MIT Emerging Technologies Conference 101
StoneLion writes "At Technology Review's Emerging Technologies Conference at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology this week, speakers in various disciplines provided fascinating glimpses of future technology, including exotica like hydrogen energy and smart dust. NewsForge has a conference report." Newsforge and Slashdot are both part of OSDN.
Resistance is futile (Score:4, Insightful)
We are Borg?
the borg or trevor goodchild (Score:1)
--Trevor Goodchild
Interesting quote from Dell (Score:5, Insightful)
To determine what businesses his company wants to be in, Dell looks for large markets where there are inefficiencies or high mark-ups. He looks for standards, because markets don't usually become high-volume until standards exist. Dell said standards benefit users, while proprietary hardware benefits only the company selling it.
+4 insightful to Dell there.
Re:Interesting quote from Dell (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Interesting quote from Dell (Score:1)
That was nice too.
But actually pretty disappointing if you give it some time... only one company
Re:Interesting quote from Dell (Score:5, Insightful)
A better way to buy, sell, and trade your games. [supergameworld.com]
Re:Interesting quote from Dell (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Interesting quote from Dell (Score:1)
Mr. Greedy Bastard replied by saying, "I have no incentive to create a standard unless I get to benefit the most. Giving and getting back from the community doesn't build vacation homes, or improve my chances of catching a trophy wife by having MORE than the next guy!"
--
Re:Interesting quote from Dell (Score:2, Informative)
A brief history [appleturns.com].
Re:Interesting quote from Dell (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Interesting quote from Dell (Score:2)
Re:Interesting quote from Dell (Score:1)
Re:Interesting quote from Dell (Score:1)
Yeah, one of the biggest examples of this is Microsoft's proprietary Office formats. From the user's point of view, it's really too bad vendors can't compete fairly on merits...despite the ideas like those in this thread [slashdot.org].
Re:Interesting quote from Dell (Score:2)
conference presentations (Score:5, Interesting)
Video taping them, and making them available on the internet or on a CD for a charge could be also beneficial. Just a thought.
Re:conference presentations (Score:2)
I find conferences like this both interesting and important. Both to keep up with what's going on, and a way of expressing your own ideas. But like I said, it's hard for people like me to attend, when most of the conferences are held in
Re:conference presentations (Score:1)
Smart dust (Score:2, Funny)
search engine ads (Score:1, Funny)
I've had a guy from ah-ha.com [ah-ha.com] call me three days in a row wanting to sell me pop unders and large banners on search engines that wrap google's results with their advertising.
Just hung up on a telemarketer who was reading from her screen about 'being very impressed with my site' and would like to improve it's rankings.
There is money in this market.
Re:search engine ads (Score:1)
Re:search engine ads (Score:1)
next time, just tell her to visit your website [goatse.cx] and ask her how impressed she is
+1 Funny (Score:1)
Dell's business niche, and music service (Score:5, Insightful)
Dell words of wisdom
To determine what businesses his company wants to be in, Dell looks for large markets where there are inefficiencies or high mark-ups. He looks for standards, because markets don't usually become high-volume until standards exist. Dell said standards benefit users, while proprietary hardware benefits only the company selling it.
Which is interesting in light of the anouncement of the music service, since the music industry is a glarring example of high mark ups.
Is that an emerging technology? (Score:1, Funny)
15 months? (Score:2)
Re:15 months? (Score:4, Funny)
"Excuse me, can you give me directions to the thread about the moon mission?"
"Sure, it's one story back that-a-way!"
=)
Re:15 months? (Score:2)
*looks sheepishly up at the street sign he just asked directions to.
I am an idiot.
Why Dell as the Keynote? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Why Dell as the Keynote? (Score:2)
One I predict will be big (Score:2, Funny)
Clean surface (Score:2)
Non stick baking pans are just the beginning.
No wax cars.
No clean windows, HUGE issue on skyscrapers
Oh yeah, and the fact it will mean a significant breakthrough in technology is nice too.
Re:Clean surface (Score:1)
Hydrogen? Er... (Score:4, Insightful)
Unfortunately, last time I checked Hydrogen just wasn't particularly practical. Why? It takes up too much space for one thing; unles you're going to use Liquid Hydrogen which takes a lot of energy to keep cool. Secondly how do you make the stuff? Electrolosis with water right? This is all based on articles I saw years ago, but I remember you needed roughly twice the electricity to make the Hydrogen than you get back when you run the car. That's fine if you're running on Hydroelectric dams, but what about all the cars in areas where they have coal or Nuclear Power Plants?
Re:Hydrogen? Er... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Hydrogen? Er... (Score:1)
Re:Hydrogen? Er... (Score:2)
True. IIRC, rapeseed and sun-flowers and similar are apparently the shiznit for producing bio-diesel, and there's no reason that the same can't happen for ethanol with other fuels.
It makes a lot of sense, hugely reduces processing, is cleaner, and is renewable.
Re:Hydrogen? Er... (Score:2, Interesting)
the point of hydrogen is not a source of energy, but a place to store energy. so we make hydrogen by electrolosys at some huge nuclear facility. then we can turn that huge energy source into a portable energy source. we can make it even more practicle by making a metalic hydride, then just pump the hydride dust into your tank and boom, you have power.
another alternative to hydrogen would be the use of fast growing plants to create ethanol and then use the enthanol in the fuel
Re:Hydrogen? Er... (Score:2)
Get frat boys to donate blood?
Re:Hydrogen? Er... (Score:1)
During the last great black out, there was a business that still had power in southern Ontario. Stuart Energy Systems. It was from a hydroge
Re:Hydrogen? Er... (Score:2)
I was wondering that too... but I'd consider things like vast arrays of floating solar cells, you can pepper miles upon miles of ocean with'em (not enough for a person to walk on, just enough to capture the sun light), and have them somehow grid the generated elecriticy to where it will be used to generate hydrogen.
Why not... (Score:2)
My idea (use it distribute it for the greater good if it is worth it):
Rather than convert to electricity using solar cells (adding an expensive inefficient step) why simply focus sunlight using molded plastic panels (over the ocean) that let sea water seep in the bottom with a collecting station sucking in the hydrogen oxygen mix - at about 1500degC water dissociates (IIRC). Only real problem is keeping the H and O separate until you can store them separately. Then pipe ashore to mar
Re:Hydrogen? Er... (Score:2)
Er, why do you need to cool the H2 to minimise volume? Why not just keep it under pressure?
but I remember you needed roughly twice the electricity to make the Hydrogen than you get back when you run the car. That's fine if you're running on Hydroelectric dams, but what about all the cars in areas where they have coal or Nuclear Power Plants?
You have to compare this ratio to the
Re:Hydrogen? Er... (Score:1)
http://www.eagle.ca/~gcowan/boron_blast.ht
Boron is inert both in energetic form (boron) and dead form (boron oxide glass). It is very energy dense and you can recycle the combustion product using a straightforward sequence of reactions.
Re:today in MIT Geology 101 (Score:1, Funny)
Around here, one of the euphemisms for using the potty (i.e. "dropping the kids off at the pool", "downloading some files", etc.) is "going to a conference on emerging technologies".
intel & dell's engineers are s.m.a.r.t! (Score:2, Interesting)
I predict the pants of the future... (Score:2, Funny)
Recycled emerging technologies. (Score:5, Insightful)
Or we need to make some of the important older new ideas, like fusion power, work. We desperately need a new power source. If we don't get one, we're headed back to a coal economy.
Re:Recycled emerging technologies. (Score:3, Insightful)
Nanotech has been around? What? The idea yes, actual implementation no. I am pessimistic about nanotech in the near term, but really, if it can be made to work you aren't going to need a lot of other new, new ideas.
Or we need to make some of the important older new ideas, like fusion power, work.
What does fusion power get you that a breeder reactor doesn't? You still have nuclea
Re:Recycled emerging technologies. (Score:1)
Umm, less sources of nuclear contamination, theoerticaly more energy, and a safe biproduct to name a few.
You were joking right?
Re:Recycled emerging technologies. (Score:2)
Well, let's see:
1) Less sources of nuclear contamination
OK, the fuel may or may not be as bad as in a conventional fission reactor: I agree that I'd rather have a tritium leak than a plutonium one. But there will still be a neutron flux that will ultimately result in nuclear waste that needs to be disposed of. And unless you have an idea as to what the final configuration of a working fusion reactor is going to look like, I think it's premature to declare contamination less of an issue.
2) Theoretically mo
Re:Recycled emerging technologies. (Score:2)
*** H. What is aneutronic fusion?
Some researchers feel the advantages of neutron-free fusion reactions offset the added difficulties involved in getting these reactions to occur, and have coined the term
"aneutronic fusion" to describe these reactions.
The best simple answer I've seen so far is this one: (I've done some proofreading and modified the notation a bit.) [ Clarifying notes by rfheeter are enclosed in brackets like this.]
>From: johncobb@emx.cc.utexas.edu (John W. Cobb)
Re:Recycled emerging technologies. (Score:3, Informative)
Maybe a technology that works.
Breeder reactors have a terrible track record. Graphite reactors and sodium-cooled reactors are both major fire hazards, and there have been major fires at both types of plant. Windscale and Chernoybl were both large graphite reactors, and both had major fires. Most large sodium-cooled reactors have been shut down, either after a major fire (Joyu A, Beloyarsk, Monju) or because of concerns about one (Kalkar,
Re:Recycled emerging technologies. (Score:3, Interesting)
Define "near term." Advances in the evolution of all kinds of technology will continue to progress at an exponential pace [kurzweilai.net]; so the long-term is closer to the near-term than you would think.
but really, if it can be made to work you aren't going to need a lot of other new, new ideas.
What do you mean "if it can be made to work?" Nature already does it, and "The principles of physics, as far as I can see, do not speak against the possibility of maneuvering th [zyvex.com]
Re:Recycled emerging technologies. (Score:2)
Hand-waving nonsense. What does it mean for technology to advance at 'an exponential rate'? Is technology some sort of scalar quantity? And yes, I know about Moore's law, and I am aware that memory density is also following something like an exponential curve. Neither of those get you to nano-scale self-replication simply by getting bigger, though. If replication is so easy, why hasn't a replicator bee
Re:Recycled emerging technologies. (Score:1)
And harddisk size, and backbone bandwidth, and the number of internet nodes, and the cost/performance of tech, etc. Any evolutionary process progresses at an exponential rate if you just observe history. (Take the evolution of transportation as yet another example - with its 'Singularity' being the speed of light (or FTL, if possible)).
If replication is so easy, why hasn't a replicator been
Re:Recycled emerging technologies. (Score:2)
Exponential: You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means. Go back and look at history, there may be rapid, pseudo exponential growth during the initial stages of technology and life (Cambrian explosion comes to mind) but inevitably, the laws of physics and the limits of re
Replicators (Score:2)
If replication is so easy, why hasn't a replicator been built at the macro scale?
This is one of the key questions. So far as I can tell the key problem is that, unless you specify your feed-stock / parts-supply you haven't really defined the problem.
For example, it would be relatively easy to build a replicator to function in an envirionment that consisted of a 50/50 mixture of tested-snap-together-replicator-tops and tested-snap-together-replicator-bottoms (batteries included). But there's no point t
Re:Recycled emerging technologies. (Score:3, Informative)
You can measure "all technology" with a single variable (or each technology depending on how you parse your sentence)? Gimme a break. So, it's just a matter of time before we have more artificial memory capacity than there are atoms in the known universe? Kurzweil may be smart, but that doesn't mean everything he writes is correct or even reasonable. In some areas, he's a certifiable nut.
What do yo
Re:Recycled emerging technologies. (Score:2)
Re:Recycled emerging technologies. (Score:1)
GE's China and India competition? (Score:4, Interesting)
Part of leadership is personal. Immelt said, "People in the organization need to feel you're a part of their life, that they're a phone call away from the top of the company. They need to be able to trust the organization's command chain to pass information in an unfiltered way."
As a former GE employee I can say GE is an innovator in outsourcing competition to China and India. I'd like to make a phone call to the top of the company: "Hey, could you please stop sending American jobs overseas?"
The board will award Immelt 250,000 performance share units (PSUs) with a present value of $7.5 million -- 8.5% more than Immelt's 2002 salary and bonus.
Source: RatcliffeBlog [ratcliffe.com]
Re:GE's China and India competition? (Score:5, Insightful)
They are not American jobs. They are GE jobs.
Re:GE's China and India competition? (Score:1)
So you're right, they're not longer American jobs. They're Indian and Mexican jobs. And all because ITI built a better home and office security system then GE. If you can
Flying Cars? (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Flying Cars? (Score:1)
They promised me flying cars!!! (Score:2)
I got enough "dumb" dust to last so long I don't know when I'll need "smart" dust!
I want my flying cars and my person spaceship.
Pictures here (Score:4, Interesting)
The future is non proprietary and patent free (Score:2)
Hey I need a partner. (Score:1)
Re:Hey I need a partner. (Score:2)
BTW, type in "against copyrights" in any internet search engine and you will likely see my bitter protest against copyrights right up there. (I also rewrote it and put it in a journal under slashdot user ~myprotest) But I've been searching for more
Read the journal. (Score:1)
Dell might try lisening to himself (Score:2)
And then he goes off and builds an MP3 player and a music store. No other companies that have done THAT yet, eh Mr. Dell? Guess he doesn't want to share as much as the quote above would indicate.
The funny thing is that they mention the new music service and consumer devices just two paragraphs later!!
which version... (Score:1)
MIT Emerging Technologies Conference
i don't get any results
maybe i need to emerge sync.. hmm ill try that