Artist Wants to Replace Lost Eyeball With Webcam 156
A one-eyed San Francisco artist, Tanya Vlach, wants to replace her missing eye with a Web cam. There has even been talk of her shooting a reality TV show using the video eye. "There have been all sorts of cyborgs in science fiction for a long time, and I'm sort of a sci-fi geek, with the advancement of technology, I thought, 'Why not?'" said Vlach. I'm a bit perplexed that the obvious things you'd want in a cyborg eye: range finder, infrared/lowlight vision, and a hypno-ray are not discussed in the article.
That's easy. . . (Score:4, Funny)
just let the Borg come to 0, 0, 1 and she'll have her replacement eye in no time.
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I never understood why the borg had the Earth at coordinates 0,0,1. I mean, they didn't even know about humans before Q launched the Enterprise D into Borg space.
Are we back to the dark ages? The Earth as the center of the Universe?
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Much can be explained as artistic license, or perhaps convenience, in Star Trek canon. Sometimes the writers work to have the audience understand that the story is from the human's perspective, but in many other ways this perspective is simply implicit.
If you must have an answer, consider that our current maps of the globe have no "center" because we understand it as a whole. Imagine the very first attempts at cartography where centered ideologically, with the unknowns at the fringe. This could also be s
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I never understood why the borg had the Earth at coordinates 0,0,1. I mean, they didn't even know about humans before Q launched the Enterprise D into Borg space.
Are we back to the dark ages? The Earth as the center of the Universe?
I have no idea what radix and endianness the Borg are using. In decimal, 0 0 1 could be 10^23 digits long.
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And while we are at it - did the Borg ever say anything about Sector 0,0,1 or was that just Starfleet personnel talking?
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Wouldn't 0,0,0 be where the Borg Queen lived with 17 trillion servants (from First Contact [imdb.com].
The coordinates need not be Cartesian, they could also be Spherical (latitude/longitude/radius). But to have a perfect set of integer values would indicate pre-knowledge of Earth. Maybe the Borg enhanced the V'Ger probe, and it was the first alien device they encountered.
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lol. I couldn't even read that without immediately coming up with three or four problems with the geometry involved.
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Re:That's easy. . . (Score:4, Insightful)
Sure, everything is moving... without coordinates in an absolute system, it'd pretty pretty damn difficult to calculate how things are moving.
A little bit rambling, but I find it annoying when people use transient landmarks when giving me directions ( thankfully not an issue anymore, due to the internet). "Take the second right after the Mobil station" they say... what if the Mobil station becomes an Exxon station due to their merger? Why can't you just tell me, "Proceed 2.4 miles then turn right onto Elm Street"? See why absolute coordinates are better?
What if I give you directions to get to Alpha Centauri using directions relative to Sol, but you're coming from Betelgeuse IV? Relative directions suck.
If you want to map the universe in a coordinate system, you'd simply add the movement curve and time to the location of an object. So location would be (x, y, z at t=0, t, curve). We'd just need to define the absolute location of (0,0,0,0) -- of course, this is assuming there is no warping of space-time, which is a big assumption... but I think we could adapt for this by compressing/expanding the axes where necessary. Please explain how in the universe you'd use a non-coordinate system to map the universe.
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That's a pretty specious argument, for two reasons.
First, navigating for yourself is a lot different than communicating to someone else.
Second, most people are a better judge of distance than that. There is no need to count paces, an estimate works just fine...
I will note that
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The entire concept of mapping space using coordinates is pretty insane. Everything is moving relative to everything else. Good luck space cartographers!
It works pretty well if you use polar coordinates, your point of reference is distant from the things you are locating, and you aren't expecting the coordinates to remain accurate over a long period of time. I.e. locating stars relative to earth with latitude, longitude, and distance works very well since even the closest extra-solar stars don't move much w
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Until they are defrosted and are given chase by Archer (Way to ruin the franchise Bacula!) and get the message off to the delta quadrant.
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Not quite what I want (Score:2)
Infinite resolution screen FTW!
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Solution: Capture at twice the output resolution (eg, 1600x1200 for an 800x600 video), then correct jitter by moving the video window within the capture frame and using AI to determine whether something is jitter or intentional frame movement (eg. does the new direction return to near the old one within some time limit, is the camera focusing on an object I should be locking on to, does the new position of the capture frame force a static video frame outside of the capture frame, etc). Basically similar to
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Obvious things (Score:5, Funny)
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Black out some pixels? For crying out loud, ever heard of an alpha channel?
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What do you mean you've never been to Alpha Centauri? For heaven's sake mankind, it's only four light years away you know. I'm sorry, but if you can't be bothered to take an interest in local affairs that's your own lookout.
Re:Obvious things (Score:5, Interesting)
I don't know if I would want an infrared seeing eye. The top layers of skin become almost transparent, so any veins near the skin become much more obvious, like in this picture [flickr.com] of a model wearing a swimsuit. The vein along the side of her stomach and on her legs are very obvious.
On the plus side, some dyes are transparent in IR, along with some synthetic cloths, so what would normally be a dyed shirt [flickr.com] looks transparent [flickr.com]
(Maybe linking to a few pictures of girls in bikini's is karma-whoring, but they really do illustrate the point I am making. I modified that IR camera for taking pictures of burning stuff [flickr.com], not making models look like zombies.)
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I don't know if I would want an infrared seeing eye. The top layers of skin become almost transparent
Hmmm, someone's never dated a redhead :)
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Maybe linking to a few pictures of girls in bikini's is karma-whoring
I forgive you!
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Weird, not only does IR light make your knees on different heights [flickr.com], it apparently also makes some black transparent but other black not. The black in her shirt [flickr.com] has become totally transparent, but her black bra hasn't [flickr.com].
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Infrared and rangefinder is good
Infared eyes work better if you are cold blooded, like pit vipers. Otherwise, infrared emissions from warm tissue surrounding the detector swamp the signal
Seven of Nine (Score:2, Funny)
Tertiary Adjunct of Unimatrix Zero-One
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I always thought of her as Six of Nine...
Well, any feature is fine... (Score:5, Funny)
...as long as the world doesn't look like this. [icarusgames.net]
Webcam? (Score:4, Funny)
If I was paying for a new eye, I'd probably invest more than fifty bucks on it.
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You haven't used a webcam in a loooooooooong time, have you?
They got them working at 15 fps now!
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Sorry to spoil the joke, but it's time to come up with a new one, don't you think?
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Okay I guess I should've said "5 fps" for my original post, then.
However, you can't push 30 fps at 1280x1024 via USB 2.0, it's got to be interpolated from 640x480 or something. Even your Philips link mentions interpolated several times, too.
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Why would "5 fps" have made more sense in your original post? Was it supposed to be a joke?
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Yes it was supposed to be a joke. The parent said 1 fps, after all.
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A web-cam goes up to 320x240 at 15 frames/second. You can get Firewire cameras that do 640x480, and mobile phones that go up to 1024x768
A mobile phone eyeball camera might just be the next thing ...
but will it have bluetooth? (Score:4, Funny)
Sorry, I just can't read this article without thinking about G'Kar and what he spies with his little eye.
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With your signature I would have assumed it to be Duncan Idaho and his metal eyes.
Duncan never took his eye out of his head and put it in someone's bedchamber. "Did I tell you about the bluetooth?"
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I think we need to combine this story (Score:5, Funny)
"I wonder what's going on down the hall?"
*Fwoomp*
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Still less creepy than a zoom [futurama.sk] function.
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Nah, get "the eye" from this movie
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Lost_Room [wikipedia.org]
Hint: it doesn't cure people...
combine it with this story: (Score:2)
http://yro.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=08/11/15/2359233 [slashdot.org]
Wireless? (Score:5, Insightful)
"It is possible to build a wireless camera with the dimensions of the eyeball,"
Want said the camera, which would be encased in Vlach's prosthesis to avoid moisture, could link wirelessly to a smart phone.
The smart phone could send power to the camera wirelessly and relay the camera's video feed by cell phone network to another person,
The effects of cellphone emissions are as yet unproven to be harmful or not harmful. But I'd think putting the rad source right next to your brain, without even the skull material as a blocker, would be a pretty bad idea.
But, if she wants to be the guinea pig...go for it.
Who knows...she may spontaneously sprout a 3rd eye.
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Well.. the eye socket is already a hole in the brain. Any idea how much radiation your eyes actually block?
Re:Wireless? (Score:5, Funny)
Well.. the eye socket is already a hole in the brain
Silly me... All this time I thought it was an opening in the skull...
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Or an opening to the brain, I suppose.
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Anita: "A Schreibman port IS a hole in the head."
- Beneath a Steel Sky
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I support her (Score:2, Funny)
I have a prostheic eye (wood, not glass - don't ask).
Needless to say, I had a difficult time dating. No girl would ever date me because of my wooden eye. There was one girl, who was OK looking, except she had larger than average ears. So I decided to ask her out. She didn't date much, so she was excited to go out. Even with me! Alas it was not to be.
I asked her, "Would you like to go to the dance Friday night?" She retorts, "Would I! Would I!" Well enough was enough. I tell her, "Forget it! I don't go aroun
how to lose your major medical plan (Score:3, Interesting)
But, if she wants to be the guinea pig...go for it.
I suspect my HMO would describe the rig as an unlicensed - untested - modification to the prosthesis, with all the risk of infection and other complications that implies - and they wouldn't want any part of it.
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Power & Range (Score:2)
The effects of cellphone emissions are as yet unproven to be harmful or not harmful. But I'd think putting the rad source right next to your brain
Well, it's not as if her eye was directly beaming the video stream to the next cell-tower. (Anyway, you couldn't probably easily fit the necessary battery and anthena).
Given that the picture is relayed by the smartphone, probably Bluetooth would be the best protocol (already has a protocol for transmitting video, handy for this situation).
Given the short range involved a class 3 bluetooth (~1m range) is enough to transmit the feed from the eye-cam to the phone in the pocket.
Class 3 bluetooth emits at 1mW po
Visual search (Score:3, Informative)
As soon as she can get that webcam to interface meaningfully with her visual cortex, then I'd say we have a cyborg on our hands.
That's going to be rather difficult. The retina already process the signals.
The signal exiting the eye on the optic nerve are already somewhat multiplexed(*)
Are people really OK with this being called a "cyborg"?!? As I read it, the camera woudln't help her function in any way
Well, although the device wouldn't help her regain stereoscopic vision, the end of the article spoke of converting the video stream into a searchable-database on the phone. Thus "augmenting" her memory.
The ability to finally have a search engine able to answer to the question "Where are my fucking keys ? [mydigitallife.info]" grants the idea enough awesomeness points so we
Cyber retina (Score:2)
all just as cool as what you could get by strapping a webcam on a hat.
Except that you remove your hat from time to time. Whereas, thank to wireless-power battery charging this thing remains in place 24/7 and is able to function except for a couple of hours per day when the artist is sleeping (with her eyes closed).
There are a lot of place where this cam can be used and where a hat would have been removed and an external cam would have looking weird (swimming pool for example). Whereas a glass looks perfectly normal. ...Hum in fact, she could work as a hidden cam in girls show
Human hack (Score:3, Interesting)
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If there's going to be a reality show, I want all the outtakes, like her in the shower! Okay, I don't really, but someone will. This is a bad idea!
If you think Big Brother is bad now, wait until they can monitor your every move as seen by you, yourself! "You're under arrest for buying dope, we have the recordings. No you can't get off by turning states evidence against the dealer, we got him too, thanks to your eye-cam!"
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More like "spy on the shell's activities".
Where this is going (Score:2)
You just know this is going to end with some type of new p0rn.
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I can't believe it took fifteen minutes to post that. Did everyone take the day off?
Think of the DMCA ! (Score:5, Funny)
she'll never be admitted into a movie-theatre again !!!
"im sorry ma'am ... is that a recording device in your eye socket ? "
BANNED !!!
Re:Think of the DMCA ! (Score:5, Funny)
Actually it would be funny. She'd have to leave her eye at the counter. And then...
Some guy - What happened to your eye, lady?
Tanya Vlach - Movies prices, these days... They cost 10$ and an eye.
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At least she could get 3D half price. Except she may wonder why the actors keep waiving shit in front of the camera.
In the movie, Doomsday (Score:2)
Reminds of Rhona Mitra in Doomsday (hey, I expected more from the guy behind Dog Soldiers)
Since the camera isn't connected to her brain, it's just a fancy pocket for a webcam. Just like Mitra, the only way she could use her eye-cam is to hold the video screen up to her good eye. Tell me what's wrong with that picture.
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Should I give it another chance?
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It is one of the better werewolf movies out there. It has some shortcomings, but definitely rent it.
How about... (Score:2, Funny)
Sure, it'd be quite useless, but it'd still rock somehow. No?
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Aughra? (Score:2)
( You have to be a Dark Crystal fan to get this one
jdb2
Suggestion (Score:1, Insightful)
The first couple of versions aren't going to work right or be what you want anyway.
So make a couple breadboard versions first to try out different feature sets.
When you have the features you like, make a portable book-size prototype and work the bugs out.
And then worry about reducing the size to fit your cybernetic eyeball.
Remember Moore's Law. Electronic's size, power requirements and cost go down over time (yeah, I know, that's not exactly Moore's Law, but that's the effect of Moore's Law).
Doesn't seem to matter... (Score:2)
And then worry about reducing the size to fit your cybernetic eyeball.
Well since as far as I can tell, she's not intending to wire this webcam into her optic nerve (the technology to do this exists but is rather preliminary at this point), who cares? I say get the best eyeball-sized wireless webcam she can get today, and then in two years, get the new greatest eyeball-sized webcam, and so forth. Maybe by the time she feels she's done all she can with successive webcam upgrades, the synthetic eye technolog
Link to blog??? (Score:1)
see what I see (Score:5, Funny)
Here's the blog link; (Score:5, Informative)
a one eyed san francisco artist (Score:2)
goes to caltech and asks if any graduate students would be interested in building her a webcam eye
she meets with a professor who is intrigued by the idea and says he will see if he can drum up any further interest. he asks where she lives in san francisco and remarks she lives in the same neighborhood as his daughter, and that he'll be visiting there soon
the artist says "oh ok, i'll keep an eye out for you"
badumpCHING
thanks, i'm here all week
Tanya wants 3D vision again... (Score:3, Informative)
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It was done years ago.
http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/10.09/vision.html [wired.com]
Check that out. Wetware. Ya
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We don't have nearly enough understanding of the visual systems of the brain for that to happen. The eye does a lot of processing on its own (edge detection, direction of movement, etc) before the signal ever reaches the brain. It doesn't just pump a bitmap down the optic
So much for the sex life (Score:2)
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New dimensions in pr0n.
*brain bleach*
Hmmm... (Score:2)
A Canticle for Liebowitz (Score:2)
I'm reminded of the scene where, at a banquet full of notables, the artist/gadfly type turns over a goblet, pops his glass eye out, looks at it and says "Watch them", places it on the upturned goblet, and leaves.
I'm half tempted to poke my own eye out just to be able to pull that off at parties.
From the photo... (Score:2)
...it seems that Tanya has other artificial members on her...
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