Bruce Sterling’s SXSW speech – excerpt 4

Presenting the final transcription, the longest excerpt from Bruce Sterling’s closing speech at SXSW, which takes us into the third chunk of it’s rough recording.

I hope it moves you, like it…

Bruce Sterling’s SXSW speech – excerpt 4

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Bruce Sterling’s SXSW speech – excerpt 3

Another, smaller, excerpt transcribed from Bruce Sterling’s closing speech at SXSW for your reading (and quoting) pleasure. For those playing at home, we’re now into the second chunk roughly…

Bruce Sterling’s SXSW speech – excerpt 3

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Digital Skins Body Atmospheres: a glimpse of 2050?

This short-film by Interdisciplinary Fashion Designer Nancy Tilbury and Visual Artists 125 Creative gives us a glimpse at what they think fashion in 2050 might look like:

Couture becomes a…

Digital Skins Body Atmospheres: a glimpse of 2050?

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The image is copyright Felix Kaestle/Associated Press, and can be found on this Wall Street Journal photoblog page; the caption says it’s “part of the stage setting for the opera ‘Andre Chenier’ by Italian composer Umberto Giordano, which will premiere [at Lake Constance near Bregenz, Austria] in July.“

via What little headline mojo I have has deserted me | Blog | Futurismic

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TED Talk: It’s time to question bio-engineering

There’s not that much that’s new here, for those of us that have been closely following this over the years, but it’s still quite something to see listed, one after another, the many achievements…

TED Talk: It’s time to question bio-engineering

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Vladivostok, March 16, 2011

JAPAN-QUAKE/RUSSIA
A woman passes by a sign on a fire station, displaying the local time, temperature and radioactivity level data, in Russia’s far eastern city of Vladivostok on March 16, 2011.

Just

Vladivostok, March 16, 2011

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Bruce Sterling’s SXSW speech – excerpt 1

Since there isn’t a decent recording online, and as a gift to the Future, I’ve started the process of transcribing key chunks of Bruce Sterling’s closing speech at SXSW, which I’ll post over the…

Bruce Sterling’s SXSW speech – excerpt 1

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Modern rockets have some degree of automation, as well as onboard sensors that inform engineers on the ground about trajectory, malfunctions and so on. But the setup is rather like a “check engine” light in a car that alerts the driver to an unspecified problem and neither offers nor implements a solution.

In contrast, data from various sensors in the Epsilon launch vehicle will come together in an electronic “brain” that, like our own, can then issue commands to the rocket’s “body.”

“The AI will diagnose the condition of the rocket, but it is more than that,” Morita said. Should there be an issue, “the AI system will determine the cause of a malfunction,” and in some cases correct for it.

One example of this AI in action could be the regulation of the electrical current that controls the orientation of the thruster nozzle. Where the thruster is pointed determines the rocket’s direction, and a surge or other irregularity in the nozzle’s electrical current can send the rocket off course. Applying AI in this way is quite similar to its use in electrocardiograms that interpret the human heart’s electrical signals in order to evaluate organ function, Morita noted.

Epsilon’s AI also seems to draw on NASA’s Deep Space One probe, which launched in 1998 and was retired in 2001. That project stands as the most notable application of AI to rocketry, said Henry Kautz, president of the Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence.

Onboard computer programs allowed the probe to devise its own plans for achieving goals set by human operators. Deep Space One took stock of its condition and executed tasks instead of waiting for detailed planning via remote control from human operators.

The probe also demonstrated the first use of AI for spacecraft navigation, which could help rockets reach their orbital destination for deploying satellites or maybe even astronauts someday. Deep Space One’s autonomous navigation system directly adjusted engines based on optical observations of asteroids against a backdrop of stars to provide orientation.

All such systems could grant rockets greater flexibility in dealing with unexpected situations and reduce time and manpower needs.

Artificially Intelligent Rockets Could Slash Launch Costs

– if that’s how they wanna pitch it, fine by me

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