RFID’s are both a classically geeky topic and, as an extra benefit this four minute video is one of the best simplified stop-motion style presentations I have seen so far. Feel free to share it.
OnTheShelf
Where my ideas play.
Category Archives: Geek Stuff
Brain Candy – Free From Space
I really love finding short media that just makes my mind feel good. Kind of like doing some light exercise on a late summer afternoon. Not too much exertion, and a perfect excuse to have a gin and tonic. Oh sorry, out-loud voice. So I was pleased to find this short brain candy video asking what would you and others do if satellite access to and from space was FREE. What a world it would be.
Damn, I’m out of lime.
What will the world be like when personal, custom satellites — or
“cubesats” — are as cheap and easy to launch as websites are today? Help us
uncover ideas about the future of science and technology at the Signtific
Lab — launching February 18, 2009. Brought to you by the Institute for the
Future. To get updates when Experiment #1: Free Space launches, pre-register
now at lab.signtific.org
Signtific Labs Experiment No. 1: Free Space from Signtific on Vimeo.
Direct Brain-Computer Interfaces – No longer science fiction
Every young geek at some point has longed for the ‘direct brain to computer’ interface. The Matrix movie series took the concept to science fantasy. Now super-heroes of science are connecting computers directly to the brain, and the brain… is typing. This short and approachable video presentation from Stanford University is equally scientifically fascinating and an inspiring message to those who need these interfaces to fully communicate.
Krishna Shenoy is creating “brain-computer interfaces” that will enable paralyzed patients to control prosthetic arms and computer cursors. In this short talk, Shenoy describes how his team of Stanford researchers has built a system that achieves typing at 15 words-per-minute, just by “thinking about it”.
Watch it on Academic Earth
I may have spoken too soon! It turns out science has created the Matrix-like fiber optic connection to control our brain. That’s the ‘good’ news. The bad news is they discovered our brain is wired for BlueRay. This equally scientifically fascinating video, though by a slightly less interesting presenter, is well worth the fifteen minutes of your life to watch a genuinely brilliant presenter talk about the breakthroughs in how he and his colleagues are able to communicate directly to the brain using fiber optics and blue light.
Watch it on Academic Earth