What's the next number in the following sequences:
Easy :
6, 28, 496, 8128,...
Not Easy :
3, 14, 337, 5475, 33491357,....
Good Luck!
What's the next number in the following sequences:
Easy :
6, 28, 496, 8128,...
Not Easy :
3, 14, 337, 5475, 33491357,....
Good Luck!
Back in 2007, Sony CEO Jack Tretton was dismissive of what he thought was a childish new product: the Nintendo Wii. Thankfully, a wise, old owl is here to make Tretton eat—er, lick—his words. [Penny Arcade] More »
Verizon's not taking the 4G wars lying down. Today at CTIA, they announced that they'd be launching 25-30 LTE 4G networks this year, covering a third of Americans by the end of 2010, and twice that within fifteen months. More »
The Council for Secular Humanism is proud to announce its 30th anniversary subscribers' conference. "Setting the Agenda: Secular Humanism's Next 30 Years" will be held October 7 - 10, 2010, at the Millennium Biltmore Hotel in downtown Los Angeles, California. Scheduled speakers include Richard Dawkins, who will accept a very special award (to be announced); authors Sam Harris and Robert Wright, who will dialogue on humanist stances toward faith; and a glittering roster of speakers, including James Randi, P. Z. Myers, Eugenie Scott, Paul Kurtz, Lawrence Kruass, Chris Mooney, Jennifer Michael Hecht, Victor Stenger, Shadia Drury, Mark Johnson, Barry Kosmin, Ibn Warraq, and many more. Sounds like a rumble. Details here....
Texas Tech to offer quicker degrees to family docs Houston Chronicle The three years of medical school will cost about $75000. After getting their degrees, doctors will spend three years in residency with a family practice. Texas Tech School of Medicine announces three-year medical degreeMyWestTexas.com Texas Tech announces 3-year medical schoolConnectAmarillo.com powered by KVII Fast-track program at HSC accreditedThe Daily Toreador (registration) LubbockOnline.com -News On 6 all 18 news articles » |
![]() Private MD | Heart health: Cutting saturated fat alone doesn't cut it CNN ... the co-director of the Program in Cardiovascular Epidemiology at Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, in Boston, Massachusetts. ... Study Suggests Polyunsaturated Fat Lowers Heart Disease RiskTopNews United States 'Good fat' cuts heart risk by a fifth, study showsBBC News Polyunsaturated Fats Really May Lower Heart RiskBusinessWeek Eat, Drink and Be (blog) -Best Syndication -eFitnessNow all 56 news articles » |
AT&T's U-Verse Mobile app is coming, and we've gotten our first demo of how AT&T's bringing TV to phones. It's a sleek-looking, intuitive interface that'll let U-Verse customers watch recorded video on their phones. More »
Well, just compare its market cap to the other top five publicly traded US companies—it's sitting pretty at $207.99 Billion, right below Walmart, as of yesterday's market close. BIG. [Data via Mac Daily News via Digital Daily] More »
An astonishing documentary about a young male ballet performer from Cambodia who has startled and amazed the dance world with his bold leaps and incredible grace.
A drama about grief, creativity, and the supernatural as expressed in the lives of a volunteer at a literary festival and a novelist who writes about ghosts.
An erotic drama about the fires of sexual desire in a female married doctor and a young hooker she hires for an unconventional job.
First, let me say that I am posting only to rant and froth at the mouth, NOT to start a political discussion. Please don't derail this thread with politics.
The other day, for about the twenty-ninth time since I've been on the earth, the government decided our schools suck and instituted a
Barnes-Jewish teams with NFL on retiree care Bizjournals.com The St. Louis hospital is one of only five medical centers across the country selected for the program. Each center will provide retired players with a team ... Wash. U./Barnes-Jewish picked as NFL neurological centerSt. Louis Post-Dispatch (blog) League Moves to Add Relevance to Week 17 GamesNew York Times (blog) NFL and alumni set up neurological planNewsOK.com The Canadian Press -UPI.com all 81 news articles » |
Line up all the viruses on Earth end to end (go ahead, I’ll wait), and they’ll stretch over 10 million light years. In my new podcast, I talk to Curtis Suttle of the University of British Columbia about what it means to live on a virus-dominated planet.
The Washington Post is reporting that GoDaddy, the biggest domain name registrar on the planet, will soon stop registering domain names in China. Their announcement comes in the midst of Google closing their Chinese search engine, though GoDaddy says their decision is specifically a response to "new government rules that require applicants to provide extensive personal data, including photographs of themselves." Yes, that is a bit creepy. [Washington Post] More »
"Before I discuss the details of the NASA budget request, I would like to talk in general about the President's new course for human exploration of space. With this budget, the United States has positioned itself to continue our space leadership for years."
"The President's budget, should it be approved by Congress, will enable NASA to align with the priorities of the Nation and to more optimally contribute to our Nation's future."
Michael Anissimov just posted a link to the site brainpreservation.org.
The site advocates a plastic-based alternative to cryonics - pump the brain full of plasticy resin that prevents the structure from being disrupted, and then wait for brain slicing and scanning technology to arrive.
The interesting part is the old chestnut about "normal people" being too "irrational" to see that this is a worthwhile thing to do, and accepting the Ancestral-Judeo-Christian account of death - roughly speaking, the idea that when you are alive you have something like a "soul" or "essence of aliveness", and that at some definite point, that essence disappears.
In the past, before scientific medicine, that point tended to be pretty easy to identify: you stop breathing, your heart stops, and your body stops moving (apart from rigor mortis). From the point of view of other people, your "agenthood" and "personhood" cease - there is now simply a human-like piece of meat lying on a bed. Nowadays, legal death is harder to define: stopped heart, cessation of breathing, etc are not sufficient conditions, because doctors can make the human-like piece of meat with no pulse or breath turn back into a walking, talking person again.
Cryonicists and transhumanists might endorse an information-theoretic criterion of death: you die if the future can no longer cause a walking, talking breathing, thinking you to come into existence from some record of you. Hence, cryopreservation and plastination are akin to being in a coma.
Information, of course, is not absolute like the Ancestral-Judeo-Christian "Essence Of Life". The fundamental laws of physics - as far as we know - do not destroy information, they merely disperse it to various degrees. Even cremation doesn't destroy the information in your brain, it merely distributes it so thinly over your future light-cone that it is unlikely that any physical entity could piece it back together. There may be edge cases where the information required to piece someone back together is not impossible to gather, but too difficult for anyone to bother attempting.
From the site:
I do want to change the world – I want to put an end to death. I want to make it every person’s right to experience the future centuries from now, and to live without the constant fear that aging and crippling disease will take away their joy for life, make them a burden to their loved ones, and strip them of their dignity. We have it within our power today to create that world. Let me say that again, we have it within our power today to create that world. From a medical and technical standpoint all that is needed is the development of a surgical procedure for perfusing a patient’s circulatory system with a series of fixatives and plastic resins capable of perfectly preserving their brain’s neural circuitry in a plasticized block for long-term storage. Such a procedure would, in effect, put the patient into a long dreamless sleep where they can wait out the decades or centuries necessary for the development of the more advanced technology required to revive them.
How could a patient ever be awoken from such an unconventional sleep? The necessary technology exists in primitive form today – the plasticized brain block will be automatically sliced into thin sections and these scanned in an electron microscope at nanometer resolution. Such scanning can map out the exact synaptic connectivity among neurons while simultaneously providing information on a host of molecular-level constituents. This map of brain connectivity will then be uploaded into a computer emulation controlling a robotic body – the patient awakes to a new dawn of unlimited potential.
Given our current state of knowledge it is quite likely that the perfection of a surgical brain-preservation procedure could be accomplished in less than five years with minimal amounts of research funds. However, aside from a few underfunded research groups, no serious brain preservation research is currently being performed. More tragically, even if such a surgical procedure were available today the legal system would prevent its proper use as a life saving measure by preventing it from being administered before the declaration of legal death. The reasons are social and political, and from those standpoints such a world is much harder to reach. It requires large numbers of people to viscerally accept a new metaphor — a metaphor that the last 150 years of biological science has demonstrated to be accurate — the metaphor that we are machines.
Michael Comments:
Amen! The above is not so much a proposal for new technology, as it is a proposal for new attitudes. If I want to preserve my brain now, and “commit suicide” according to the Judeo-Christian-influenced standard meme complex, then I should be allowed to do so.
i need to know, in the dash of a 84 mercedes 300D i installed a new sterio and i need to know where i hook up the wire for the ignition?
Sure, we kinda think AT&T's cell-reception boosting MicroCell 3G should be like, free, since it's using your pipes to route calls, but I suppose this is about as swell as we could've hoped for—$150 with no monthly fee. More »