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Category Archives: Transhuman News

[EZ2ON] 132.Futurist – Video

Posted: January 1, 2014 at 2:40 am


[EZ2ON] 132.Futurist
Futurist.

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[EZ2ON] 132.Futurist - Video

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[video] Ford Futurist: Consumers Seek a Better Balance with Technology in 2014

Posted: at 2:40 am

The video this transcript is based on appeared on December 31.

NEW YORK (TheStreet) -- Ford Motor Company (F) futurist Sheryl Connelly discusses the top trends expected to take shape in 2014 and how they will affect what consumers will want to buy in the coming year and beyond.

VIDEO TRANSCRIPT:

Brittany Umar: What will be the biggest consumer trends in 2014? I'm here with Sheryl Connelly, Futurist for Ford Motor Company, and Sheryl, put simply, your job is to stay on top of these trends and analyze and predict what consumers will be wanting to buy next year. So what is it specifically that you look at to determine that?

Sheryl Connelly: Most people don't realize it takes three years to bring a vehicle to market. So even if we have the most innovative ideas today by the time the rubber hits the road it might be a little flat. So we look at social, technological, economic, environmental, and political arenas to try to understand was gonna shake consumer values.

Brittany Umar: So what have you found to be the top global trend for consumers in 2014?

Sheryl Connelly: One of the things we talk about in our publication for 2014 is a quiet riot of innovation. Well we've almost become immune to how advanced and rapid technology innovates and we have these dramatic disruptions that we're almost immune to. Consider for a moment that the iPad has been on the market for about four years and is already widespread throughout elementary schools. So these changes happen and they go unnoticed for the most part.

Brittany Umar: So how do you expect that to come into play and actually affect consumers' purchasing next year?

Sheryl Connelly: Well that's a double-edged sword because everyone's really excited about the new exciting thing that's out there, but we also know because innovation moves so quickly, prices drop correspondingly. So sometimes people get into a waiting game that's a 'I want that but I'm going to wait for price to drop." When the price is finally affordable, something new catches their eye and they say, "maybe I'll wait a little longer for that price to drop." And so there's this weighing of value versus innovation.

Brittany Umar: Thank you so much Sheryl Connelly. I'm Brittany Umar for TheStreet.

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Transhumanism?

Posted: December 31, 2013 at 6:45 am

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Over the past few years, a new paradigm for thinking about humankind's future has begun to take shape among some leading computer scientists, neuroscientists, nanotechnologists and researchers at the forefront of technological development. The new paradigm rejects a crucial assumption that is implicit in both traditional futurology and practically all of today's political thinking. This is the assumption that the "human condition" is at root a constant. Present-day processes can be fine-tuned; wealth can be increased and redistributed; tools can be developed and refined; culture can change, sometimes drastically; but human nature itself is not up for grabs.

This assumption no longer holds true. Arguably it has never been true. Such innovations as speech, written language, printing, engines, modern medicine and computers have had a profound impact not just on how people live their lives, but on who and what they are. Compared to what might happen in the next few decades, these changes may have been slow and even relatively tame. But note that even a single additional innovation as important as any of the above would be enough to invalidate orthodox projections of the future of our world.

"Transhumanism" has gained currency as the name for a new way of thinking that challenges the premiss that the human condition is and will remain essentially unalterable. Clearing away that mental block allows one to see a dazzling landscape of radical possibilities, ranging from unlimited bliss to the extinction of intelligent life. In general, the future by present lights looks very weird - but perhaps very wonderful - indeed.

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Transhumanism?

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Sochi 2014 Olympic Torch travels to the International Space Station – Video

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Sochi 2014 Olympic Torch travels to the International Space Station
Exactly one month since the start of the Sochi 2014 Olympic Torch Relay #39;s journey across Russia, a Soyuz TMA-11M was launched from the Baikonur Cosmodrome wi...

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American Hustle and the Art of the Homage

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Even many of its admirers have brought up the G word when discussing David O. Russells American Hustle. That word, of course, is Goodfellas, the 1990 Martin Scorsese classic to which Russells film with its multiple narrators, its probing long takes, and its lively use of pop music clearly owes a stylistic debt. To some, Hustle pays homage to the Scorsese film; to others, its a rip-off of sorts. At any rate, the comparison is an interesting one, since Scorsese himself has his own very Goodfellas-y film, The Wolf of Wall Street, out in theaters now, too. And while Scorsese cannot really be said to rip himself off, his new film has also drawn comparisons to his 23-year-old masterpiece. (Such a fate also befell 1995s Casino, which some of us now think might actually be an even better film than Goodfellas.)

But all this brings up some good questions: Whats the secret to a good homage? When does homage veer into rip-off territory? Why do some films get away with this sort of thing while other films dont? And how does American Hustle fit into this dynamic?

Some homages are very simple: They briefly nod at a familiar element to pay their respects to a previous film or filmmaker, and move along on their merry, and very different, way. Think of Uma Thurmans Anna Karina wig in Quentin Tarantinos Pulp Fiction, or Wong Kar-wais borrowings from the score for Once Upon a Time in America in his martial arts epic The Grandmaster. This is probably the simplest, and most effective, form of homage.

But some films go beyond that with their referentiality, seeming to borrow their whole stylistic ethos from another film. Here, a film that feels too much like another in the same genre, or that takes place in a similar setting, can have a harder time of it. For example, when I first saw Moon, I was uncomfortable about the weird similarities between Duncan Joness film and Stanley Kubricks 2001: A Space Odyssey. Ive since come to like Moon, but at the time, it seemed like Jones was using the work of a more original filmmaker as a crutch on which to stand. And Paul Thomas Andersons There Will Be Blood may borrow even more heavily from 2001; but because its not about space travel or moon colonization, its referentiality is less distracting.

Actually, P.T. Anderson and Kubrick share a couple of similarities in this regard. When Anderson first unleashed Boogie Nights, many criticized that film for being just an assemblage of references to Goodfellas, certainly, but also to the work of Robert Altman, Jonathan Demme, and others. And back in the day, Jean-Luc Godard (let that sink in for a moment) dinged Kubrick for being basically just a diligent reference artist enamored of Max Ophuls and John Huston. This is the film of a good pupil, no more, he wrote of Kubricks classic noir thriller The Killing. Neither Anderson nor Kubrick would have denied the influences, but today, you dont hear many such complaints about either Boogie Nights or The Killing (or Kubricks Paths of Glory, which is even more Ophulsian). Thats because both Anderson and Kubrick proved themselves to be filmmakers of singular vision. You watch The Killing and Paths of Glory today, and you dont so much see Ophuls as you see Kubrick you see his stylistic and thematic hallmarks.

People like to quote T.S. Eliot and say, Good poets borrow, great poets steal. Actually, the exact quote is a bit different, and more nuanced. Eliot said: Immature poets imitate; mature poets steal; bad poets deface what they take, and good poets make it into something better, or at least something different. In other words, when Eliot uses the word steal, hes not just talking about taking, but also about making something your own, building on what youve taken, and creating something new out of it.

There are numerous terrific examples of this. Many of the great American films of the seventies owed a huge debt, for example, to John Fords The Searchers. But whether it was Paul Schraders Hard Core or Martin Scorseses Taxi Driver (written, not coincidentally, by Schrader), these films all used the template of The Searchers to explore their own eras. Brian De Palma was, for many years, slagged by many critics for being a Hitchcock rip-off artist until, gradually, it became clear in films like Dressed to Kill and Body Double that he was taking the Hitchockian stylistic and thematic template to illogical, psychotic extremes. More recently, I cant help but think of Steven Spielbergs War Horse, which takes from both The Searchers and another iconic Ford film, The Quiet Man, to create a vision of an Old World that is about to be destroyed by the mechanized horror of World War I.

And heres where American Hustle comes in. Yes, in some ways, the film is very reminiscent of Goodfellas. In his review, our own David Edelstein describes the stylistic echoes well: [Russell] out-Scorseses Scorsese: whip pans, whooshes, slo-mo, tacky (but great) seventies chart toppers, actors wound up and let loose.

But thematically, Hustle does something very different. True to Eliots dictum, it creates something new out of familiar elements. Lets take the dual voice-over, for example. In Scorseses film, both Henry Hill (Ray Liotta) and his wife Karen (Lorraine Bracco) are tour guides of a sort, and they jointly narrate the film. When Karen first butts in on Henrys voice-over, the film is charged by the hilarity and boldness of her intrusion. It sets us up for some of the things she does later in the film. But it also creates a kind of solidarity between the two: Henry and Karen see different parts of the mob experience, and the fact that theyre both narrating allows Scorsese to give us a more fully formed vision of this world. (We can witness scenes where Henry isnt present but Karen is, for example.)

Scorseses characters are creatures of their environment; Russells characters rarely fit into their environment. The ping-ponging narration in the early scenes of Hustle between Irving Rosenfeld (Christian Bale) and Sydney Prosser (Amy Adams) reveals their vulnerabilities as well as the effect theyre having on each other: He had this air about him, and he had this confidence that drew me to him, Sydney tells us, even though weve seen that Irv is anything but comfortable in his own skin. He was who he was. He didnt care. Remember, shes saying this about a man who spends obscene amounts of time perfecting his comb-over. Irv observes something similar about Sydney, even though she tells us that her dream, more than anything, was to become anything else other than who I was. Which she does, when she becomes the faux-British aristocrat Lady Edith Greensley. Both Irv and Syd are anxious figures, constantly trying to be someone else; and yet, to each other, at least at first, they seem like masters of their domain.

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American Hustle and the Art of the Homage

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New Year Honours 2014: list in full

Posted: at 6:44 am

The Rt Hon Robert Haldane Smith, Baron Smith of Kelvin. Chancellor of the Order

KNIGHTS BACHELOR

The Rt Hon Kevin Barron, MP. Member of Parliament for Rother Valley. For political and public service. (Rotherham, South Yorkshire)

Professor Adrian Peter Bird, CBE, FRS, FRSE. Buchanan Professor of Genetics, University of Edinburgh. For services to Science. (Edinburgh)

Professor Richard William Blundell, CBE, FBA. Professor of Economics, UCL and director, ESRC Centre for the Micro-Economic Analysis of Public Policy IFS. For services to Economics and Social Science. (London)

Ian Michael Cheshire. Chief executive, Kingfisher plc. For services to Business, Sustainability and the Environment. (London)

Michael Victor Codron, CBE. For services to the Theatre. (London)

Paul Collier, CBE. For services to promoting research and policy change in Africa. (Oxford, Oxfordshire)

David Nigel Dalton. Chief executive, Salford Royal NHS Foundation Trust. For services to Healthcare. (Willaston, Cheshire)

Roger Michael De Haan, CBE, DL. Philanthropist. For services to Education and to charity in Kent and Overseas. (Ashford, Kent)

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New Year Honours 2014: list in full

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Sandy Hook Hoax New Updates 12/27/2013 DNA Issue NOT Adam ELIMNATED – Video

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Sandy Hook Hoax New Updates 12/27/2013 DNA Issue NOT Adam ELIMNATED
Sandy Hook Hoax New Updates Chat Room http://hoaxatsandyhook.blogspot.com/p/final-report-12.html Anon0573: Watching the Lanza house video....um why did they ...

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lexwill DNA proof 4: the most important INDIAN video you’ll ever see – Video

Posted: at 6:43 am


lexwill DNA proof 4: the most important INDIAN video you #39;ll ever see
DNA vs Book of Mormon http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=svfxSscxh8o.

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WarFrame Season 4 part 31 With Rachel Dna Dana – Video

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WarFrame Season 4 part 31 With Rachel Dna Dana

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Marine Mammal Diversity Can Be Monitored Accurately With DNA

Posted: at 6:43 am

December 30, 2013

Lee Rannals for redOrbit.com Your Universe Online

Researchers have determined that DNA barcoding could be useful in accurately monitoring marine mammal biodiversity.

Up to now, scientists have had a difficult time monitoring marine mammal biodiversity. Some species can be easily observed, while others are more difficult because of their scarcity or their discrete behavior. Researchers collaborated to determine whether or not DNA barcoding could be useful for monitoring this type of biodiversity, concluding that it could be a useful method in conjunction with a stranding network.

The presence of marine mammals is thought to reflect the health of a place, while the disappearance or displacement of the animals shows negative environmental changes.

One solution to monitor marine species is based on the organization of stranding networks listing and recording marine mammal strandings. However, scientists wrote in a special edition of the open access journal Zookeys about how DNA barcoding could also help monitor these creatures.

A routine use of DNA barcoding to monitor marine mammal biodiversity could increase a scientists ability to detect impacts that global climate change might have on these animals environments. Understanding these factors is necessary to take appropriate measures to try and conserve marine biodiversity.

The Centre de Recherche sur les Mammifres Marins (CRMM) in France created the French marine mammal stranding recording program at the beginning of the 1970s. This program consists of about 260 field correspondents, including members of several organizations as well as volunteers.

The network found that an average of 150 animals are stranded each year in a region located at the northwest of France. This number represents 14 species of cetaceans and five species of pinnipeds, including bottlenose dolphins, harbour porpoises, minke whales and fin whales. The strandings have even included deep-diving or rare species like arctic seals.

In this study, our aim was to determine the potential contribution of DNA barcoding to the monitoring of marine mammal biodiversity as performed by the stranding network, the team wrote in the journal.

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