1. Information Shadows

    Information Shadows

    Mike Kuniavsky’s fascinating Information Shadows keynote explores the serialization of everyday objects in today’s era of ubiquitous computing.

    Bike Shadow

    It’s required reading for fans of Spime, Everyware, Blogjects, and UFOs. Mike’s written several articles too. Sounds like a great title for a book!

    Strange Connections

    Coming soon to You(r)Tube: Gut Bots.

    I’m taking Three Cups of Tea and Cost on vacation. Any more suggestions?

    (via findability.org (RSS 0.91).)


  2. Will Google create the god of knowledge?

    Robotic Nation Evidence

    Face value | St Lawrence of Google | Economist.com

    Playing God
    If Google is a religion, what is its God? It would have to be The Algorithm. Faith in the possibility of an omniscient and omnipotent algorithm appears to be what Messrs Page and Brin have in common. It’s “in their DNA,â€? says Michael Moritz, a venture capitalist famous for investing early in both Yahoo! and Google. Whereas Yahoo! was started by two Stanford students who turned a hobby into a business, Google was started by two Stanford students who turned an intellectual obsession into a quest, says Mr Moritz. And what is that quest? Merely upstaging Microsoft would be almost banal. “We’re not trying to build a better operating system,â€? says Mr Schmidt (although that will not kill the rumour). Part of the plan is certainly “organising the world’s informationâ€?. But some people think they detect an even more grandiose design. Google is already working on a massive and global computing grid. Eventually, says Mr Saffo, “they’re trying to build the machine that will pass the Turing testâ€?—in other words, an artificial intelligence that can pass as a human in written conversations. Wisely or not, Google wants to be a new sort of deus ex machina.

    (Via Robotic Nation Evidence.)

    [tags]religion, ai, bot, intelligence, turring, computing, algorythm, search engine[/tags]