--- Log opened Sun Dec 19 00:00:08 2010 00:29 -!- phreedom_ [~quassel@109.254.17.41] has joined #hplusroadmap 00:30 -!- phreedom [~quassel@109.254.17.41] has quit [Ping timeout: 265 seconds] 00:37 -!- strages [~strages@wifi.makerslocal.org] has quit [Ping timeout: 272 seconds] 00:45 -!- Juul [~Juul@static.88-198-13-205.clients.your-server.de] has joined #hplusroadmap 00:46 -!- Juul [~Juul@static.88-198-13-205.clients.your-server.de] has quit [Client Quit] 01:11 -!- wolfspraul [~wolfsprau@lucia.q-ag.de] has joined #hplusroadmap 01:18 -!- strages [~strages@c-71-207-215-204.hsd1.al.comcast.net] has joined #hplusroadmap 01:30 -!- mheld [~mheld@pool-173-76-224-45.bstnma.fios.verizon.net] has joined #hplusroadmap 01:30 -!- mheld [~mheld@pool-173-76-224-45.bstnma.fios.verizon.net] has quit [Client Quit] 01:34 -!- Tyrant91101 [~tyrant@cpe-24-24-171-254.socal.res.rr.com] has quit [Ping timeout: 240 seconds] 02:08 -!- QuantumG [~qg@rtfm.insomnia.org] has quit [Remote host closed the connection] 02:40 -!- flamoto_ [~root@70.49.175.107] has quit [Ping timeout: 260 seconds] 02:51 -!- flamoto [~root@70.49.175.107] has joined #hplusroadmap 02:58 -!- strages [~strages@c-71-207-215-204.hsd1.al.comcast.net] has quit [Ping timeout: 240 seconds] 03:05 -!- QuantumG [~qg@rtfm.insomnia.org] has joined #hplusroadmap 03:14 -!- phreedom_ [~quassel@109.254.17.41] has quit [Ping timeout: 240 seconds] 04:11 -!- phreedom [~quassel@109.254.17.41] has joined #hplusroadmap 04:17 -!- wolfspraul [~wolfsprau@lucia.q-ag.de] has quit [Quit: Lost terminal] 04:17 -!- jm|space [~jm@p57B9CCF4.dip.t-dialin.net] has quit [Ping timeout: 240 seconds] 04:41 -!- flamoto [~root@70.49.175.107] has quit [Ping timeout: 260 seconds] 04:54 -!- flamoto [~root@70.49.175.107] has joined #hplusroadmap 04:55 -!- wolfspraul [~wolfsprau@lucia.q-ag.de] has joined #hplusroadmap 05:06 -!- killall-9 [~paulc@diana.null.ro] has joined #hplusroadmap 05:28 -!- shady_ is now known as shady 06:23 < kanzure> morning 06:26 -!- phreedom [~quassel@109.254.17.41] has quit [Ping timeout: 240 seconds] 06:28 -!- wolfspraul [~wolfsprau@lucia.q-ag.de] has quit [Quit: leaving] 06:45 < JayDugger> Good monring. 07:06 -!- flamoto [~root@70.49.175.107] has quit [Ping timeout: 265 seconds] 07:12 -!- flamoto_ [~root@70.49.175.107] has joined #hplusroadmap 07:13 -!- QuantumG [~qg@rtfm.insomnia.org] has quit [Remote host closed the connection] 07:20 -!- codeshepherd [~Deepan@122.167.88.195] has joined #hplusroadmap 07:49 -!- klafka [~textual@cpe-74-74-152-155.rochester.res.rr.com] has joined #hplusroadmap 07:52 -!- Jon_D [Jonano@24-230-229-143.tr.cgocable.ca] has joined #hplusroadmap 08:04 -!- Tyrant91101 [~tyrant@24.24.171.254] has joined #hplusroadmap 08:09 -!- asdf58 [realname17@silenceisdefeat.com] has quit [Remote host closed the connection] 08:15 -!- delinquentme [~delinquen@pool-108-17-102-2.pitbpa.east.verizon.net] has joined #hplusroadmap 08:19 < delinquentme> whoop! 08:50 -!- delinquentme [~delinquen@pool-108-17-102-2.pitbpa.east.verizon.net] has quit [Quit: Leaving] 08:52 < augur> kanzure: when can we eliminate sleep 09:06 < uniqanomaly> augur: you can start here http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nootropic 09:06 < augur> :P 09:07 < augur> im just getting increasingly irritated by the lack of commercially available H+ technology 09:07 -!- codeshepherd [~Deepan@122.167.88.195] has quit [Quit: codeshepherd] 09:07 < uniqanomaly> and there won't be any 09:07 < augur> :( 09:07 < uniqanomaly> with 10 years for FDA drugs approval 09:08 < augur> ok well, non-commercially available hackware too 09:08 < augur> or at least commercially available in japan 09:09 < uniqanomaly> http://www.sens.org/ 09:09 -!- flamoto_ [~root@70.49.175.107] has quit [Ping timeout: 276 seconds] 09:09 < uniqanomaly> this gives some hope 09:10 < augur> yeah, but not the kind of hope i want right now 09:10 < augur> i just want to not have to sleep and to be able to interface directly with my computer. is that so hard to ask? :( 09:10 < JayDugger> Yesl 09:10 < JayDugger> Harder even than accurate spellihg. 09:11 < augur> i would even accept a much improved UI of some sort, provided it make interaction significantly more efficient 09:11 < uniqanomaly> augur: if you tell me that you using time you already have optimally i just won't belive you 09:12 < augur> optimally for my goals :p 09:12 -!- flamoto_ [~root@70.49.175.107] has joined #hplusroadmap 09:12 < augur> its more that im a linguistics grad student and a coder and there are many many tasks that i feel would just be so much improved with a better UI 09:13 < augur> not that i couldnt write something that would capture the whole screen and provide a new UI, right, but theres also something to having different physical inputs too 09:13 < augur> and alas i cant manufacture hardware yet 09:13 < augur> reprap isnt at the point of printing wires and circuits 09:14 < uniqanomaly> what would you manufacture if you could anyway 09:14 -!- delinquentme [~delinquen@pool-108-17-102-2.pitbpa.east.verizon.net] has joined #hplusroadmap 09:14 < uniqanomaly> EEG suck, thats for sure 09:15 < augur> probably just some experimental chording keyboards for mode keys, or some sort of drafting-table like multitouch screen (not that i cant do that without a printer, but) 09:16 -!- mheld [~mheld@pool-173-76-224-45.bstnma.fios.verizon.net] has joined #hplusroadmap 09:17 < uniqanomaly> well, having artificial intelligence would make interaction 'significantly more efficient' 09:18 < uniqanomaly> no need for hacking shitty bodies to interact with machines 09:18 < uniqanomaly> well, machines to interact with shitty bodies 09:19 < klafka> if i had a reprap that could manufacture wires and circuits i'd build badass edm party decorations 09:19 < klafka> it wouldn't really change how i do research 09:20 < klafka> at least in the short term 09:20 < kanzure> reprap for alternative keyboards and computer interfaces has been a surprisingly untapped field so far 09:20 < kanzure> i'm a little surprised that nobody is printing up weird looking keyboards, there's obviously tons of configurations to try out 09:20 < augur> kanzure: see? 09:20 < augur> the problem is wires and circuits 09:20 < kanzure> keyboards are mostly plastic 09:21 < augur> yeah but you NEED wires and circuits! 09:21 < augur> i suppose you could build those yourself tho 09:21 < kanzure> electronics for keyboards is already well commoditized, so you can buy the parts for $5 to $10 +shipping 09:21 < JayDugger> Actually...you can buy laser projected keyboards. 09:21 < augur> but this is sort of what i mean, you know? i feel like theres actually not much of a trend to build h+ technology 09:21 < klafka> what is h+ technology? 09:21 < kanzure> augur: part of the problem is that the h+ people have been drowning in bullshit for a while now 09:21 < JayDugger> Any alternative has to beat the incumbent. 09:22 < kanzure> augur: the whole concept of "build stuff" is new to them 09:22 < kanzure> plus, the people who do build stuff, were annoyed by the original amounts of bullshit ;) 09:22 < JayDugger> Speculation is intoxicating and unproductive. 09:22 < kanzure> augur: that doesn't mean there isn't demand though 09:22 < augur> klafka: surely any technology explicitly designed with the goal of upgrading humans. now ofcourse its limited to trivial shit like optimization of how we interact with the environment through pre-existing modes, but its not just about what it does but what the motivation is behind it 09:22 < kanzure> many people max out on qwerty and dvorak isn't that fascinating to them, for instance 09:22 < augur> kanzure: oh im sure theres a demand, we just need to make it happen 09:23 < JayDugger> max out on qwerty and dvorak? 09:23 < klafka> kanzure my understanding was that dvorak isn't necessarily better than qwerty it was based on old failed trials 09:23 < augur> this is true, klafka 09:23 < kanzure> klafka: really? i hear some people claiming 250+ wpm on dvorak 09:23 < kanzure> i max out at 120 wpm on qwerty 09:23 < klafka> idk 09:24 < klafka> i just heard that the claims of dvorak's research were somewhat spurious 09:24 < JayDugger> I think those trial depend on whether you actually touch-type, or just hunt-and-peck with speed. 09:24 < kanzure> i also seem to max out at about 12 characters per second on qwerty 09:24 < kanzure> i don't know what the upper limit on quick-twitch finger interaction is 09:25 < kanzure> *intentional quick-twitch finger interaction 09:25 < augur> can i just comment also that im reading A Fire in the Deep and these.. pack minds, they're rather disturbing. and Andromeda's fractured consciousness is even worse 09:26 < augur> i want the multiplicity of attention, but not the mutliplicity of identity :| 09:26 < JayDugger> HUMOR--http://landoflisp.com/ 09:26 < JayDugger> Scroll way down for the comic. 09:26 < klafka> hmm 09:27 < klafka> not familiar w/ that book 09:27 < augur> lol 09:27 < klafka> although there are some cool peter watts books that talk about the idea of pack minds 09:27 < augur> shame im already intimately familiar with lisp 09:27 < augur> well, one particular dialect of it 09:31 < klafka> man somehow i don't see how lisp makes your code bug free, are they just hawking functional programming / side effect free programming? 09:32 < JayDugger> I've not read the text. 09:32 < augur> it doesnt make your code bug free 09:32 < augur> but haskell almost does x3 09:35 < kanzure> augur: can i abuse yuo in the future for figuring out AutoLisp stuff 09:35 < kanzure> i will eventually need to incorporate that stuff (or similar APIs) into lolcad 09:35 < kanzure> *you 09:35 < augur> i odnt know autolisp 09:37 < kanzure> isn't it just lisp but with various libraries 09:37 < kanzure> (i'm implying that i don't know lisp) 09:37 < augur> i dont know 09:37 < augur> also, the dialect of lisp im familiar with is scheme 09:37 < augur> which has significant differences from common lisp 09:38 < augur> afk 10:00 < kanzure> used ct scanners and MRI machines http://www.zettamed.com/equipment.shtml 10:01 -!- flamoto_ [~root@70.49.175.107] has quit [Read error: Operation timed out] 10:10 -!- flamoto [~root@70.49.175.107] has joined #hplusroadmap 10:11 < augur> lol 10:11 < augur> dangerous 10:18 < klafka> thats what i was thinking 10:21 < augur> i mean in the hands of non-medical professionals, ofcourse 10:21 < augur> big magnets = scary 10:22 < klafka> CT scanners can be scary regardless apparently 10:25 < uniqanomaly> wtf are you talking about 10:25 < uniqanomaly> recreational drugs in hands of organized crime are scary 10:25 < uniqanomaly> handed over to them by governments 10:25 < uniqanomaly> this is fucking scary 10:28 < uniqanomaly> also monopoly for other drugs in hands of physicians 10:29 < uniqanomaly> like retards don't believing you actually can improve memory in normal individual by nootropics 10:30 < klafka> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X-ray_computed_tomography#Typical_scan_doses 10:30 < klafka> CT scans just have high radiation doses 10:32 < augur> uniqanomaly: that too 10:42 < kanzure> "diybio: never clone alone" 11:20 -!- mheld [~mheld@pool-173-76-224-45.bstnma.fios.verizon.net] has quit [Ping timeout: 240 seconds] 11:57 -!- strages [~strages@c-71-207-215-204.hsd1.al.comcast.net] has joined #hplusroadmap 12:15 -!- delinquentme [~delinquen@pool-108-17-102-2.pitbpa.east.verizon.net] has quit [Quit: Leaving] 12:19 < kanzure> "free radicals may not be the cause of aging" http://science.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=10/12/19/167212 12:29 < uniqanomaly> o srsly 12:44 < kanzure> slow science manifesto http://slow-science.org/ 12:44 < kanzure> also a pdf http://slow-science.org/slow-science-manifesto.pdf 13:18 -!- Netsplit *.net <-> *.split quits: jennifer2, Ian_Daniher, CIA-56, archels, elmom, flamoto, mage2, nsh_, killall-9, kanzure, (+14 more, use /NETSPLIT to show all of them) 13:20 -!- Netsplit over, joins: strages, flamoto, Tyrant91101, killall-9, jennifer2, Noahj, JayDugger, uniqanomaly, Ian_Daniher, drazak (+14 more) 13:20 -!- QuantumG [~qg@rtfm.insomnia.org] has joined #hplusroadmap 13:25 * epitron likes slow science 13:25 < epitron> i like the idea of humanity not racing each other to take a flying leap off a cliff 13:26 < epitron> that's interesting that oxidants aren't the cause of aging... 13:27 < epitron> mitochondria are pretty likely involved though 13:27 < epitron> did you ever see that talk by the guy who selectively bred fruit flies over 20 years to increase their lifespans? 13:27 < epitron> and tracked all the DNA mutations along the way? 13:29 < epitron> apparently the most important lifespan-extending mutations were in the mitochondria 13:46 < archels> "free radicals may not be the cause of aging" should probably be taken with a grain of salt 13:49 < epitron> good point :) 13:49 < archels> "slow science" is hopelessly naive 13:49 -!- nchaimov [~cowtown@c-71-59-157-3.hsd1.or.comcast.net] has quit [Quit: nchaimov] 13:49 < archels> There's always competition between who publishes first. 13:49 < epitron> idealism is not naivety 13:50 < epitron> if we don't strive to be better, we're just going to rot. 13:51 < Tyrant91101> its not striving to be better though 13:51 < Tyrant91101> its striving to be slower 13:51 < epitron> don't make me explain slow science :) 13:51 < Tyrant91101> and while thats great for developments of massive fundamental theories 13:51 < Tyrant91101> the only way to move science forward at this point is to speed up the process and involve far more people than those in the 'ivory tower' of science 13:53 < epitron> did you read slow-science.org? 13:54 < Tyrant91101> yep 13:54 < epitron> the 2nd sentence says that they like the accelerated science 13:55 < Tyrant91101> i dont see the difference between what they call 'accelerated science' and what they are calling for 13:56 -!- klafka [~textual@cpe-74-74-152-155.rochester.res.rr.com] has quit [Quit: Computer has gone to sleep.] 13:56 < Tyrant91101> the only meaningful sentence in that manifesto is "Society should give scientists the time they need, but more importantly, scientists must take their time." 13:57 < Tyrant91101> and the problem with giving scientists the time they need is that almost all science done now is profit driven 13:57 < Tyrant91101> even in universities 13:57 < Tyrant91101> i could argue, ESPECIALLY, in the universities 13:58 < epitron> corporatization has crept into everything 13:58 < epitron> it's corrupting society 13:58 < Tyrant91101> it's not corrupting anything, it's society that is doing the corrupting 13:58 < epitron> that's another issue :) 13:58 < epitron> what? 13:59 -!- nchaimov [~cowtown@c-71-59-157-3.hsd1.or.comcast.net] has joined #hplusroadmap 13:59 < epitron> i think the metalevels of our labels and definitions are getting confused here. 13:59 < Tyrant91101> these corporations that are "corrupting" science and government are only the response to societies that are, for lack of a better word, becoming extremely consumerist 14:00 < epitron> sure, that's what i was saying 14:00 < Tyrant91101> during the height of the cold war, american and even soviet society was dedicated tos cientific innovation in an attempt to beat out the other 14:01 < Tyrant91101> as a result, many corporations like Bell spent billions in pure research 14:01 < Tyrant91101> on their own accord 14:01 < epitron> so let's call this the goal of society 14:01 < epitron> right now the goal is to consume all the resources on the planet 14:01 < epitron> well, there's that one... 14:01 < epitron> which is baked into the system... 14:01 < epitron> and then there's the competing goal of trying to save the planet 14:01 < Tyrant91101> but now all society cares about is ipads and iphones 14:02 < Tyrant91101> theres no incentive, culturally or economically, to do pure research 14:02 < epitron> i'm having trouble getting a bead on you :) 14:02 < Tyrant91101> and instead it is left up to universities, where the most intelligent people are turned into managers and beauracrats 14:02 < epitron> you're moving around too fast 14:02 < epitron> maybe you could just give me your general ideology 14:02 < epitron> then we could go from there 14:03 < Tyrant91101> i have no ideology. 14:03 < Tyrant91101> ideology is for the masses so they can try to wrap their heads around an extremely complex issue 14:03 < Tyrant91101> i try to be a 'pragmatist' 14:04 < epitron> okay 14:04 < Tyrant91101> i think that everything from science to politics should be about setting goals and achieving those goals with something closer to the scientific method 14:04 < epitron> ah, okay 14:04 < epitron> so you're a rationalist 14:04 < uniqanomaly> Tyrant91101 i guess you'd like move to china 14:05 < epitron> haha 14:05 < Tyrant91101> no 14:05 < epitron> get with the winning team! 14:05 < epitron> america's circling the drain 14:05 < Tyrant91101> while i guess i am to some degree a rationalist, i think there are still some basic ideologies people must subscribe to 14:05 < uniqanomaly> srsly 14:05 < uniqanomaly> china is like nicely managed company 14:05 < Tyrant91101> i for one value intellectual and other freedoms 14:06 < epitron> uniqanomaly: where the managers filter your internet and execute you if you complain 14:06 < uniqanomaly> yeah, freedom of religion for the win 14:06 < uniqanomaly> and you get US society where >40% don't believe in evolution 14:06 < uniqanomaly> what a shame 14:06 < epitron> well, they are products of the educational system 14:07 < epitron> you can't blame 'em 14:07 < Tyrant91101> you can blame their parents 14:07 < epitron> they were also products of the educational system! 14:07 < uniqanomaly> oh yeah of course it's not their fault they're idiots 14:07 < Tyrant91101> the education system is a product of them as well 14:08 < epitron> mmm... not really... 14:08 < epitron> the "factory educational system" was setup to create useful cogs 14:08 < epitron> and limit the education, so that workers didn't get demotivated 14:08 < Tyrant91101> haha you think the workers are blameless for that? 14:09 < epitron> the more educated workers get, the less they want to be your slaves 14:09 < Tyrant91101> any and every societal construct in the history of man is held up only by man 14:09 < Tyrant91101> any nonsense that a person is willing to tolerate is nonsense that they are willing to uphold 14:09 < epitron> hmmm 14:09 < epitron> personal responsibility depends on being aware of the thing you're responsible for 14:10 < epitron> i mean, you're right to some extent 14:10 < Tyrant91101> With the internet where it is today, it is a crime not to be aware 14:11 < Tyrant91101> half a century ago, you could be forgiven for not knowing how congress is infringing on your rights 14:11 < epitron> the internet is so full of information... 14:11 < epitron> you can get stuck in a myriad of backalleys 14:11 < Tyrant91101> today, with news.google.com and other aggregators you have no excuse 14:11 < Tyrant91101> ofcourse 14:11 < epitron> there's tons of garbage on it 14:11 < Tyrant91101> noise is always a problem 14:11 < uniqanomaly> 'it is a crime not to be aware' 14:11 < uniqanomaly> except wikileaks.org taken down by us gov 14:11 < uniqanomaly> of course not officially 14:11 < Tyrant91101> uniqanomaly, it gets a lot worse than that 14:11 < epitron> of course not :) 14:12 < Tyrant91101> when i say something about transhumanism i get people complaining about 1984 and Brave New World 14:12 < epitron> does news.google.com really give you useful information? :) 14:12 < uniqanomaly> epitron: yeah right 14:12 < Tyrant91101> yet they ignore they fact that that's already whats happening around the world in cities like New York and London 14:12 < uniqanomaly> usefull as in fox news 14:12 < uniqanomaly> useful* 14:12 < epitron> i find the news outlets tend have a lot of interesting but ultimately not useful things 14:12 < Tyrant91101> epitron, news.google.com can serve its purposes 14:13 < Tyrant91101> for stuff like what's hapenning in congress its a good enough aggregator for the big things 14:13 < epitron> have you ever read "Complexity and Information Overload in Society"? 14:13 < epitron> it's a two-part paper by Heyligen 14:13 < epitron> http://web.archive.org/web/20070103091059/http://pespmc1.vub.ac.be/papers/Info-overload.pdf 14:13 < epitron> (that's both parts) 14:14 < Tyrant91101> thank you for the link 14:14 < epitron> the signal to noise ratio and the speed at which things spread is making it hard to make smart decisions 14:14 < epitron> things are meming around before anyone can verify them 14:15 < epitron> once the meme has saturated the network, if the verification comes back false.... how do you fix it? :) 14:15 < epitron> sensationalism and corporatism are pretty corrupting 14:16 < Tyrant91101> thats the fault of society 14:16 < Tyrant91101> when the acidity of a lake rises dramatically you cant blame the bacteria for evolving to live in that new environment 14:16 < epitron> the social protocol and ideologies? 14:17 < Tyrant91101> what a crappy analogy but i think you understand my point 14:17 < epitron> "society" is kinda vague 14:18 < epitron> hah.. i don't get the lake thing actually... the did the bacteria cause the lake acidity to rise, or did they just adapt to it and they're the only things left? 14:18 < Tyrant91101> they adapt 14:18 < Tyrant91101> thats the only way they can survive 14:18 < epitron> okay.. 14:18 < epitron> and that maps to society? 14:18 < Tyrant91101> only the corporations that adapt to the consumerism in society are the ones that survive 14:18 < epitron> ah 14:19 < epitron> well, they survive in the short term... 14:19 < Tyrant91101> and yes society is very broad 14:19 < epitron> but the system is pretty close to the point of failure 14:19 < Tyrant91101> so is life 14:19 < epitron> as david suzuki puts it, we're in a car headed at 90mph at a brick wall, and the people in the car are arguing about who gets to sit in the front seat 14:20 < Tyrant91101> the evolution of technology always requires us to be headed at a brick wall 14:20 < Tyrant91101> its just that as technology evolves, we push the brick wall further back 14:20 < epitron> until... 14:20 < epitron> "Heyligen[2] , Alvin Toffler, and others have written about how ephemeralization, though it may increase our power to solve physical problems, can make non-physical problems much worse. Increasing system complexity and information overload make it difficult and stressful for the people who must control the ephemeralized systems. This can negate the advantages of ephemeralization." 14:20 < Tyrant91101> one day, perhaps soon, we will hit such a brick wall before we can push it back via more technological development 14:21 < epitron> our brains have not grown 14:21 < epitron> there's only so much complexity we can handle 14:21 < Tyrant91101> i think that way of looking at it is very naive and over simplistic 14:21 < epitron> it's true though :) 14:21 < Tyrant91101> as the amount of information grows so do our systems 14:22 < Tyrant91101> maybe one day the rate of information growth will exceed system growth 14:22 < epitron> what systems? 14:22 < Tyrant91101> but all you can do is postulate that, not prove it afaik 14:22 < Tyrant91101> once again system is a broad word :0 14:22 < Tyrant91101> :) 14:22 < epitron> i know 14:22 < epitron> i'm still having trouble getting a bead on you 14:22 < epitron> :) 14:22 < Tyrant91101> when you have a village with a few dozen people, you may only needo ne leader to process all that information and act on it 14:23 < Tyrant91101> but when you have hundreds of millions of people, the system of leadership that was once the village elder becomes a massive beauracracy 14:23 < epitron> and we all know how well bureaucracies can manage information 14:23 < Tyrant91101> that CAN process all that information 14:23 < Tyrant91101> well it appears to work better than anarchy 14:24 < epitron> you lose sight of the big picture 14:24 < Tyrant91101> which is what i would envision hapening once the system can't support the information 14:24 < epitron> our way of tacking the complexity is to break it down into smaller and smaller subdisciplines 14:24 < epitron> then summarize and aggregate 14:24 < epitron> but at some point there's so many layers and so much information loss that it stops working 14:25 < epitron> if our brains were designed like bureaucracies, we'd have gone extinct a long time ago 14:25 < Tyrant91101> but that's a false analogy 14:25 < epitron> it's more of a joke 14:25 < Tyrant91101> and our brains are to some extent designed like that 14:26 < epitron> the brain is designed more like pixar 14:26 < epitron> there are cross-hierarchical links all over the place 14:26 < Tyrant91101> just like our brains evolved to process the information we needed to survive, so do beauracracies evolve 14:26 < Tyrant91101> and just like the brain, beauracracies may not do everything the most efficient way possible 14:26 < epitron> a bureacracy requires lateral communication to go up the hierarchy and back down 14:26 < epitron> which kills the signal 14:27 < Tyrant91101> huh? 14:27 < Tyrant91101> i dont understand 14:27 < epitron> if you're in accounts, and i'm in marketing, i can't talk to you... i have to talk to my boss 14:27 < epitron> then he talks to your boss 14:27 < epitron> or rather to his boss 14:27 < epitron> who talks to your boss 14:27 < Tyrant91101> ah i see 14:28 < Tyrant91101> well there are similar heirarchies in the brain 14:28 < Tyrant91101> nervous system i mean 14:28 < epitron> there are hierarchies 14:28 < epitron> but they are functional ones :) 14:28 < epitron> and if lateral communication is necessary, the brain just grows links 14:28 < Tyrant91101> just as functional as that of a beauracracy 14:28 < epitron> hmmm 14:28 < Tyrant91101> you're confusing functionality with efficiency 14:29 < epitron> haha 14:29 < epitron> i suppose 14:29 < epitron> although that is a function 14:29 < Tyrant91101> the american beauracracy works, just like the brain 14:29 < Tyrant91101> but neither are efficient 14:29 < epitron> but the point i was making is that nobody can see the big picture 14:29 < Tyrant91101> you don't need to 14:29 < epitron> i don't think this discussion is going anywhere :) 14:29 < epitron> let's change angles 14:30 < Tyrant91101> no single bacterium in a colony in that lake knows the big picture of that colony, but the colony survives and evolves to meet the needs of survival 14:30 < epitron> that's emergent behaviour 14:30 < epitron> and efficiency is critical 14:31 < epitron> if they can't spread plasmid rings fast enough, the colony could die 14:31 < Tyrant91101> fast enough does not mean the fastest possible spreading 14:31 < epitron> you get that in bureaucracies too.. if they can't make decisions fast enough, they could miss out on things. 14:31 < epitron> or people could get bored waiting for their boss to get back to them 14:31 < epitron> and they could forget what they wanted tod o 14:31 < epitron> and it could go undone 14:31 < uniqanomaly> or drugs approval takes 10 years 14:32 < uniqanomaly> -> FDA 14:32 < Tyrant91101> the stomach could have been designed to send signals that you're no longer hungry in seconds, yet it takes 20 minutes 14:32 < Tyrant91101> its not the fastest and most efficient, but its fast and efficient enough 14:32 < epitron> well, maybe your stomach has to make sure you ate something nutritious 14:32 < epitron> it has to start breaking it down 14:32 < uniqanomaly> Tyrant91101: not really 14:32 < epitron> if you ate styrofoam you should eat something else 14:32 < uniqanomaly> 20 minutes is about digestion 14:33 < Tyrant91101> epitron, you can eat whatever you want, you can eat pure cellulose and the stomach will tell you you're full 14:33 < clemux> is it the stomach's role to send satiety signals? 14:33 < epitron> haha 14:33 < epitron> there's a few things at play there 14:33 < Tyrant91101> that you've eaten something and that you're full, yes 14:33 < epitron> cellulose is actually used by the bacteria in your gut 14:33 < Tyrant91101> but about nutrition and all that, no 14:33 < epitron> it's nutritious to them, and they are nutritious to you 14:34 < Tyrant91101> hmm i thought we couldnt break down cellulose 14:34 < epitron> we don't, but the gut bacteria need it 14:34 < epitron> that's how cows work 14:34 < Tyrant91101> anyway, you could drink water and your stomach will tell you you're full 14:34 < epitron> that's why you're supposed to eat lots of fiber 14:34 < epitron> water is nutritious :) 14:34 < epitron> it's one of the most important nutrients 14:35 < epitron> you can go a month without food... but only 3 days without water 14:35 < Tyrant91101> that's irrelevant 14:35 < epitron> well, why don't you tell me your point instead of these analogies :) 14:35 < Tyrant91101> your body has other methods of telling you you need water 14:35 < Tyrant91101> i already said my point 14:36 < Tyrant91101> the stomach messaging your brain isn't the most efficient way possible 14:36 < Tyrant91101> but its efficient enough for survival 14:36 < epitron> that's what you were saying?? 14:36 < epitron> i think the stomach thing is a bad example :) 14:36 < Tyrant91101> most organism, and systems in general, evolve only to be as efficient as needed 14:36 < epitron> but yes, that's true 14:36 < epitron> (good examples are hard) 14:37 < Tyrant91101> going back to the information thing, we'll evolve our systems to handle whatever information comes our way 14:37 < Tyrant91101> perhaps we'll get overloaded and hit that brick wall soon 14:37 < Tyrant91101> but you cant say that for certain 14:37 < Tyrant91101> anyway nice talking to you 14:37 < Tyrant91101> i gotta go to a diybio meeting 14:37 < epitron> okay... 14:37 < Tyrant91101> ill be back online in an hour or so 14:37 < epitron> ttyl! 14:37 < epitron> have fun 14:37 < Tyrant91101> thank you 14:42 -!- Tyrant91101 [~tyrant@24.24.171.254] has quit [Ping timeout: 276 seconds] 14:51 < kanzure> "Leonard Hayflick is keeping aborted fetal tissue samples in his garage" what? 14:52 < kanzure> epitron: yes, the selectively-breeding-drosophila person is michael rose who now works for genescient 14:52 < epitron> kanzure: wewt :) 14:53 < epitron> that guy is pretty awesome 14:54 < epitron> "two excellent advices for wielding too much power: 14:54 < epitron> 1. Do less; don't do everything that seems like a good idea, but only what you must do. 14:54 < epitron> 2. Avoid doing things you can't undo." 14:55 < epitron> seasoned coders know those two lessons well :) 14:56 < epitron> (that's for tyrant91101 when he gets back) 15:12 < kanzure> "Palo Alto, CA - December 20, 2010 - The Foresight Institute, a nanotechnology education and public policy think tank based in Palo Alto, has announced the winners of the prestigious 2010 Foresight Institute Feynman Prizes in Nanotechnology." 15:13 < kanzure> "The winner of the 2010 Feynman Prize for Experimental work is Masakazu Aono (MANA Center, National Institute for Materials Science, Japan) in recognition of his pioneering and continuing work, including research into the manipulation of atoms, the multiprobe STM and AFM, the atomic switch, and single-molecule-level chemical control including ultradense molecular data storage and molecular wiring; and his inspiration of an entire generation of resea 15:13 < kanzure> "The winner of the 2010 Feynman Prize for Theory is Gustavo E. Scuseria (Rice University) for his development of quantum mechanical methods and computational programs that make it possible to carry out accurate theoretical predictions of molecules and solids, and their application to the chemical and electronic properties of carbon nanostructures." 15:13 < kanzure> i can't seem to find this on their site 15:15 < epitron> ooo, theory AND experiment prizes 15:15 < epitron> i like the sound of that molecule simulator 15:16 < epitron> you ever play with molecule simulators, kanzure? 15:21 -!- Noahj [~noa@24.38.179.66] has quit [Quit: Leaving.] 15:23 < kanzure> epitron: have you looked at nanoengineer yet 15:23 < epitron> nope! 15:23 < kanzure> http://diyhpl.us/cgit/nanoengineer 15:24 < kanzure> http://nanoengineer-1.com/content/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=40&Itemid=50 15:24 < epitron> mmm.. cgit 15:25 < epitron> oh man, these nanomachines are trippy 15:26 < epitron> reality is all jiggly :) 15:26 < epitron> so i take it you have played with this thing? 15:26 < kanzure> yes 15:26 < kanzure> and i'm now hosting the git repo 15:26 < epitron> did you make any neat jiggly things? 15:26 < kanzure> you can join the new mailing list http://groups.google.com/group/nanoengineer-dev 15:27 < kanzure> no i've been doing more high-level maintenance stuff 15:27 < kanzure> like svn->git conversion 15:27 < epitron> you must have a minute or two to play though :D 15:27 < epitron> it's jiggly things! 15:28 < kanzure> i'm too busy to jiggle.. i'm acting like i'm working on gitduino.com 15:28 < epitron> and what's that to further? 15:29 < kanzure> github+thingiverse open source hardware hosting hotness 15:29 < epitron> EXTREEEEEEEME 15:30 < flamoto> http://arbornet.org/~flamoot/telepathic-critterdrug.html updated 15:30 < kanzure> go away 15:30 < epitron> who, flamoto? 15:30 < epitron> FLAMOTO 15:30 < epitron> that's fun to imagine saying 15:30 < flamoto> leave me alone 15:30 < flamoto> rude as heck 15:30 < flamoto> yeah 15:30 < flamoto> flamoto is a good permutation of my real name 15:31 < flamoto> "flamoot" 15:31 < flamoto> i put blood sprays in my a life evolver 15:31 < epitron> FLAMOOT 15:31 < epitron> that's awasome too 15:31 < flamoto> i wired a synthetic brain with and gates yesterday 15:31 < epitron> you should rotate between them 15:31 < kanzure> epitron: see pm 15:31 < flamoto> i'm going to try to make a robot controller to seed this thing with 15:31 < flamoto> :3 15:31 < flamoto> brb >> 15:32 < epitron> so kanzure... 15:32 < kanzure> sup 15:33 < epitron> this Masakazu Aono guy's experimental discoveries 15:33 < epitron> can they run on nanoengineer? 15:33 < kanzure> o 15:34 < kanzure> i'm not familiar with his work 15:34 < kanzure> nanoengineer primarily does atomically-precise mechanical modeling, and then offloads these models to various simulators like GROMACS 15:34 < kanzure> it's not uncommon for researchers making up theoretical frameworks to just write their own simulators all the time 15:35 < epitron> interesting 15:35 < kanzure> i should add that ne-1 doesn't just use gromacs of course 15:35 < epitron> i bet that kind of thing would be easier with a good language workbench 15:35 < kanzure> there's a few other packages that i'm forgetting the names of 15:35 < epitron> can you play with these models in real-time? 15:35 < epitron> like.. interactively? 15:35 < kanzure> nanoengineer-1 was designed based on solidworks 15:35 < kanzure> so yes 15:35 -!- Tyrant91101 [~tyrant@99-110-134-133.lightspeed.irvnca.sbcglobal.net] has joined #hplusroadmap 15:35 < kanzure> there's also tutorials up on youtube 15:36 < kanzure> hi Tyrant91101 we're talking about http://nanoengineer-1.com/content/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=40&Itemid=50 15:36 < epitron> ohh, i think i get why you need the models... 15:36 -!- killall-9 [~paulc@diana.null.ro] has quit [Quit: Leaving] 15:36 < epitron> in that motor, for example.. 15:36 < epitron> you have some complex relationships going on 15:36 < kanzure> well also because these guys are hoping for molecular nanotechnology and molecular machines 15:36 < epitron> a basic atom force model might not be able to handle that, right? 15:37 < kanzure> so once http://diyhpl.us/~bryan/irc/freitas_process.txt works, what do you build? :) 15:37 < Tyrant91101> kanzure, are those nanotech machines that have been made? 15:37 < Tyrant91101> or just simulated for now? 15:37 < kanzure> Tyrant91101: just simulated 15:37 < Tyrant91101> shame :( 15:37 < kanzure> in the past few months i've been bringing the simulator/CAD environment into the public 15:37 < kanzure> http://diyhpl.us/cgit/nanoengineer 15:37 < Tyrant91101> nice 15:37 < kanzure> it was open source, but not in the traditional sense (i.e. just the last release was publicly available and open source) 15:37 < kanzure> but now all of the development history is available as well 15:37 < Tyrant91101> now if only there was a good open source CAD and CAM package 15:38 < kanzure> one of the first things we did (well, fitzsim- he's sometimes in here) is get rid of the damn advertisement splash logo screen on bootup 15:38 < kanzure> Tyrant91101: http://heekscad.org/ is a start 15:38 < kanzure> i have a tiny python-based CAD kernel called lolcad http://diyhpl.us/cgit/lolcad 15:38 < epitron> lolcad! 15:38 < kanzure> lolcad is sort of like an all-in-one kernel that hopefully will be easier than openscad to use 15:39 < kanzure> also it's written in python so you get interactive interpreter goodness 15:39 < kanzure> ... once i get it more functional 15:39 < Tyrant91101> heh i dont think cad is anywhere near as developed as commercial packages 15:39 < epitron> wow, commenty 15:39 < kanzure> heekscad is much further along ;) 15:39 < Tyrant91101> unfortuantely i have to stick to the caltech pro/e and mechanica licenses 15:39 < Tyrant91101> :9 15:39 < Tyrant91101> :( 15:39 < epitron> do those comments generate code? 15:39 < kanzure> epitron: in lolcad? 15:39 < epitron> they look pretty structured 15:39 < epitron> yeah 15:39 < kanzure> well. 15:39 < kanzure> yes and no 15:40 < epitron> this looks like a much more ordered version of that old thing you were working on 15:40 < kanzure> basically STEP is an ISO definition in a language called EXPRESS which is also an ISO definition 15:40 < epitron> the apt-get for stuff 15:40 < kanzure> the right way to do this would be to write an EXPRESS parser in python 15:40 < kanzure> but i really didn't want to or know how at the time, so i decided to just write it the way you see it 15:40 < epitron> you should make those comments docstrings then 15:40 < kanzure> the next steps for lolcad are cleaning it up a little bit, a simplified geometry API on top of all that bullshit, 15:40 < epitron> then python could read them off the classes and compile them 15:41 < kanzure> and getting NURBS mapping to the geometric entities-- right now there's some NURBS rendering going on but it's limited to basic objects, and it's not even in the same file 15:41 < Tyrant91101> ugh i have to figure out how to do FEM and dump it on to amazon ec2 15:41 < Tyrant91101> fun week 15:41 < kanzure> openfoam? 15:41 < kanzure> i'm sure you can pay $$$ to cosmosworks if you want something proprietary 15:41 < kanzure> there's also freefem++ 15:42 < kanzure> i really like the freefem++ syntax, but it might be a little limited in terms of capabilities 15:42 < Tyrant91101> yeah im going to have to decide sometime this week 15:42 < epitron> solidworks 2010 is 10 gigs? 15:42 < kanzure> salome-platform.org is built by the same guys as opencascade (the library behind heekscad.org) so the quality is a little questionable 15:42 < kanzure> epitron: my copy is only 4ish 15:42 < epitron> man, kanzure is like a predictive search engine 15:42 < epitron> he gives you links before you ask 15:43 < epitron> do you mind if i patent you? 15:43 < Tyrant91101> i think he would mind lmao 15:43 < epitron> it's okay, i won't license him 15:43 < epitron> i'll just license copies of him 15:43 < epitron> i'm just patenting the idea of the process of him 15:45 < kanzure> epitron: back to the nanotech stuff.. you should look at http://diyhpl.us/~bryan/irc/freitas_process.txt 15:45 < Tyrant91101> i wish you could patent the idea of patenting 15:45 < Tyrant91101> id be rich 15:46 < epitron> some guy patented the idea of making a machine that can make patents 15:46 < epitron> and apparently he made that machine 15:46 < epitron> and it generated his next two patents 15:46 < epitron> (seriously) 15:47 < epitron> kanzure: i'm not familiar with these techniques you've got in this doc 15:47 < epitron> is there some nanotech textbook i can read? 15:47 < kanzure> epitron: freitas is in the process of writing another one 15:47 < epitron> i should probably get a good foundation 15:47 < kanzure> this is a good presentation: http://www.molecularassembler.com/Papers/PathDiamMolMfg.htm 15:48 < kanzure> a good foundation is the book 'Nanosystems' by drexler, but it's a little dated 15:48 < epitron> who's freitas? 15:48 < kanzure> it goes over all of the fundamental concepts, but some of them just stop abruptly, which are the ones that happened to have the most progress on 15:48 < kanzure> freitas is the guy who wrote the 1980s NASA report on a self-replicating moon base 15:48 < kanzure> http://www.islandone.org/MMSG/aasm/ 15:48 < epitron> hahaha 15:48 < kanzure> and then the book on kinematic self-replicating machines 15:48 < kanzure> http://www.molecularassembler.com/KSRM.htm 15:49 < epitron> that looks fun 15:49 < kanzure> his site is here: http://rfreitas.com/ 15:49 < kanzure> yeah KSRM is a big deal in the reprap community 15:49 < kanzure> (and to me) 15:50 < Tyrant91101> epitron, yeah its a massive brute force thingy 15:50 < Tyrant91101> you stick a problem in and it brute forces a mechanical solution 15:51 < kanzure> Tyrant91101: i was working at "automated design lab" for a while 15:51 < epitron> kanzure: i meant the aasm... 15:51 < kanzure> we were using graph theory for automated design based on rules for what can plug into whatever 15:51 < epitron> i remember that we talked about the KSRM a long time ago though! 15:51 < epitron> you wanted to fill every cubic centimeter of the universe with self replicating garbage 15:51 < kanzure> garbage huh 15:51 < epitron> YEAH 15:51 < epitron> PUNK 15:51 < epitron> i kid i kid 15:52 < QuantumG> McDonalds or Starbucks? 15:52 < Tyrant91101> the latter 15:52 < Tyrant91101> definitely 15:52 < Tyrant91101> better to be a hipster barrista 15:52 < epitron> self-replicating coffee cups? 15:52 < QuantumG> Starbucks is certainly self-replicating. 15:52 < epitron> idneed 15:52 < epitron> man, whenever i talk to kanzure, my browser ends up full of tabs 15:52 < QuantumG> and their coffee tastes like grey goo 15:52 < epitron> i just cleaned it too 15:53 < epitron> lol @ grey goo joke 15:54 < Tyrant91101> tbh starbucks coffee reminds me of soylent green 15:54 < Tyrant91101> i duno why 15:54 < kanzure> epitron: yeah i have the same problem with tabs 15:54 < kanzure> http://heybryan.org/shots/2008-06-16.png 15:54 < kanzure> http://heybryan.org/shots/2008-06-07_polymerase.png 15:54 < epitron> HAHAHA 15:55 < kanzure> oh.. actual tabs: 15:55 < kanzure> http://heybryan.org/shots/2008-03-29-30.png 15:55 < epitron> what is that huge blue thing? 15:55 < epitron> (cyan) 15:55 < epitron> if that was my hard drive, it would be music 15:55 < kanzure> nature.com 15:55 < epitron> you have a copy of nature on your hard drive? 15:56 < kanzure> one of my hard drives.. 15:56 < epitron> what year does it date back to? 15:56 < kanzure> 18xx 15:56 < epitron> have you read any of it? 15:56 < kanzure> lots of it 15:56 < kanzure> i even wrote my own weird.. "pdfs instead of television".. thing 15:56 < kanzure> for back when i had >3 monitors 15:57 < epitron> a software thing? 15:57 < kanzure> yes 15:57 < kanzure> well i figured instead of tv i could "watch" science 15:57 < kanzure> and then pause it when the article/paper looks especially interesting 15:57 < epitron> so you'd plop down in front of your computer with some spaghetti and it would display things to you? 15:57 < kanzure> pretty much 15:57 < epitron> that's awesome 15:58 < epitron> my friend did that with the linux kernel once 15:58 < kanzure> honestly i thought you'd be more into 2008-03-29-30.png 15:58 < epitron> he made it his 2nd screen 15:58 < epitron> it would just play it all day while he was working 15:58 < epitron> he learned a lot :) 15:58 < epitron> you showed me a screenshot like that a long time ago 15:58 < epitron> i used to have screenshots like that a long time ago 15:59 < epitron> too many tabs is a curse for me! 15:59 < QuantumG> get tab candy 15:59 < epitron> is it less flaky now? 16:00 < epitron> i tried it a few betas ago 16:00 < QuantumG> only problem I have with it: if my browser dies I have to restore the groups manually (the tabs restore fine) 16:00 < QuantumG> that might be fixed by now though 16:01 < epitron> kanzure: https://chris.ill-logic.com/mrserver/screenshots/opera-and-mp3elfTNG.png 16:02 < epitron> that's Aug 2002, according to the file 16:02 < epitron> oo... pretty windows theme: https://chris.ill-logic.com/mrserver/screenshots/outlook2003.png 16:04 < epitron> QuantumG: haha... 16:04 < epitron> that's a pretty brutal bug for a beta to have 16:07 < kanzure> epin8r? 16:09 < epitron> ICEMAN, scoreotaph, epitaph5, epiphone, epijeeneeus, pietron, Copy_of_epitron, epitronical, epitaph3, aching_rash, epimyass, CrazyDazed, taph[epi], epigenetic, epagoge, snoreotaph, epitroon, epitrono, epilogue1, epitine, epidemic, epigram, epitaph4, [n2o], epilogue, mistataph, epi, epitronics, epitron_, epitron_plus, epitronic, epigauge, epiglottis, epitaffy, epithet, noeld, epitoad, epigenesis, epitone, epizoa, epigenetics, epitaph6, epicac, 16:09 < epitron> epitax, epimule, epitr0n, ^_^, epijean, epitron_pro, epiweb, file_id_diz, epitaph2, epitronium, epitato, epitaph, epitron2000, capntaph, werdguest608, epoutine, epitaph7, epinat0r, changs_hair, DrEpi, epitron, epikeeneeus, epinoodle, epitrain, epipen, DrAwesome, orotaph, epimaas, Lt_E_P_Taph, epiling, epitro1, epigawge, epitronn, zorotaph 16:09 < augur> epitron: eugh 16:09 < augur> what is with that theme 16:09 < augur> its horrible 16:09 < epitron> it was 2002 man 16:09 < kanzure> epitaph? 16:09 < augur> looks like 1992 16:09 < kanzure> oh. 16:09 < epitron> yessum! 16:09 < kanzure> you dumped a list 16:10 < kanzure> ^_^ can't count 16:10 -!- epitron is now known as Lt_E_P_Taph 16:10 < Lt_E_P_Taph> CARRY ON HERE SEARGENTS 16:11 < kanzure> old screenshot https://chris.ill-logic.com/mrserver/screenshots/coolfont.png 16:11 < kanzure> you've been at this for a while 16:12 < Lt_E_P_Taph> yeah man 16:12 < Lt_E_P_Taph> i started using computers when i was 7 16:12 < Lt_E_P_Taph> when the user interface was ROM BASIC 16:19 -!- QuantumG [~qg@rtfm.insomnia.org] has quit [Ping timeout: 264 seconds] 16:38 < augur> Lt_E_P_Taph: how old are you? 16:39 < kanzure> you probably shouldn't watch this http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sdU05-Ewdl4 16:41 < kanzure> there were a few odd years where i was makign dbz amv videos back before youtube existed that i don't tell anyone about 16:41 < kanzure> *making 16:46 -!- eridu [debian-tor@gateway/tor-sasl/eridu] has joined #hplusroadmap 16:46 < Lt_E_P_Taph> augur: 31 16:46 < kanzure> holy crap you're an oldie 16:47 < Lt_E_P_Taph> what it is, daddy-o 16:47 < kanzure> you could be my dad 16:52 < kanzure> Lt_E_P_Taph: http://bit.ly/diybionews 16:52 < kanzure> those links should last you at least a few minutes, right? 16:52 < augur> Lt_E_P_Taph: so you're not that old then 16:54 -!- klafka [~textual@cpe-74-74-152-155.rochester.res.rr.com] has joined #hplusroadmap 16:55 < Lt_E_P_Taph> not really, no :) 17:09 < Lt_E_P_Taph> If you are in a shipwreck and all the boats are gone, a piano top ... that comes along makes a fortuitous life preserver. But this is not to say that the best way to design a life preserver is in the form of a piano top. I think that we are clinging to a great many piano tops in accepting yesterday's fortuitous contrivings. 17:09 < Lt_E_P_Taph> -- Buckminster Fuller 17:11 -!- wolfspraul [~wolfsprau@lucia.q-ag.de] has joined #hplusroadmap 17:18 < kanzure> ftp> dir 17:18 < kanzure> 200 PORT command successful 17:18 < kanzure> 425 Could not open data connection to port 3017: Connection timed out 17:18 < kanzure> ftp> 17:18 < kanzure> durr 17:27 -!- eridu [debian-tor@gateway/tor-sasl/eridu] has quit [Quit: Leaving] 17:27 -!- eridu [debian-tor@gateway/tor-sasl/eridu] has joined #hplusroadmap 18:01 -!- mheld [~mheld@pool-173-76-224-45.bstnma.fios.verizon.net] has joined #hplusroadmap 18:03 < JayDugger> minor clipboard malfunction? 18:04 < kanzure> embarrassing 18:06 < JayDugger> If nothing worse happens today, good. Minor, discreet, and past. 18:06 < JayDugger> Good night, everyone. 18:06 -!- JayDugger [~duggerj@pool-173-74-75-194.dllstx.fios.verizon.net] has quit [Quit: Leaving.] 18:23 -!- ybit [~heath@unaffiliated/ybit] has joined #hplusroadmap 18:33 -!- uniqanomaly_ [~ua@dynamic-78-8-82-238.ssp.dialog.net.pl] has joined #hplusroadmap 18:36 -!- augur [~augur@c-71-196-120-234.hsd1.fl.comcast.net] has quit [Remote host closed the connection] 18:37 -!- uniqanomaly [~ua@dynamic-78-8-83-39.ssp.dialog.net.pl] has quit [Ping timeout: 272 seconds] 18:45 -!- augur [~augur@c-71-196-120-234.hsd1.fl.comcast.net] has joined #hplusroadmap 18:46 < kanzure> http://www.sens.org/files/pdf/WILT.pdf 18:59 -!- wolfspraul [~wolfsprau@lucia.q-ag.de] has quit [Quit: leaving] 19:35 -!- eridu [debian-tor@gateway/tor-sasl/eridu] has quit [Ping timeout: 245 seconds] 19:38 -!- augur [~augur@c-71-196-120-234.hsd1.fl.comcast.net] has quit [Ping timeout: 240 seconds] 19:50 -!- augur [~augur@c-71-196-120-234.hsd1.fl.comcast.net] has joined #hplusroadmap 19:51 < kanzure> if you have webgl enabled: http://bodybrowser.googlelabs.com/index.html 20:00 -!- eridu [debian-tor@gateway/tor-sasl/eridu] has joined #hplusroadmap 20:07 -!- eridu [debian-tor@gateway/tor-sasl/eridu] has quit [Ping timeout: 245 seconds] 20:13 -!- eridu [debian-tor@gateway/tor-sasl/eridu] has joined #hplusroadmap 20:31 < kanzure> not that it's new.. http://brainblogger.com/2010/12/18/a-brain-made-of-memristors/ 20:43 -!- flamoto [~root@70.49.175.107] has quit [Read error: Operation timed out] 20:56 < mheld> anybody do any research on sensory induction? 20:58 < mheld> like, inducing sensory input via magnets 20:58 < mheld> or electrical impulses 20:58 < superkuh> A little. Did you have a question? 20:59 < superkuh> And it's not precise to say "magnets". It's always electromagnets. 20:59 < mheld> I was just looking for some reading material 20:59 < mheld> /pointers 20:59 < superkuh> When you are depolarizing nerves with a magnetic field it is the rate of change in the field that matters; not flux. Okay. 20:59 < mheld> ah 20:59 < superkuh> http://www.superkuh.com/users/superkuh/Library/001-rTMS/ 21:00 < superkuh> You might start in; http://www.superkuh.com/users/superkuh/Library/001-rTMS/005-Books/ 21:00 < mheld> gracias 21:03 < mheld> I'd love to build some sort of IO cap that could induce some sort of shared state between a community of people 21:04 < superkuh> So you write fantasy books? 21:04 < mheld> ha 21:04 < mheld> no 21:05 < mheld> I'm a computer scientist who happens to have seen one too many sci-fi movies 21:05 < superkuh> rTMS will never be that. The precision is not great and deep stimulation is hard if not infeasible. 21:05 < mheld> of course not 21:05 < mheld> but it's a lot less invasive than surgery for some research 21:06 -!- Tyrant91101 [~tyrant@99-110-134-133.lightspeed.irvnca.sbcglobal.net] has quit [Ping timeout: 240 seconds] 21:18 < kanzure> i should read more into russell's papers/talks sometime 21:18 < kanzure> http://www.russellhanson.com/ 21:19 * kanzure is looking at http://www.russellhanson.com/web/capump-2004-04-28.pdf 21:19 < kanzure> "Dynamical properties of the calcium pump of sarcoplasmic reticulum: a normal mode analysis" 21:19 -!- mheld [~mheld@pool-173-76-224-45.bstnma.fios.verizon.net] has quit [Quit: mheld] 21:26 < kanzure> lol russell http://www.metal-archives.com/band.php?id=7212 21:40 -!- Tyrant91101 [~tyrant@cpe-24-24-171-254.socal.res.rr.com] has joined #hplusroadmap 21:45 -!- eridu [debian-tor@gateway/tor-sasl/eridu] has quit [Quit: Leaving] 21:52 -!- strages [~strages@c-71-207-215-204.hsd1.al.comcast.net] has quit [Ping timeout: 272 seconds] 22:29 < Tyrant91101> kanzure, you there? 22:32 -!- phreedom [~quassel@109.254.17.41] has joined #hplusroadmap 22:56 -!- amaruk [~freeze@p54B29949.dip0.t-ipconnect.de] has joined #hplusroadmap 22:56 -!- amaruk [~freeze@p54B29949.dip0.t-ipconnect.de] has left #hplusroadmap [] 22:59 -!- codeshepherd [~Deepan@122.167.73.136] has joined #hplusroadmap --- Log closed Mon Dec 20 00:00:07 2010