Tag Archive for 'wired magazine'

Haiti Rewired

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SuperForest loves loves loves Haiti Rewired!

Haiti Rewired is a collaborative community focused on tech and infrastructure solutions for Haiti. It’s open to anyone, and the ideas are flowing like water, all downstream towards a smarter, more flexible, and more accommodating system of living for all Haitians.

Here are the five main goals according to the Haiti Rewired Mission Statement

1. Collaboration. The events unfolding in Haiti bring together an unusual coalition: non-governmental organizations, the military, international organizations, state actors. To avoid waste, duplication of effort and confusion, they will have to break down cultural and institutional barriers, and start sharing everything: imagery, sensor data, on-the-ground intel. Old models of classification and need-to-know must be dumped.

2. Transparency. Haitians are rightly disillusioned with aid: promises unfulfilled by donors, corruption and graft by officials, a general lack of accountability when it comes to aid. While there may always be inefficiency, waste and corruption must be tackled. It might not sound like the most important element of the recovery, but we need data-based metrics. Funding will be tracked; aid will be measured; disclosure shall be the rule.

3. Innovation. Solutions for Haiti’s problems will have to blend time-tested ideas with new ways of doing things that have been enabled by technology. Transparency and collaboration have become radically easier with new communication and networking technologies. On the other hand, these same tools can fail us during major disasters. How can we incorporate and build new technological systems for Haiti that are both efficient and resilient?

4. Design. Rebuilding Haiti will be a test in the politics of architecture. How can planners, urbanists, architects, construction companies and local authorities come together to design a better Port-au-Prince on the rubble of the earthquake?

5. DIY. The old model of The Development Set — highly paid expat consultants who jet around from crisis to crisis — needs to be jettisoned. This could be rebuilding on the cheap and that could be a good thing. Empowering local communities, avoiding Beltway banditry and giving communities control of their own affairs might generate real results. Can smarter, locally rooted ideas provide immediate shelter for thousands in need and lay the foundation for the city’s seismic, social and economic future?

Three Easy Ways to Get Involved:

1. Add a Blog Post. We want to hear your thoughts about the future of Haiti. If you’re here, we figure you want to share them. Here’s how to do it. After you’ve signed up, it just takes these two clicks:

2. Add a Forum Discussion. Got a question about Haiti, this project, crisis response or infrastructure? Just post a question in the Forum. There are a lot of people with specialized expertise here on the site and many of them are actively engaged answering questions.

3. Post a Status Update. If you’re on the ground or pressed for time, you can always post a quick, Twitter-like status update from your Member Page.


Join Haiti Rewired!

The Red Camera Makes Obsolescence Obsolete.

The Red Digital Cinema Camera Company is turning out to be the little company that could.

A short while ago, Red execs stood up at a trade conference and announced their intention to build a digital camera capable of capturing resolution as yet unheard of. Better yet, the cameras would be cheap, rugged, and modular, with obsolescence built right out. And they were going to do it in a year.

They were laughed at…

Who’s laughing now?

We are all laughing now! Everybody now gets insane resolution at amazing prices!

This means that all of the existing “top of the line” digital devices will be going for pennies two years from now. Everybody wins.

An whole new era of digital film making is just beginning, and the Red camera will be responsible for jump-starting it.

Wired.com has a great article on the Red.

Wired: Plug-In Battery Powered Plane!



We want!

Great new item from wired.com:

“Take your everyday metal moni motoglider, trick it out with a custom battery pack and you’ve got the ElectraFlyer C, a small electric airplane that debuted at the AirVenture show in Oshkosh, Wisconsin, last week.

The plane, which received its airworthiness certificate in April, features a 5.6 kWh lithium battery with a projected life cycle (the number of times it can be depleted and recharged) of 1,000 cycles. The battery has a max weight of 78 pounds and can be custom-built to fit the available space in an airplane. It provides juice for a motor driving a 45-inch superlight PowerFin propeller made of a foam core surrounded by an outer shell of carbon fiber and glass fabric.

Once in the air, the ElectraFlyer C cruises at 70 miles per hour. Top speed is 90 mph and the stall speed is 45. The plane can fly for 90 to 120 minutes before the battery needs recharging. When the battery winds down, just plug it into a 110V outlet — your house is full of them — and you’re good to go in just more than six hours. Bump the voltage to 220 and you’re flying again in two hours.”

Yes! Are they kidding? Yes! Yes!

Slap some thin-film photovoltaics on the wings and roof to maintain charge mid-flight and we’re seriously talkin’.

Long gone are the days when we thought of commercial airline travel as “bearable.” Long have we wondered what wonderful new tech and behaviors would supplant flying coach.

Now that Personal Air Vehicles have arrived, perhaps we may never again have to suffer the indignity of another TSA screening.

Couldn’t have gotten here sooner.

Awesome!

The Trons!!!

Finally, a robot band the whole family can enjoy.

The Trons!

Love robot bands! Love! Love! Love!

Here’s the Trons Myspace

First saw this on wired. Beautiful, sweet, wonderful wired!

Crabfu’s Robots!

This viddy was featured on youtube and it lead us to Crabfu’s many other amazing creations.

Creations like Swashbots 2 & 3!

R2S2, a steam-powered RC R2D2-bot!

For real!

Check out the whole arsenal:

This Crabfu is a genius.
His real name is I-Wei Huang, and he lives in SF working as a game animator.

Here is his website: Crabfu Steamworks

And here’s a cool 2 page article that wired did on him.

(all viddys via youtube.)

Kindle Redux

Hello All,

A thought just occured to me…

I think a major facet of why I love my Kindle so much is the idea that:

If I could be satisfied with reading only the books I downloaded from Amazon (or another eBook retailer,) theoretically, I would never again be responsible for the death of a tree.

That is a very powerful meme.

Of course, materials were used in the creation and distribution of my Kindle, but that is over and done with. My Kindle can and will be recycled when it reaches the end of its useful life.

In the meantime, those majestic and incredibly useful creatures called trees will no longer have to be toppled over, pulped, bleached, pressed flat, dried and then have ink sprayed on them in order to convey intel from my visual cortex to my cerebrum.

I absolutely LOVE that.

I no longer want to own books willy nilly. Sure, a first edition of Catcher in the Rye, or Ender’s Game is something I would cherish, but the run of the mill Hudson News airport purchase? Paper no longer!
And once my precious little device can render images in color, well, that ends my addiction to Wired; in print form anyway.

I’m already reading the Times on my Kindle, which translates the grainy, black and white nature of a newspaper perfectly.

The Kindle is in its Game Boy stage right now, but soon it will be an XBox. Fast, furious, and gorgeously rendered.

And in the meantime, the sound of a tree falling in the woods has nothing to do with my reading habits and everything to do with my eBook version of Zen Flesh, Zen Bones.

This goes for everything in my life. I no longer wish to own things. Just gimme the data.
I don’t want dvd’s, I want the codecs contained on them. I don’t want books, just the info they contain. No more cds, just the mp3s please.
It’s the ideas things represent that I desire, not the things themselves.

Little by little, the world of things falls away and the truth is revealed in its shining glory. This is the SuperForest way.

I feel so free!

Buy a Kindle, save a hundred thousand trees.

Love to All,

-Jackson

NASA: In Space Every Day is Earth Day

just saw this at wired.com

In Space Every Day is Earth Day

Double-Decker ForTwo SmartCar!!!

Finally, an answer to the age-old question: What do you get when you bolt one SmartCar ForTwo atop another?

Double the space, half the handling, and thrills and excitement galore in the 50 mph moose-avoidance test.

Enjoy:


(Amazing viddy from fifthgear.five.tv)

Thanks to Wired for the heads-up.

Beyond "Trash"

We just saw this over at wired.com

This is how the Australian company Global Renewables is dealing with “trash”
They’ve invented a machine whereby trash goes in, recyclables, biofuels and compost comes out.

Here’s how the system works:


(illustration for wired by Peter Grundy)

We need this in every city in the US and we need it now.

Happy Tuesday,

Team SF

Thanks to wired.com!

Sleep Hacking

Wired online has a great piece about how to hack your sleep schedule to optimize both restfulness and efficiency.


(image and words via wired)

Check it out! Wired Sleep Cheats

Scott Brown – “How Facebook Exposed Us All As Freaks.”

The newest issue of Wired (Sarah Silverman cover) has an extraordinary article in it.
Scott Brown, I don’t know who you are, but your lingo is tantalizing.

I’m a big fan of slang, leetspeak, in-jokes, tech-jargon, and this little gem of a piece is chock full of it.

Highlights:

Selectibitionist – someone who creates an online persona that only represents a facet of their real persona, i.e. for Myspace I rock the obligatory abs-flexed shirtless pic, vs. my Facebook page with it’s more conservative (read: $$$) button-down rugby shirt, Abercrombie look.

Identity Hive – App that enables the selectibitionists to show off their goods. (facebook, friendster, myspace, j-date, match.com, etc.)

“The suicide of privacy” – No one’s going to take our privacy away. We’re just going to hand it over without a fight. Blogging, twitter, flickr all let us give our private photos, ideas, locations, activities, away to whoever wants to know, free of charge, no need for waterboarding.

Fascinating and amazing times we live in.

Here’s the article: Wired.com

Love to all,

Jackson