAILLASSE: A COMMUNITY LABORATORY IN PARIS

“An example of a community laboratory is the association called La Paillasse which was established in Paris by Thomas Landrain, a PhD student at the Institute for Systems and Synthetic Biology. La Paillasse describes itself as “a physical and web platform for citizen scientists, amateur biologists, researchers and entrepreneurs that fosters open-science, debates and hands-on practice of Biotechnologies” and as “a group of passionate people about biology, each with his or her own area of expertise, interest and dedication”. Informally created in 2008 and officially launched in 2011, the association works in a “DIYbio spirit”, is “accessible to anybody” and aims for “very open, diverse and possibly opposed approaches to biology”. The mailing list of the association counts some 70 members of which there are 10 “core” people.

“La Paillasse is currently located in two spaces. The first one is “totally open” and is dedicated to discussions and projects “that don’t necessitate particular materials (computer projects, electronic projects or “light” biology for example)”.

“The second space, more regulated, contains machines and equipment for projects that are “more weighty”. The latter is based at the Electrolab at Nanterre (an area north east of Paris). If at the beginning of its history, the association only disposed of a very small surface (only a few square metres of a working bench in the Electrolab laboratory), since November 2011 La Paillasse occupies a real laboratory of 15 square meters.

“It was above all Génopôle, the prime institution for genetics research in France, and a former laboratory from the municipality of Paris that have donated scientific equipment to the lab, including centrifuges, fridges, a PCR machine, and shakers. But getting other material proves more difficult. One of the founding members of La Paillass eexplains: “We still lack consumables, enzymes, bacteria. I don’t know how we will get our material from suppliers, they are not used to deal with associations. It’s the unknown, we are the first in France”.

“In terms of scientific tools, the association’s aims include “developing and distributing the tools needed to perform biological studies and experiments” and thereby to be “contributing to the international biohacker community by releasing our tools in an open source format”.

“La Paillasse works on several projects: a bioethics workshop that aims to define the current limits of French and European legislation concerning the manipulation of biological and chemical samples and thereby “help La Paillasse to provide a legal framework for its experimental and social activities”; the construction of kits to detect GMOs in food; the creation of renewable energy from waste, bacteria and algae; projects to do with informatics, and so on.

“However, besides being a scientific project, La Paillasseis also explicitly a project with a political aim. One of the founders of the association argues: “Citizens must have in their hands a counter-power to participate in the societal choices concerning the use of these technologies”. (((Wow, that’s just what the National Rifle Association says. Perhaps we can grow biocellulose handguns!)))

“There are other examples of community laboratories worth to mention: BioCurious, an association founded in 2009 by DIYbio near San Francisco which has leased and turned a 220-square-meter office into a laboratory (funded via Kickstarter); BiologiGaragen, located in Copenhagen, “a laboratory and open creative space” that “will encourage citizen science in biology and make knowledge, tools and software available for people” and on whose website a call for donations of used scientific equipment is made (freezer, refrigerator, pH-sensors, incubator, etc.); Genspace in Brooklin, New York, etc.

3. KAY AULL’S PRIVATE LABORATORY IN HER APARTMENT

“A famous story of a private laboratory is that of Kay Aull, a PhD student at the University of California, San Francisco. Aull’s story has been reported in many media (Le Monde, Sky News, Wall Street Journal, etc.) as well as in academic journals (Alper, 2009; Wolinski, 2009). For the price of around 1000 dollars, Aull set up a laboratory in her closet in her apartment in Boston.

“Aull built many devices for her experiments herself (see Eudes, 2009; Wohlsen, 2011; Moore, 2009). For instance, she uses a rice cooker to distil water. Instead of buying an incubator, she put one together out of a polystyrene packaging box, a thermostat from an aquarium, a fan, a heating pad, and a digital thermometer. In order to be able to separate DNA, she constructed an electrified box out of a picture frame and a plastic box lined with aluminium foil. A blue Christmas light serves her to produce blue light to be able to see DNA. But she also bought some tools from eBay: a thermocycler and an electrophoresis supply. (((I’m trying to figure how the authorities would repress this kind of street-level ingenuity. I’m reckoning that the usual marijuana grow-lab busting techniques oughta do it.)))

“Using these rather basic tools she was even able to build a hemochromatosis test….”

Distant fingerprint scanner

*Interesting gestural applications here. A’s handwave works, B’s handwave doesn’t.

via @futuristpaul

http://www.popsci.com/technology/article/2012-06/fingerprint-scanner-captures-prints-20-feet-away

“Gaining access to your gym or office building could soon be as simple as waving a hand at the front door. A Hunsville, Ala.-based company called IDair is developing a system that can scan and identify a fingerprint from nearly 20 feet away. Coupled with other biometrics, it could soon allow security systems to grant or deny access from a distance, without requiring users to stop and scan a fingerprint, swipe an ID card, or otherwise lose a moment dealing with technology.

“Currently IDair’s primary customer is the military, but the startup wants to open up commercially to any business or enterprise that wants to put a layer of security between its facilities and the larger world. A gym chain is already beta testing the system (no more using your roommate’s gym ID to get in a free workout), and IDair’s founder says that at some point his technology could enable purchases to be made biometrically, using fingerprints and irises as unique identifiers rather than credit card numbers and data embedded in magnetic strips or RFID chips….”

Architecture Fiction: Christopher Green

*Royal College of Art people have really got it going on.

http://www.theatlanticcities.com/housing/2012/06/incredible-skyscraper-breeds-insects-food/2415/

http://www.theatlanticcities.com/design/2012/07/more-renderings-skin-crawling-insect-office-tower/2445/

Meanwhile, in the weather-stricken capital of the USA

http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/capital-weather-gang/post/derecho-behind-washington-dcs-destructive-thunderstorm-outbreak-june-29-2012/2012/06/30/gJQA22O7DW_blog.html

“Peak wind gusts in the D.C. region include the following:

71 mph near Dulles Airport
70 mph in Damascus, Md.
79 mph in Reston, Va.
65 mph in Rockville, Md.
70 mph at Reagan National Airport
76 mph in Seat Pleasant, Md. (Prince George’s co.)
77 mph in Swan Point, Md. (Charles co.)
70 mph in Ashburn, Va.
69 mph in Leesburg, Va.

“In addition, an 80 mph gust was clocked in Fredericksburg. To the north and west, 91 mph and 72 mph gusts were measured in Ft. Wayne, Indiana and Columbus, Ohio.

“This derecho event is likely to go down as not only one of the worst on record in Washington, D.C. but also along its entire path stretching back to northern Indiana….”

*Political capital suffers power blackouts despite, or rather because of, plenteous supplies of fossil fuel:

*Cloud down, mobiles down…

http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/post_now/post/verizon-atandt-sprint-t-mobile-how-dcs-storm-affected-major-cell-phone-companies/2012/06/30/gJQAubbXEW_blog.html

Steven Levy interviews Google Glass team

*Hey look, real journalism, ladies and gentlemen…

(…)

“Wired: Where are you now with Glass as compared to what Google will eventually release?

“Babak Parviz: Project Glass is something that Steve and I have worked on together for a bit more than two years now. It has gone through lots of prototypes and fortunately we’ve arrived at something that sort of works right now. It still is a prototype, but we can do more experimentation with it. We’re excited about this. This could be a radically new technology that really enables people to do things that otherwise they couldn’t do. There are two broad areas that we’re looking at. One is to enable people to communicate with images in new ways, and in a better way. The second is very rapid access to information.

“Wired: Let’s talk about some of the product basics. For instance, I’m still not clear whether Glass is something that works with the phone in your pocket, or a stand-alone product.

“Parviz: Right now it doesn’t have a cell radio, it has Wi-Fi and Bluetooth. If you’re outdoors or on the go, at least for the immediate future, if you would like to have data connection, you would need a phone.

“Steve Lee: Eventually it’ll be a stand-alone product in its own right.

“Wired: What are the other current basics?

“Parviz: We have a pretty powerful processor and a lot of memory in the device. There’s quite a bit of storage on board, so you can store images and video on board, or you can just live stream it out. We have a see-through display, so it shows images and video if you like, and it’s all self-contained. It has a camera that can collect photographs or video. It has a touchpad so it can interact with the system, and it has gyroscope, accelerometers, and compasses for making the system aware in terms of location and direction. It has microphones for collecting sound, it has a small speaker for getting sound back to the person who’s wearing it, and it has Wi-Fi and Bluetooth. And GPS.

“This is the configuration that most likely will ship to the developers, but it’s not 100 percent sure that this is the configuration that will we ship to the broader consumer market….”

(…)

“So literally I could touch the device and ask, “What’s the capital of China?” and the response would just appear in front of my eye….”

The WELL

*Will some sensible person or institution please buy the WELL so I can keep my time-honored email account? Thanks very much. — bruces@well.com

“With its roots going all the way back to the mid-1980’s, The WELL was a true pioneer of the digital age: one of the earliest virtual communities and a forerunner of today’s ubiquitous social networks.

“However, as part of the company’s review of its strategic objectives, we have determined that The WELL no longer aligns with our business plans and accordingly we are exploring transferring The WELL to new management.

“The WELL has played a central role in the origin of countless creative endeavors and cultural movements and it’s safe to say there will never be another online community quite like it. Many of you have been active in The WELL since these early days and have played major roles in keeping the community active and engaging. We deeply admire and appreciate that engagement, and will keep you informed as this process develops.

“Best regards,
Cindy Jeffers
CEO, Salon Media Group”

Urban Guides for Cyberflaneurs

*Work like this is very of-the-moment. In ten years it will seem odd to notice that cities are digital platforms, because, well, of course they are, what else could they be.

*The next decade might see some interesting work on non-digitized urbanism — museum-culture stuff, like today’s touring for “authentic” pubs that lack TVs and jukeboxes.

http://www.domusweb.it/en/book-review/urban-guides-for-cyberflaneurs/

Web Semantics: POETICON: Robots Need Language

*Apparently none of the many European languages will do for robots.

http://www.poeticon.eu/

“Handling novel situations beyond learned schemas or set behaviours is still a quest in engineering cognitive and embodied systems. Simply put, sensorimotor experiences in real world are non-finite and therefore powerful generalisation mechanisms are necessary for any agent to operate effectively in real-world environments. POETICON++ suggests that natural language can be used as a learning tool for:

generalisation of learned behaviours and perceptual experiences, and
generation of new behaviours and experiences.

“This is a new approach to behaviour and perception generalisation for artificial agents that capitalises on the use of a hierarchical and generative symbolic system for “indexing” (labelling) sensorimotor experiences at different levels of abstraction. Motivated by experimental findings on a common neurological basis between language, perception and action (a common syntax), POETICON++ suggests the use of natural language for generalisation and generation of sensorimotor “syntactic structures”.

“The main objective of POETICON++ is the development of a computational mechanism for such generalisation of motor programs and visual experiences for robots. To this end, it will integrate natural language and visual action/object recognition tools with motor skills and learning abilities, in the iCub humanoid. Tools and skills will engage in a cognitive dialogue for novel action generalisation and creativity experiments in two scenarios of “everyday activities”, comprising

behaviour generation through verbal instruction, and
visual scene understanding.

“POETICON++ views natural language as a necessary tool for endowing artificial agents with generalisation and creativity in real world environments. Building on results from the POETICON project, it brings together an interdisciplinary group of experts for developing the first ever computational mechanism that will use language as a behaviour/experience generalisation tool.

Funding:
STREP Project ICT-288382
European Commission Framework Programme 7
Information & Communication Technologies
Cognitive Systems, Interaction, Robotics

Why We Fry

*Has many facts, charts and figures, is therefore of no use to ideologues.

*However, it raises the interesting issue of what you do when you’re a climate denialist and actually on fire and/or swept up in mass evacuation. Are there special climate-refugee camps for people who don’t believe the climate is changing, places where their resistance to the facts of their own distress could be amplified? I don’t doubt people could be found to fund such camps. They could likely be privatized and made really profitable.

*A really clever denialist would be preparing NOW to deny future climate change. You’d want to study this carefully so as to be able to deceive and defraud more effectively.

http://climatecommunication.org/new/articles/heat-waves-and-climate-change/overview/

“Heat Waves and Wildfires

“For many heat waves, there are also important feedbacks that come into play that amplify drought and heat and set the stage for wildfires. There is a direct local contribution to the drying and high temperatures in the absence of evaporative cooling.1 While heat waves with high humidity are oppressive and give no relief at night, heat waves often form in association with drought. In these cases, the prevailing dry conditions set the stage for the heat since the land is dried out, the vegetation is wilted, and all of the heat from the sun goes into raising temperatures, whereas ordinarily, in the process of evaporative cooling, surface water or wetness acts as an evaporative cooler (swamp cooler) of sorts.

“Some extreme examples have occurred in recent years in south Australia in January 2009, in Russia in summer 2010, and in Texas and Oklahoma in summer 2011. The record high temperatures in each case, along with the tinder dry conditions, led to extensive wildfires that were extremely costly in terms of lives, structures, human dislocations, and costs.2 3 The exceptionally warm March in the U. S. is but part of record warmth for the first five months of the year (see Figure 8 below) and, along with an absence of snow, the rapid snow melt has left the Rocky Mountains almost without snow by 1 June 2012. The very hot and dry conditions throughout the Southwest and Rocky Mountain Region have led to exceptionally high risk of wildfire. Multiple wildfires have already occurred, and several in Colorado and Utah have expanded into huge burn areas, resulting in loss of life and structures.

“As emissions of heat-trapping gases continue to rise, and global average temperatures continue to increase, we can expect even more of the of extreme heat and related impacts we’ve been witnessing in recent years…”

(((Colorado, five days in summer 2012)))