Howard Stearns' Inventing the Future

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This war brought to you by the RIAA

Posted By: Stearns

This morning my Internet service was out. Usually, I call and get either a recorded message saying that there's an outage in my area and that technicians have been dispatched, or a I get a voice menu that talks me through resetting my modem. They don't let you talk to an actual person until you do this.

But today, I got right through to a person. He asked for my social security number, my wife's social security number, and what I used the Internet for. I was specifically asked what I downloaded. After several more minutes of monkeying around, the putative technician (who must have recieved his degree from a Blackwater USA training camp), told me that “it was broken” and they'd send someone out next Tuesday. After several minutes of screaming at him, and then my wife screaming at him (the big guns), the service was back on.

Could this possibly be anything other than Homeland Security outsourcing the RIAA's bidding to the telecom operators? It sounds absurd, but the weird thing is — we already they know that this has happened. There's no question of “can this happen”, only a question of what happened here in this case.
Posted: 10/03/07 10:29:18 - 2 comments

The Real-Time Internet, circa 2007 – It's about the information, not the interaction

Posted By: Stearns

World-Wide Web technology is primarily static. The technology is designed around slow repeated cycles of request-a-page/get-a-page. Technologies like Flash, Curl, and Laszlo are aimed at improving this interaction while staying within the WWW framework. But the Web isn't about interaction, it's about information and, to a certain extent, transactions. While these drivers remain unchanged, two stories in my local paper this week have shown me that the expectations of pace have changed. [Read More!]
Posted: 10/02/07 09:23:24 - No comments

Mixed Reality

Posted By: Stearns



Getting virtual worlds away from a computer screen and into a physical classroom space doesn't have to be hard. These Greenbush Labs guys are using a commercial computer/whiteboard link to run open source software based on the KAT. How cool is that?

Check out their other projects and the related stuff on YouTube. What a great way to get the word out. (See also.)
Posted: 09/27/07 10:00:05 - 1 comment

Harvard statue becomes Halo avatar

Posted By: Stearns

John Harvard as Halo's Master ChiefIn another sign of the significance of virtual reality, MIT hackers transformed the Harvard benefactor into a character from the popular video game.
Posted: 09/25/07 14:20:01 - 1 comment

The Virtual Gets Real

Posted By: Stearns

I figure there is no technology on earth to which the Chief Technical Officer of Intel Corp doesn't have access. Today he chose to talk about Qwaq and Croquet during his closing keynote address to the Intel Developer Forum in San Francisco's huge Moscone Center.

The auditorium at the Moscone Center.The virtual auditorium in Qwaq Forums, showing Intel's Miramar desktop on one virtual screen, a movie about virtual surgery on another, and in between is a model of the patient. [Read More!]
Posted: 09/20/07 22:41:10 - 1 comment

Cred on “The Street”

Posted By: Stearns

Yesterday Lockheed announced that it had bought Croquet simulations learning company 3D Solve. (3D Solve's founding CTO is David Smith, who is Chief System Architect for the Croquet Consortium, and CTO of Qwaq. Consortium point-man Julian Lombardi is an advisor.) Being Lockheed, the news was carried by financial folks like CNN and Merrill Lynch, but I'm most excited by the release carried by Gamasutra and Serious Games Source, which is all about Croquet.

This comes on the heels this week of Cisco blogs about Qwaq.

I'm old enough to know that all of this should be taken with a grain of salt. But it certainly ain't bad news, and it gives a lot of credibility to the Croquet platform. I hope that Croquet folks around the world are able to make good use of this news in setting up their own projects.



This week I had posted links to some cool new Croquet project movies, but I missed this somewhat cold one from 3D Solve.
Posted: 08/18/07 13:14:31 - No comments

Current projects, and movies vs interactive machinima

Posted By: Stearns

Check out the movies of U.Minnesota's neato language lab. They're leveraging Croquet's open architecture to produce custom behavior, and the unique core model to make everything efficiently recordable. The third movie blows me away. (But watch 'em all.)

Greenbush Labs (edu software) has a couple of movies showing what you can do right out of the box. Some of the stuff they guy tries isn't working quite right, but it's still cool as snot. Must be the tunes.

No movies yet of the Krestianstvo installations being shown at the top Russian art museums. Nikolay has also combined Croquet and the Sophie/FutureOfTheBook projects – not quite as in this wonderful movie by Daniel Lanovaz, but heading that way, I suppose.
[Read More!]
Posted: 08/14/07 22:48:25 - No comments

Can you smell the logic?

Posted By: Stearns

I was petting a cat this week. She was smiling and arching her back and obviously enjoying being alive. Then she suddenly turned and started licking herself, after which she repositioned her neck back under my hand. I realized then that cats don't “decide” to clean themselves. How do they keep track of which spot needs cleaning? Now? A cat's skin must have some distributed chemical mechanism that causes particular areas to itch on some approximate schedule. [Read More!]
Posted: 07/21/07 13:32:04 - 2 comments

iPhone and the Techno/Business of Artificial Scarcity

Posted By: Stearns

There are a couple of weaknesses is Apple's awesome new iPhone that have technological explanations accepted by the Conventional Wisdom. I'm not buying these stories, and I think there are bad-business factors driving the decisions for memory and third-party applications. [Read More!]
Posted: 07/04/07 19:57:29 - 2 comments

Ramble On...

Posted By: Stearns

My heart broke the day Julian left the University of Wisconsin: 11/1/05. We were struggling to get anything out the door. An amazing technology entrepreneur (and Lisp guy!) named Greg Nuyens was trying to hold startup Qwaq together with both hands. I knew it was going to be a tough time for Croquet.

Fast forward.

I have left the University of Wisconsin Division of Information Technology to work at Qwaq, Inc. Sweet!
[Read More!]
Posted: 06/11/07 09:46:32 - 4 comments
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