Staring Down a Revolution: Questions for Sid Karin 114
Mark of THE CITY writes "Mark of THE
CITY writes
"Since helping to found the San Diego Supercomputer
Center in the 1980s, Sid Karin has distinguished
himself as a national expert on digital technology and
its possibilities for scientific research. Go here for the full interview."
Re:Mark (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Mark (Score:2)
Perhaps the Editors' "read-out" the mistakes? (Score:1)
Dupe (Score:3, Funny)
Its the first time I see a dupe inside itself.
Re:Dupe (Score:1)
Mark of THE CITY writes "Mark of THE CITY writes " MARK OF THE CITY WRITES "Since helping to found the San Diego Supercomputer Center in the 1980s, Sid Karin has distinguished himself as a national expert on digital technology and its possibilities for scientific research. Go here for the full interview."
Re:Dupe (Score:2, Funny)
by fimion (890504) [fabulousgeek.com] on Wednesday August 10, @03:02AM (#13284475 [slashdot.org])
Could be worse i suppose now couldn't it?
Re:Dupe (Score:3, Insightful)
Not to mention the fact that you still got no clue who did the interview or what the interview was about.
Click here for the interview... THE Interview!!!
WHAT INTERVIEW?????
Yes, I know I can click the link to find out, but would it be so hard to actually describe the article in the short blurb? Imagine every submitter fucked up like this, then we'd have to RTFA on every single new slashdot headline. I'd never get around to getting actual work done...
"Technological revolutions don't happen every day" (Score:4, Interesting)
I think we'll see fewer bells and whistles and more fundamental and substantive shifts in how the technology basically works and how and when we choose/bother to use it.
RS
Re:"Technological revolutions don't happen every d (Score:2, Insightful)
KFG
Re:"Technological revolutions don't happen every d (Score:3, Funny)
And who are we to say that fish don't need them?
Re:"Technological revolutions don't happen every d (Score:2)
Re:"Technological revolutions don't happen every d (Score:2)
Re:"Technological revolutions don't happen every d (Score:2)
OTOH, using the time honored, "was it created before I was born" rule of thumb, a bicycle was only technology to my great grandparents (or older as I am too lazy to look up when bicycles were invented).
They'll be technology to me when you mount lasers on 'em.
That would be pretty cool actually because then when some car doesn't respect your rights on the road you could blow out their tire (or vaporize them depend
Re:"Technological revolutions don't happen every d (Score:2, Insightful)
That is the rule of thumb for tradition, not technology.
They'll be technology to me when you mount lasers on 'em.
Invented in 1958. By your rule of thumb not technology, unless you are older than myself, and I'm turning grey.
Same year the integrated circuit was first actually produced, although the invention goes back some years, to the same year the first nuclear power plant went critical.
Ahhhh, but what about that modern icon of
Re:"Technological revolutions don't happen every d (Score:2)
I'm gonna be so upset if someone already came up with that and I missed it.
Re:Energy!=Oil (Score:2)
But you don't have to have a truck to haul electrons directly to the consumer.
If techno
His revolution: seemingly infinite storage (Score:5, Insightful)
Having infinite storage is interesting, but if you consider the Internet to be the same type of thing, there are already limitations. First, you need to realize that 90% of everything is garbage. The other 10% may be useful, but to whom? The tiny fraction of a percent of all information that may be useful to you personally needs to be able to find its way to you. So we have tools like search engines to help us. They are slowly getting better, but the tide of information only comes in, so though the engines are getting better, the quality of results is increasingly getting worse.
What would I do with all recorded music? I couldn't possibly listen to it all in my lifetime. I'd need some sort of intelligent agent to find things that I'd like and play those so that I don't waste time listening to things I'm not interested in.
This isn't some future revolution. It's reality now, and for the most part it works okay.
What will we do with infinite storage? Probably just hoard more data, I think. There's only a small amount of data that is actually usable to any one person, expanding storage capacity isn't going to change that.
Re:His revolution: seemingly infinite storage (Score:3, Interesting)
It's a reality today!? So does that mean when I'm on the way home on the train today I'll be able to watch any movie or any episode of any TV show I can name? Cool!!!
What will we do with infinite storage? Probably just hoard more data, I think. There's only a small amount of data that is actually usable to any one person, expanding storage capacity isn't going to change that.
And I suppose you're going to be able to tell
Re:His revolution: seemingly infinite storage (Score:2, Interesting)
Lawyers have such a tool. Doctors have such a tool. These tools already exist. Yes, they will expand as information and knowledge grows.
But the question is not whether information will accumulate. It is whether we will have the tools to gather from that data the information that is relevant to us personally.
Yes, in a sense you can have access to any movie or TV
Re:His revolution: seemingly infinite storage (Score:2)
Many lawyers have embraced such technology but my experience is that very few doctors practicing today do.
Yes, in a sense you can have access to any movie or TV episode you want to watch. Currently that information is out on the Internet. If your device is able to access that, download it, and decompress it in a reasonable manner, you'd be able to watch it anywhere you went. The storage medium is just not local to your device.
If it's not accessible when I n
Re:His revolution: seemingly infinite storage (Score:1)
True story:
About two years ago, I went to see my doctor about an annoying rash. We were considering whether it might be something contagious, she went off to check the incubation time for some virus. (Turned out to be nothing but some minor irritation, BTW.) I pictured her going to her office and consulting a big bookshelf of medical reference works.
She camr back and said she had ruled out the v
Re:His revolution: seemingly infinite storage (Score:2)
Google basically saved my girlfriend's life. The doctors (including 2 specialists) had her on a medication that was causing seizures and kept uping the dosage because it was meant to be reducing them. I looked up the side effects of drugs she was on on google and found a few refrences including a NewZealand government site.
This medication was definitely causing her seizures which had increased in fre
Re:His revolution: seemingly infinite storage (Score:1)
Option 2: Store data once and build a cheap wireless network. Yes, it can work on your train ride.
Re:His revolution: seemingly infinite storage (Score:2)
Yes, but you'll need to name the show precisely, including any misspellings that the nerd who keyed in the database made. You will also have to watch adverts from the original screening, because depriving those 1980s companies of their revenue would be PIRACY, and you can't eat while you're watching unless it's from an authorised supplier.
Re:His revolution: seemingly infinite storage (Score:2)
Re:His revolution: seemingly infinite storage (Score:1)
Re:His revolution: seemingly infinite storage (Score:2)
Re:His revolution: seemingly infinite storage (Score:2)
90% is garbage (Score:2, Funny)
The fun thing of the interview is though that it is mainly centered on music as example again. I would go as fa
I am with him, there. (Score:3, Insightful)
And just like that (the press), it will take decades to slowly get recognition to its worth.
There wont even the possiblilities of "Burning libraries" anymore if everybody can store the whole history and culture of his country/region/religion on his ipod mk9...
Re:I am with him, there. (Score:2)
I shall predict the name of the virus now....Celcius_233
Re:His revolution: seemingly infinite storage (Score:2)
The point is that all barriers related to a lack of information will disappear. Anything that anyone knows or has ever known, you can know, too, just like that, instantly, at no cost, from the comfort of your couch. Any song ever written, any novel ever penned, any movie ever filmed, any speech ever given.
Once the network
Re:His revolution: seemingly infinite storage (Score:2)
What's the point of having a brain the size of a planet if you have a pain in all the diodes down your left side?
small amount of data that is actually usable (Score:2)
Your view of the world is (obviously) a function of your information feeds. In the old days, that meant what you saw, heard, and felt. Slightly more recently it began to include newspapers, radio, and TV. In both "past eras" you couldn't do too much to select your feeds, and you got a pretty mixed view.
Today we have infoglut, and it has become necessary to manage our feeds. Unfortunately many will not have discipline to diversify their information input, and will only take in that w
Re:His revolution: seemingly infinite storage (Score:2)
Be fair to the guy - he's talking to an interviewer from a completely non-technical magazine. He's giving extremely good examples, because they relate directly to the lives of the kind of people who'l
Re:His revolution: seemingly infinite storage (Score:2)
Re:His revolution: seemingly infinite storage (Score:1)
How is this "problem" any different that finding music you like at the music store or on Amazon? I don't see how having all the info locally causes a new problem, but it does make it immediately available once you find what you want. Ditto for stuff outside o
Re:His revolution: seemingly infinite storage (Score:1)
Re:His revolution: seemingly infinite storage (Score:2)
Even worse, what if everything is garbage to 90% of everyone, but everything is valuable 10% of everyone, and it's not always the same 10%?
Re:His revolution: seemingly infinite storage (Score:2)
Uh oh (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Uh oh (Score:1)
Email? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Email? (Score:1)
Re:Email? (Score:1)
Just being neighbourly, is all.
Re:Email? (Score:2)
Re:Email? (Score:2)
Re:Email? (Score:2)
Or, perhaps he's giving you his spam address.
Re:Email? (Score:2)
Re:Email? (Score:1)
Re:Email? (Score:1)
Slashdotting apps? (Score:1)
Re:Slashdotting apps? (Score:1, Insightful)
Okay... (Score:2, Insightful)
I'm also confused on his ideas on buying a license for all music... and then playing $.16 for each song... Don't those ideas contradict themselves..?
Re:Okay... (Score:2)
Most people drive in pretty limited areas, so that terabyte of space could be used to cache data for your usual driving area. When you drive somewhere else, you probably ask the GPS to give you directions, and it can cache the suggested route. It's not that bad an idea. Note also that he says "photorealistic", so I'd imagine large stretches of highway and desert would probably be simulated until satellite imagery is available to update it (and determined to contain
mmm? (Score:2)
I'm not sure I'm quite getting this reference. Does he mean that the bell would have to be rung so that people will stay clear of the vehicle? If so, why not affix the bell to the car?
I'm getting the point that there were people with silly ideas back then, but I was hoping somebody could clarify this point.
Re:mmm? (Score:3, Informative)
Does he mean that the bell would have to be rung so that people will stay clear of the vehicle? If so, why not affix the bell to the car?
(From wikipedia [wikipedia.org])
...a backlash against these large speedy vehicles resulted in passing laws that self-propelled vehicles on public roads in the United Kingdom must be preceded by a man on foot waving a red flag and blowing a horn.
So, a vehicular-mounted bell wouldn't cut it - you needed the full servant-with-flag-and-horn set-up to remain lawful. This wasn't as hard
mp3's are the revolution? (Score:2)
IMHO, Ray Kurzweil [kurzweilai.net], master book/snake oil salesman that he is, is at least addressing some of the changes implied by the (what are we calling it now?) Information Explosion.
Yeah, sure. (Score:2, Interesting)
He seems to have noticed the problems with the record industry's current business model, but he's not saying anything new. Next!
Re:Yeah, sure. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Yeah, sure. (Score:1)
If we all paid what we currently spend on music into a universal licence it would support the exact same number of musicians, since it's the same amount of money. Distributing it fairly (and preventing fraud) would be tricky... but if we wanted to maximise our gains at the expense of pure capitalism we could actually get MORE full-time musicians out of it by capping salaries - a few millionaire rock stars could g
Why wait .. (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Why wait .. (Score:2)
wireless anyone? (Score:1)
Then depending on the situation, one could stream the data at varying levels of quality to the client.
Re:wireless anyone? (Score:2)
Re:wireless anyone? (Score:1, Interesting)
Why waste money on wifi when you can carry it in your pocket? It doesn't matter. It's the same thing.
Ever heard of distributed clustering file systems? You download and cache everything, it's distributed. Everything you want is transparently aviable to you, you don't have to worry about wifi being aviable or terrabytes of information aviable at your
Look at it another way... A ultra-unpersonalized (Score:1, Interesting)
Say you just busted your last set of headphones. You want to get a new player and some people have a slick looking pair of headphones to come with a updated music player device.
Notice the steps:
Step 1. You buy the music player device.
Step 2. You plug in your headphones.
Step 3. You listen to your music.
You notice how there is no 'download songs' or 'copy files' step?
This is because the media player comes pre-installed with the music you like.
However it's not because of focus marketting or they tr
Misread (Score:1)
New editorial technique? (Score:1, Offtopic)
Is this a recursive story or something?
The _real_ questions for Sid. (Score:2, Interesting)
Karin is in a position to answer some really tough questions.
The questions that need to be answered are things like, how can peer review be improved to eliminate the cronyism that goes on? When will the National Science Foundation understand that persistent IT infrastructure for supercomputing is as critical as things like telescopes in hawaii
Re:The _real_ questions for Sid. (Score:1)
give me some of what you're smoking *right now*
A megabyte doesn't go as far as it used to. (Score:2)
Along with the local storage to each PC (4+15+15+40+80GB) I own a 160GB and I recently had to clear come files off of it.
I am thinking of installing a NAS with a 1TB drive from LaCie.
That shows me the amount of storage required in a 'digital home' can't be predicted with any certainty. As storage grows to encompass everything we used to store, we store something else which takes up a lot more space.
Re:A megabyte doesn't go as far as it used to. (Score:1)
alter ego (Score:2)
How'd he do it?! (Score:1, Funny)
A better question would be is how did he get information about the Revolution?? This guy must have some great contacts!
Dupidy Dupey Dupe :-p (Score:1)
with terabyte drive they'll buy all ... (Score:2)
Uh?
Uncompressed, terabyte is about 1500 to 2000 CDs (roughly). With compression, say, 1:10, it is still only up to 20,000 CDs. A lot but hardly 'all of the recorded music'.
Re:Latest Sony all products keygen incl mp3/mpeg p (Score:2, Interesting)