sábado, 8 de enero de 2011

Facebook hype will fade - CNN.com

Interesante pieza por Dougla Ruskff para CNN.com, escritor y analista de medios tecnológicos. Su argumento es que los movimientos económicos de inversión de parte de Goldmas Sachs hacia Facebook en realidad son presagio de que este fenómeno de red social ya alcanzó su plenitud de crecimiento y valor y ue de aquí en adelante seguirá el patrón de otroras gigantes de los medios tenológicos como AOL, et al.

Sus comentarios sobre AOL son especialmente divertidos, podríamos decir sin burla premeditada, ya que los mantengo vívidos en mi recuerdo. Siempre me asombró como pudo ser que lograsen convencer al mundo de que era necesario usar AOL para acceder a la internet ya que existia valor añadido al así hacerlo. Podré haber sido un dinosaurio, pero siempre me quedé en Explorer y a la large el mundo siguió accesando a través de Exploror para luego, es decir, ahora, hacerlo de mil maneras. Y tambien recuerdo perfectamente que los CD's de AOL me llegaban en las farmacias, por correo, en los supermercados, etc. ¡Qué tiempos! Confieso que jamás creí que AOL terminaría como terminó, es decir, aún nadie sabe realmente cuando y como terminó.

PR necesita insertarse en la web como destino socioeconómico, no meramente como dirección de residencia de nosotros los puertorriqueños. Nuestro destino y el del mundo están indisolublemente atados a la internet.

Facebook hype will fade - CNN.com

viernes, 7 de enero de 2011

Robert Lanza, M.D.: Biocentrism and the Existence of God

Interesante exposición del biocentrismo, nuevo paradigma que plantea básicamente que el tiempo es una creación de la conciencia humana y por ende, no una variable exógena independiente. El planteamiento es mucho mas complejo que esto, pero el efecto práctico es correlacionar lo que consideramos la existencia del tiempo a la naturaleza funcional del ser humano. Al así hacerlo la existencia adquiere una peculiar relación directa al ser humano y comienza a ser posible interpretar ciertos reesultados curiosos que recientemente están siendo obtenidos en el laboratorio, en especial, relativos a la forma en que ciertas partículas se comportan.

El autor, Dr. Robert Lanza sigue una búsqueda a través de los planteamientos de la mente humana y presenta cada vez mas interesantes posibilidades.

Robert Lanza, M.D.: Biocentrism and the Existence of God


Robert Lanza, M.D.

Robert Lanza, M.D.

Posted: January 3, 2011 09:04 AM

All human knowledge is relational. What is light without dark? Good without evil? Perhaps free will and determinism, order and chaos, something and nothingness, are simply different sides of the same circle of scientific logic. As science has penetrated the atom, we've discovered that solid matter consists mainly of empty space. We've discovered that inert objects, such as rocks, consist of particles whirling round each other trillions of times a second. Likewise, believers and nonbelievers in God may both be right, just traveling the same circle in opposite directions.
Of course, there have been myriad conceptions of God since the dawn of civilization. There are the Abrahamic conceptions of God, including the monotheistic God of Judaism and the trinitarian God of Christians. In Buddhism, God is almost non-theist. In fact, conceptions of God vary so widely there's no clear consensus on the definition of God. In short, believers believe God has an incorporeal (immaterial) existence, and that there's an afterlife. Atheists believe in a strictly corporeal (material) world, and it's bye-bye when you die.
According to biocentrism, a new "theory of everything," the material and immaterial worlds are co-relative. Life and consciousness represents one side of the equation, matter and energy the other. They can't be divorced; split them and the reality is gone. Although the current scientific paradigm is based on the belief that the world has an objective observer-independent existence, a long list of experiments shows the opposite. Consider the double-slit experiment: When scientists watch particles pass through two slits in a barrier, they behave like bullets and go through one slit or the other. But if you don't watch, they act like waves and go through both slits at the same time. How can a particle change its behavior depending on whether it's watched or not? Biocentrism maintains reality is a process that involves our consciousness.
We think life is just the activity of atoms and molecules −- we live awhile and die. But biocentrism shows that if you add life to the equation, you can explain some of the biggest puzzles of science. For instance, it becomes clear why space and time -- and the properties of matter itself -− depend on the observer. How can entangled particles be instantaneously connected on opposite sides of the galaxy as if there's no space or time between them? And how can events in the present affect those in the past? Recently, scientists sent particles into an apparatus and showed they could retroactively change something that had already happened in the past (Science 2007). Biocentrism says these phenomena occur because space and time aren't just "out there," but are tools of our mind. Remember you can't see through the bone surrounding your brain -- everything is woven together in your mind.
In the end, life is motion and change, and is only comprehensible through a biological concept of time. Motion is possible through the representation of time. "No concept, no matter what it might be," said Immanuel Kant, "could render comprehensible the possibility of an alteration ... for instance the being and the not-being of one and the same thing in one and the same place." God, too, lives in action and is a relational concept, both existing and not-existing at the same time. "Discordant opinions," said Emerson "are reconciled by being seen to be two extremes of one principle, and we can never go so far back as to preclude a still higher vision."
Those who believe in God believe in an afterlife. Nonbelievers believe death is the end. Biocentrism reinforces the primacy of consciousness found in the work of Kant, as well as Descartes, Berkeley, Schopenhauer and Bergson. Without consciousness, space and time are nothing. At death, there's a break in the continuity of space and time; you can take any point as your new frame of reference and estimate everything relative to it. Like the particles that can pass through two holes at the same time, you can consider yourself both alive and dead, outside of time.
According to nonbelievers, you simply die and rot into the ground. The universe continues to tick along like a clock; and in a few billion years, the sun will expand into a red giant, devouring all the inner planets, including the Earth. In one scenario, the universe will reverse its expansion, growing hotter until everything is crushed out of existence. Some theorists say the universe may bounce back into expansion in a "Big Bounce," and so on indefinitely. In this view, the Big Bang was simply the beginning of one, say, 20-billion-year cycle time. We might be living in the trillionth universe (or any of an infinite sequential universes). Some say this oscillating model is consistent with the Buddhist worldview. Although speculation, it provides a sense of scale: If it takes a gazillion cycles to be reborn, that's only 70 years out of what (in terms of human comprehension) is essentially infinity -- the mathematical equivalent of materialistic death.
In contrast to the old mechanical worldview, biocentrism maintains that time is a form of animal intuition, not an object that ticks along independent of the observer. Without consciousness, the passage of time is meaningless. From this viewpoint you never die (see "Is Death the End?" and"Does Death Exist?" for development of this idea).
The implications of this were clear with the loss of my friend Bill Caldwell, who died over the holidays of a heart attack after golfing. Bill was CEO of Advanced Cell Technology (where I work), and one of the most decent human beings I've known. He struggled against the last day to cure human disease. When the company almost folded, Bill was the only other officer who didn't jump ship. He refused to give up and believed we could make the world a better place for millions suffering from horrific diseases. Indeed, a few weeks ago we received FDA approval to carry out the world's first clinical trial to use embryonic stem cells to try to prevent blindness. Accepting responsibility for the hopes of patients, Bill said "We do not intend to let them down." My regret is that someday patients will benefit from stem cell therapies, but will never know the sacrifices that Bill and his wife, Nancy, made for their well-being.
At the viewing, Nancy leaned over the casket, tears streaming down her face. She was with Bill at every step. When the company couldn't make payroll, she used her own money to pay the employees. It seems like yesterday I was at their wedding dancing with Nancy under the stars in her flowing gown. As Nancy guarded over Bill's body, surrounded by majestic floral arrangements, I recalled the words of Loren Eiseley: "There remained in his garden only the dried husk of an old plant among flowers reaching for the sun." But I knew that God or no God, that somewhere outside of our primitive thinking − of any particular spatio-temporal possibility − that Bill missed yet another golf game, and that he, Nancy, and I were sitting on the beach with a bottle of Champagne celebrating our recent success.
'Biocentrism' (co-authored with astronomer Bob Berman) lays out Lanza's theory of everything.

domingo, 2 de enero de 2011

Sobre computadoras e inteligencia artificial

Incluyo en este artículo varios enlaces relacionados con el rol que las computadoras están jugando en nuestras vidas. Las aplicaciones incluyen gran variedad de usos en la sociedad desde óptica, control de transaciones financieras, control de filas en Disney World, usos militares, etc.

Las implicaiones son vastas y significativas. Entre ellas destaco las siguientes:
  • Varios artículos presentan la expandida capacidad de observación que proveen las computadoras tanto a usuarios indivviduales en aplicaciones fotográficas como a la expandida capacidad de "vigilar" las actividades humanas. 
    • En este sentido existe la posibilidad de perder libertad ante la enorme capacidad de observación que permiten las computadoras. 
    • Llama la atención la posibilidad de una aplicación que puede "ver" en un espacio cerrado o detrás de objetos sin ir hacia ellos, mediante un lente especial que procesa los reflejos de la luz del ambiente. Esta tecnología está detrás de las aplicaciones de la defensa que se desarrollan actualmente.
  • La capacidad de manejo de procesos de control y de procesos financieros nos hace pensar hasta donde estamos los seres humanos a nivel de economía nacionales y empresariales siendo manejados por programas de computadora. 
    • Wall Street, el mercado financiero que casi quiebra al mundo entero en los pasados años y que aún no sabemos con certeza si el peligro ha pasado, de hecho está manejado por sofisticados programas computadorizados cuya premisa básica es que no pueden ser manipulados por intereses específicos. Si esta premisa es cierta o no, esta por ver, pero ambas posibilidades son igualmente nefastas;
      • Si los procesos son tan automáticos y autoregulados, es decir basados en inteligencia artificial, entonces la sentencia dictada por Jesús sobre que no es posible servir a mammon y a Dios es cierta. El sistema se regula solo y la sociedad humana se conduce en respuesta al sistema. ¿No es esto lo que hacían las sociedades que adoraban dioses paganos? ¿No es entonces Wall Street, en efecto un becerro de oro que adoramos? Al fin y al cabo, funciona por si mismo.
      • Por el contrario, si en realidad el sistema es un elaborado engaño, un "hoax" al decir americano, entonces todo es una farsa ideada por la ologarquía financiera del mundo que en realidad controla el resultado de las transacciones financieras.
  • Los usos militares cada vez son mas sofisticados y permiten lograr un conocimiento insospechado en el campo de batalla que dá una ventaja insospechada a quien disponga de dicha tecnología.
En fin, la lectura de estos partes noticiosos nos están hablando y presentando un mundo cuya realidad ha cambiado drásticamente en el espacio de una y media generación. 

En WEBXISTENCE planteo que lo que conocemos como realidad objetiva está cambiando fundamentalmente y que lo que leemos en los periódicos es solo un limitado aspecto de lo que está realmente pasando. El mundo que dejaremos al partir será uno posiblemente desconocido por lo que nos vamos. Es por ello que planteo nuevamente que el fundamento de lo que nosotros somos es que somos historia. 

La historia que estamos siendo ha llegado al punto de ser una historia cuántica, es a la vez nuestra historia individual y a la vez incomprensible por nosotros mismos ya que no pertenecemos a la generación que está capacitada para entenderla a plenitud. Estamos viviendo una historia que no comprendemos ni tenemos la posibilidad de cambiar a base de nuestras capacidades humanas ya que los protagonistas de ella ya no somos nosotros. La suma de nuestra actividad ha llegado a ser solo un pequeño aspecto de lo que el ser humano puede realizar.

Ante esta disyuntiva surge la figura luminosa de Jesús de forma innegable e irrechazable, al decir de Albert Einstein cuando se le preguntó su respuesta a Jesús. LA lectura de los Evangelios, de sus enseñanzas, de sus parábolas y sobre todo el ejemplo de su sacrificio y Resurrección son la única respuesta posible ante una historia personal que cada vez tiene menos sentido individual ante el desarrollo y avances colectivos.

El Emmanuel nos llama a una relación personal con Dios pues significa: Dios con nosotros y Jesús nos llama a la Salvación: Yeshua es Dios Salva. Su nombre lo significa todo en si mismo. Su nombre es immanente, no cambia, fué, es y será... Es el que causa ser...

Ante un mundo que nos plantea una historia individual que cada vez es menos nuestra, se plantea solo una respuesta: Dios en nosotros. Eso es lo único que tiene significado en realidad. 

Eso y solo eso es la realidad.
  1. Computational Photography May Help Us See Around Corners - NYTimes.com
  2. Wall St. Computers Read and Trade on the News - NYTimes.com
  3. Computational Photography May Help Us See Around Corners - NYTimes.com
  4. Disney Command Center Aims to Keep Lines Moving - NYTimes.com
  5. With Air Force's new drone, 'we can see everything'
  6. Smarter Than You Think - When Computers Keep Watch - NYTimes.com

Independent Projects Turn Google’s Maps Into Entertainment - NYTimes.com

No pretendo hacer una eulogía de Google, pero aqui presento otro ejemplo de la gran influencia que esta teniendo en las formas y maneras en que manejamos información, esta vez, información geográfica.

Nada, lean esto y asómbrense. mucho de lo que estamos viendo por Google no existia antes que esta compañía. Otras cosas que sí existían han sido elevadas a la "N" potencia por esta empresa.

Nada será igual ya que nada es igual yá.

Independent Projects Turn Google’s Maps Into Entertainment - NYTimes.com

CONSUMED

Global Entertainment



Maps have always had admirers: people collect them, display them, linger over them in museum exhibitions. Yet it is only in recent years that geography, organized not on paper but online, has really arrived as popular entertainment — as diverting as the latest stupid video your Facebook friends are linking to yet somehow more virtuous or, at times, titillating. Or both.
Information: Google/Associated Press. Voyeurism: Jon Rafman.

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Much of the heavy lifting on this front has been undertaken by Google, which rewrote the rules of Web-based geography. Its Google Earth product aims to be a kind of virtual re-creation of the globe, using satellite and other imagery, fleshed out by information contributed by users. The Street View imagery it began adding to its maps a few years ago is a result of a mind-boggling undertaking: vehicles equipped with nine-direction cameras taking 360-degree views of, basically, everything viewable from a road, anywhere. It’s the sort of project that would be laughed off as impractical if proposed by the government but is evidently doable with the spare profits churned out by search-based advertising. As a Washington Monthly article argued recently, Google “may well be the world’s most important mapmaker.”
But as is so often the case, the really interesting stuff comes not from the massive compilation of information by a giant corporation but rather from the creative projects of smaller entities that find interesting ways to mine and tweak that information. Two notable examples areMapCrunch and Globe Genie. On Globe Genie, created by Joe McMichael, an M.I.T. graduate student, you click the “teleport” button and the main window displays a Street View selected at random from whatever Google has available on whichever continent you’ve chosen. This could be a stretch of highway in rural Denmark, a corner in downtown Denver or the outskirts of Rio de Janeiro. MapCrunch is much the same but lets you narrow your virtual travel to specific cities. In both cases, if you see something compelling, you can stop and look around via Street View, wandering as much as you like, checking out the pedestrians, street signs and other random imagery that has been collected.
A variant of these exploratory sites is the View From Your Window Game. You are shown a single image and have to deduce where it was made by clicking on a map, which gradually narrows your choices. It’s excruciatingly hard. If you prefer a more passive approach to Web-map entertainment, there are plenty of geo-­bloggers doing virtual exploration. A prominent example is Google Sightseeing (not affiliated with Google), which presents Google-image-illustrated travelogues of, say, the restoration of a Dresden church or murals in the Mission District of San Francisco; roundups of satellite images of notable craters; or collections of funny signs, aberrant behavior and “weirdness.” As the site asks: “Why bother seeing the world for real?”
The new cartography also benefits from the availability of other massive data streams that can be channeled into a form cross-matched on a map. The Geotaggers’ World Atlas shows where Flickr and Picasa users take the most pictures. Lookbackmaps andHistorypin put user-submitted photos of historic interest onto Google maps. The BBC has an online tool called Dimensions that allows you to see, for instance, the size of the gulf oil spill overlaid on the geographic location of your choice. You can also find instructions online for how to create a Google map pinpointing foreclosures in your city.
Part of what’s different about this version of map-based enjoyment is that technology has brought it into a realm that occasionally crosses the border of voyeurism. It’s one thing to speculate about distant lands; it’s quite another to zoom in for a better look at a random pedestrian in Taipei. (Street View blurs faces and license-plate numbers.) And as the artist Jon Rafman has demonstrated with his astonishing “The Nine Eyes of Google Street View” project, which culls compelling images that the company’s roving cameras have unthinkingly captured, Street View produces images that are as unexpectedly beautiful, beguiling or disturbing as those of any traditional street photographer.
Maps have always served as visual information compendiums, often tacitly revealing some point of view or assertion about who rules the space depicted. Digital geo-tools revolve around the individual, and plenty cater explicitly to the sense that it’s your world: WeePlaces visualizes Foursquare and Gowalla check-ins on a map, and Map My Followers provides you with a map showing the locations of yourTwitter followers. And although there are occasional outcries about how this iteration of documenting the world threatens our privacy, many of us seem to find it compelling just the same. Sure, it’s a new culture of constant and inescapable surveillance — but to a surprising degree, it’s one we can participate in too.