MyLifeBits to Store Every Moment of Your Life 219
Dixie_dean writes "Microsoft researchers are developing a way to enable you to capture every moment of your life and store it on your computer. The principal researcher with Microsoft's research arm, Gordon Bell, is developing a way for everyone to remember those special moments. 'The nine-year project, called MyLifeBits, has Bell supplementing his own memory by collecting as much information as he can about his life. He's trying to store a lifetime on his laptop. He's gone on to collect images of every Web page he's ever visited, television shows he's watched, recorded phone conversations, and images and audio from conference sessions, along with his e-mail and instant messages. Calculating that he saves about a gigabyte of information every month, he noted that he tries to only save photos of a megabyte or less. Bell figures one could store everything about his life, from start to finish, using a terabyte of storage." This is a project we've been talking about for a long time.
Aren't they 24 years late? (Score:4, Insightful)
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Re:Aren't they 24 years late? (Score:5, Insightful)
That such moments will be forever trapped and preserved, like a fly in digital amber, is a notion that I relish with degree of satisfaction paralleled only by the joy I have in watching old episodes of The Waltons and the Golden Girls.
Re-run runs...
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#137 is a stolen account, methinks.
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Re:Aren't they 24 years late? (Score:4, Funny)
We still remain the eminence grise. Our typos are more correct than the not-typoes of the epigones.
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Cutting room floor (Score:5, Funny)
MyLifeStore for boring people (Score:5, Funny)
Re:MyLifeStore for boring people (Score:5, Funny)
Re:MyLifeStore for boring people (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Cutting room floor (Score:4, Insightful)
Not really ... (Score:5, Informative)
FTFA:
Just goes to show you don't have much of a life if you could store the whole thing in one terabyte.
Just do the math: 1 terabyte (1024x1024x1024x1024)
divided by 80 year lifespan
= 13743895347.2 bytes
divided by 364 days
37,654,507 bytes/day
16 waking hours/day
2,353,407 bytes
divided by 60 minutes
39,223 bytes/minute
divided by 60 seconds/minute
653 bytes/second.
There's no way you'll record everything about your life in 653 bytes/second. And that's ignoring that lossy compression isn't an option, since then you *aren't* recording *everything*, and ignoring your dreams, etc.
All this is is an "enhanced blog" - big f*cking deal.
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One BluRay movie would take up more storage than he allots for a year, yet that is merely two hours of my day.
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There's no way you'll record everything about your life in 653 bytes/second. And that's ignoring that lossy compression isn't an option, since then you *aren't* recording *everything*, and ignoring your dreams, etc.
On the other hand, I seriously doubt that our consciousness receives information at a higher rate than this. And what do you mean by recording everything anyway? All the things you pick up with your senses? Our perception already filters out some information, and is in that sense "lossy". Another "lossy compression" is going on between our senses and our brain. If you do not compare the possible recording rate with our perception rate, IMHO, this comparision is useless. For instance, what pixel resolution
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Alan Turing, in his 1950 paper Computing machinery and intelligence [abelard.org], where he discusses the question of whether machines can think, and where he introduces the Turing Test, says (section 7):
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My point is he's saving the stuff that ISN'T important - the mundane. The web pages he's visited, crappy pix that nobody else will ever see, etc.
Recording all the sensations in a sky jump, on the other hand, would take terabytes, but people would definitely want to experience that second-hand.
Besides, slashdotters already have the ultimate way of dividing up images, video, etc.
It's binary: Everything is either "pOrn" or "recycle bin."
It's about time! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:It's about time! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:It's about time! (Score:4, Funny)
We need to remember THIS! (Score:5, Funny)
To remember what all the pr0n sites we visited when we were 15...
at age 70.
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Obligatory Red Dwarf Quote (Score:5, Funny)
LISTER: What isn't?
CAT: I'm looking for this dream I had last month on the dream recorder.
It was sensational.
LISTER: What was it about?
CAT: Me, three girls and a family-sized tub of banana yoghurt!
RIMMER: You know, cats have a very strange attitude to women if you ask
me.
CAT: Say what, Goalpost Head?
RIMMER: It's all sex, and no sense of settling down and having a long-
term relationship.
CAT: Hey, I want to settle down. And as soon as I find the right small
group of girls, the seven or eight women who are right for me, my
wandering days are over, buddy.</pre>
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Dude! Now, I want to try this and it is your fault!
Copyright Infringement (Score:5, Interesting)
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I want to record my boring life in 1080p... That is about 10GB / HR, about 1 TB/week assuming you don't record yourself sleeping. 50 TB / year, a few Petabytes over a lifetime. 1 TB is now $200, so it could be done for $10k/year now.
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They'll call bullshit. They'll say that it's more likely that you plan on distributing it. And convince a jury of that. And that's game over for you.
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Plausible deniability right there.
Oh, and later on, when you get it home, use your Linux box to rip out the DRM and post it to Pirate Bay.
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Plausible deniability requires plausibility; DRM that you control is not plausible. Also, even if it met that standard, it's not enough. You have to demonstrate that it is more likely that you are not going to distribute it than that you are. Now, if the quality was 320x240, in B&W at 6 FPS, that's an argument. But if the quality is up-to-snuff, you lose.
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DRM is supposed safe, BBC iPlayer downloads are supposed safe. All you have to do is convince a judge that you were using the video for your LifeBits and you can then use your other machine to give it away or whatever else you want to do with it.
Recursive? (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Recursive? (Score:4, Funny)
Dark Helmet: What happened to then?
Colonel Sandurz: We passed then.
Dark Helmet: When?
Colonel Sandurz: Just now. We're at now now.
Dark Helmet: Go back to then.
Colonel Sandurz: When?
Dark Helmet: Now!
Colonel Sandurz: Now?
Dark Helmet: Now!
Colonel Sandurz: I can't.
Dark Helmet: Why?
Colonel Sandurz: We missed it.
Dark Helmet: When?
Colonel Sandurz: Just now.
Dark Helmet: When will then be now?
Colonel Sandurz: Soon.
Already done in a way... (Score:3, Informative)
This sounds like a terrible idea... (Score:4, Insightful)
Really... How many moments of your life do you really want to relive? And wouldn't re-watching your most pleasant memories knowing what you know now dilute just how pleasant those memories were?
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Where did you get the impression that it is meant for that kind of thing?
As long as its optional (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:As long as its optional (Score:4, Insightful)
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Not "every moment" (Score:4, Insightful)
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We're being "Microsgoogled"!! (Score:3, Funny)
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Do NOT want (Score:5, Funny)
Imagine what would happen if they could just look up the past and say "Ha ha, Grandma! You're lying!"
Do not take away my golden years, dammit!
Re:Do NOT want (Score:5, Funny)
Then he hit me with...
"Yup 'cause having German snipers shooting at me on Omaha was just as much fun as tugging it to almost naked girls on Youtube".
Shut me right up
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What's gasoline, Grandma?
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-What?
-I said HEAR! HEAR!
-Carebear?
-Nevermind, grandpa.
Wait till he gets his first subpoena (Score:2, Interesting)
A Great Measure! (Score:2, Funny)
But to make it a more useful measure, there should also be a way of adding "emotion" points to the total score (where users asign a level of emotion or fun to each event stored in their digitally stored lives) with a function such as {Adjusted true-life-years = life disk usage x total emotion poin
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I might be a pessimist but... (Score:4, Insightful)
I might be ok with it if the constitution was changed to make privacy an absolute right, and make the punishment for taking one of these files to be extremely severe.
Grey matter... (Score:2)
I've already got the best storage medium possible for my life: my brain. Keeps not only video and audio, but also stores the other three senses.
Who is this for? Those with Alzheimer's or amnesia?
Interesting concept, but it seems to be more marketing fluff than a useful product.
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Hint: "We have a warrant for a backup of your brain here..."
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I've already got the best storage medium possible for my life: my brain. Keeps not only video and audio, but also stores the other three senses.
Who is this for? Those with Alzheimer's or amnesia?
Interesting concept, but it seems to be more marketing fluff than a useful product.
Or, for, you know, your great grandchildren. Or your widow. Or for some historian who finds your body 100 years after "The Great Incident".
Or whatever.
I'd love to be able to review things that I've forgotten later on, like trying to remember what exactly I was told at work, that one book I saw in passing at Borders.
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Actually, that's a pretty intense area of research right now. We cohosted a related workshop [rochester.edu] last year with (you got it) Microsoft, and will likely do so again in the near future. The lab homepage [rochester.edu] is a bit rudimentary at present, but it should give you some idea of what exactly is going on.
With the Baby Boomers approaching the "elderly" stage, is it surprising that there is a demand?
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No, only narcissics.
People who suffer from Alzheimer's usualy keep vivid memories of important past events long after they forgot how to manage the moment. Odds are that they will remember what they see in the archive but forgot that they already saw that archive 5 min ago.
For people whith amnesia, it theorically could be used to remind the victim of the nature of the bounds he/she has with his/her relatives, but from that point, it is more important for
My Computer (Score:4, Insightful)
If the source were open, it were stored locally or encrypted at customer-selected third-party networked datacenters, this app could be wonderful, a lifesaver. But trust Microsoft with one's entire life? That sounds like putting it all in once place to be ruined or stolen.
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Now in Vista there's only "Computer", "Documents", "Pictures", "Music", etc.
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Why? (Score:3)
Seriously. I think filling my drives with random bits and seeing if there is anything readable would be more interesting.
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a story full of itself (Score:2, Insightful)
After all, the recording work must be recorded, and so must the recording work of the recording work, the recording work of the recording work of the recording work, ad infinitum. Get a life, microsoft.
Honest baby! (Score:4, Funny)
Unless you're dating someone with the IQ of Paris Hilton... Or the exhibitionist streak of Paris Hilton... I see some problems here. And if you are dating Paris Hilton, good God man, you've got problems enough.
Henry David Thoreau said... (Score:2)
Guess not anymore! Now how long until we are able to back up our brains into hard drives?
Very small subset of everything (Score:2)
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2012: MyLifeBits, now a legal requirement for all! (Score:2, Insightful)
I have a strange feeling (Score:2)
All you need to do is just ask for your personal copy.
gods! (Score:3, Insightful)
Ipso facto, their saved record/video/photos of their life would be reeally boring.
I seem to remember reading once that almost nobody ever used their web browsers history, so I'm guess this will never get off the ground.
Frankly I do not feel like I need my own black box, but I guess there will be some sound medical reasons why some people might want one (dementia?)
How will he manage it? (Score:2)
WGA_LIFE (Score:2)
(EULA) YOUR_LIFE License is non-transferable to non Genuine Life supported platforms. Once you start YOUR_LIFE service with Microsoft or authorized 3rd parties, Microsoft owns YOUR_LIFE. Microsoft reserves the rights to up
Bell is a boring man... (Score:2)
Yes, I know that is not the kind of thing you save, but from what I've seen when people have digital space to store things, they collect more things. They never worry about space until they run out.
"... oh, well then do you think I should get the 300GB drive?" says one little lady I know who just wants to have room for her 'stuff'. Yes, most
My life ... (Score:2)
1TB? Unlikely... (Score:2)
Don't need it. (Score:2)
The real challenge (Score:2)
"Show me that conversation from a few years ago when Kelly told the clown joke."
David Boies (Score:2)
My idea was better (Score:2)
prior art (Score:2)
SciFi idea.... (Score:3, Interesting)
The communists did it first (Score:3, Informative)
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What a remarkably naive idea (Score:3)
who cares? (Score:2)
Unbelievable, Costly Time-Squandering (Score:2)
Soul catcher (Score:2)
http://www.pcw.co.uk/personal-computer-world/features/2045102/cutting-edge-futures-brain-drain [pcw.co.uk]
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Is this a joke, or are you serious? I drove through Gary once; the only thing you'll get slides of there is boarded-up buildings downtown and winos lying around begging for money.
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Not interesting enough to watch those 300 slides, though, as we can see by the reaction of his friends.
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His trip sounds about as exciting as a trip to south Chicago, or a trip to Newark, New Jersey.