Mercurial > thoughts
view newideas.html @ 149:a5d107180b16
prepare sussman reading list for inclusion on hompage.
author | Robert McIntyre <rlm@mit.edu> |
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date | Sun, 19 Apr 2015 17:10:02 -0700 |
parents | 94e03d638078 |
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1 <html>3 <head>4 <style type="text/css">5 body {6 font-size:18px;7 line-height:1.5em;8 margin:0;9 padding:3em;10 }13 .ideas {14 margin-top:4em;15 }17 blockquote {18 text-align:center;19 font-style:italic;20 }21 .project {22 position:relative;23 padding:0.15em;24 min-height:4em;25 }27 .project:nth-child(even) {28 /*background:#eee;*/29 }31 .project h2 {32 position:absolute;33 top:0.15em; bottom:0;34 width:12em;35 margin:0;36 padding:0;37 text-align:right;38 text-transform:capitalize;39 font-size:1.2em;40 line-height:1.25;41 }43 .project .description {44 padding-left:16em;46 }48 h1 {49 font-size:3em;50 line-height:1em;51 text-align:center;52 text-transform:uppercase;53 }55 .header h1 {56 display:inline;57 font-size:2em;58 text-transform:none;59 }63 div.header {65 background:#0F4D92;66 color:#fff;67 position:absolute;68 top:0;69 left:0;70 right:0;71 padding:1em 3em;72 }73 body {74 padding-top:8em;75 }77 h1.title:before {78 content:"\2022";79 color:#d90;80 border:0.1em double #d90;81 border:0.1em solid #d90;83 display:block;84 width:1em;85 height:1em;86 border-radius:100%;87 margin:0 auto;88 margin-bottom:0.5em;90 }91 </style>92 </head>94 <body>95 <div class="header">96 <h1><em>aurellem</em>.org</h1>97 </div>100 <h1 class="title">Ideas</h1>101 <p>102 This is a list of all the ideas I've had that I felt like writing down103 for the past ~ 8 years. Some of them could be practical inventions and104 are "just" waiting the that 95% perspiration to bring them to105 fruition, some are ideas for science fiction, and some are simple106 observations. Some are really only for my own personal notes and are107 not meant to be comprehensible. They are arranged roughly in reverse108 chronological order, with the most recent ideas at the top of the109 list. The ones at the bottom of the list are heavily influenced by my110 time at MIT.111 </p>112 <p>113 If you find some of these interesting and would like to collaborate on114 them with me or discuss them in more detail, I'd love to hear from115 you. You can email me at <a href="mailto:ideas@aurellem.org">ideas@aurellem.org</a>.116 </p>117 <p>118 If you want to use one of these ideas as your own and run with it,119 please feel free. I'd love120 to <a href="mailto:ideas@aurellem.org">hear about it</a> if you do.121 </p>122 <blockquote>124 <p>There's no end to what a man can accomplish if he doesn't care about125 getting credit.126 </p>127 </blockquote>129 <hr/>131 <div class="ideas">132 <div class="project"><h2>the great computing slow-down</h2><div class="description">In general, our computers are133 getting faster and faster. However, eventually our brains will be134 made of the same stuff our computers are made of! This has very135 interesting consequences – I can add 2+2 and get four in about a136 second. Since my neurons actually work at around 10-60 hertz in137 parallel, this means that it takes me around 10-30 operations to138 do this addition. That's actually not bad in terms of computing139 time. If my neurons were as fast as the latest transitors, then140 most calculators would be SLOWER than me at adding numbers. Only141 the newest, most optimized calculators would be faster, and then142 only about 10 times faster! This means that once we begin to143 think at the speed of our technology, that technology will144 suddenly seem pitifully slow in comparison to how it seems145 now. And no amount of technical progress will remedy it, because146 that same progress will also make us all think faster. We'll147 either have to settle with living in "slow time" to do some148 computations, or learn to make smarter hardware with special149 optimizations. But this is actually really hard, because we'll be150 working with machines that will appear to us about as fast as151 MECHANICAL computers. So, in the future, all the cool parties152 will be in cyperspace at vastly accelerated speeds compared to153 how we exist now. But at these parties, the computers will SUCK!154 Of course, this is one of the few things that can save us from AI155 risk, because those AI's won't seem so scary when the're build156 out of rickety mechanical parts form our perspective.158 </div></div>159 <div class="project"><h2>unitary reverse evolution of chaos+minds</h2><div class="description">Chaotic systems diverge160 exponentially in state space. Do you get anything interesting161 when part of the physical system associated with the chaotic162 system is a object that performs some sort of computation? Is it163 possible for the computational system to play a164 percision-enabling role in determining the final/initial165 conditions of the chaotic system, just by tracing out thoughts in166 its decision paths? This is probably too vague of an idea right167 now, I just wanted to write it down.169 </div></div>170 <div class="project"><h2>microwave time</h2><div class="description">the cooking time you enter on most microwaves is171 insane. It's expressed in what I call a "hybrid base", a172 combination of base 10 and base 60. You can get absurd things173 like 100 < 61, and 120 == 80! I wonder if these hybrid base174 systems could be very useful for some purposes!176 </div></div>177 <div class="project"><h2>three-eyes</h2><div class="description">if you had three eyes, would you still draw cubes like178 we currently draw them? Or would all 2D-representations of 3D179 space always look hopelessly fake?181 </div></div>182 <div class="project"><h2>visual taste/smell assay</h2><div class="description">get a grid of bacteria, each expressing183 a human taste/smell receptor linked to some sort of fluorscent184 activity or ion pump. Use a camera / electrical grid to transduce185 the smell / taste signal into bits!187 </div></div>188 <div class="project"><h2>carabiner mushroom lock</h2><div class="description">you can take a trapazodial carabiner and189 make it so that a chain link is caught between the wide end of190 the carabiner and another chain attached to the carabiner.192 </div></div>193 <div class="project"><h2>children's tool shop</h2><div class="description">I think that kids should be provided with194 tool shops – these would be nice sheds with a good collection of195 tools to do various things – circuit components and soldering196 irons, wires, a small lathe, drill press, belt sander, a197 centrifuge, microscope, and telescope, etc. The idea is that the198 kid can now think, "I could use X to do this thing that I'm199 thinking about" – the building becomes an extension of the kid's200 body & mind.202 </div></div>203 <div class="project"><h2>fluid display</h2><div class="description">like the previous idea about matching refractances204 between glass and liquid, except you make a lot of205 switchable glass tubes in various patterns in the206 glass, and actively pump colored liquid through the207 tubes (the tubes have glass-like fluid in them by208 default.) The result is that you can cause the209 tubes to appear and dissappear, and vary their210 colors as well!212 </div></div>213 <div class="project"><h2>immunoincompatibility</h2><div class="description">take the human genome, and refactor it so214 that it doesn't use a particular codon at all. Then remove the215 support from our ribosomes for that codon. What does this do for216 us? It makes us immune to almost all viruses!218 </div></div>219 <div class="project"><h2>life cycle</h2><div class="description">it's called a cycle, right? So, the thing that repeats220 itself over and over, right? Not much of a cycle if221 you don't come back after you die, if you ask me!223 </div></div>224 <div class="project"><h2>car with no blind spots</h2><div class="description">use some cameras in the back of the car225 to augment the rear-view mirror so that you never have to turn226 around in order to lane change.228 </div></div>229 <div class="project"><h2>partial cell death</h2><div class="description">you freeze a set of cells using some cryo230 protocol and 60% survive. How can this be explained? It seems to231 me that if the cells are the same, and the conditions232 homogoneous, then all the cells should either die or233 live. However, suppose that there is a metabolic cycle that needs234 to be in a certain phase for the cell to survive. If the cells235 are asynchronous, then you might end up with some cells dying236 because there were in the wrong part of their cycle. This implies237 that you might be able to cryoprotect cells by causing them to238 enter a certain metabolic mode before freezing.240 </div></div>241 <div class="project"><h2>cryonics color appeal</h2><div class="description">perfusate used by cryonics companies should242 have red food coloring in it. It's just a nice touch so that the243 cryonics patient looks more life-like than with clear CPAs, and244 hopefully might get treated with more respect.246 </div></div>247 <div class="project"><h2>paramagnetic CPA</h2><div class="description">you take a CPA that can be influenced by248 magnetic fields so that its degrees of freedom are limited. Then,249 you release the field, instantaly increasing the size of the250 state space of the system and dramatically decreasing the251 temperature enough to plunge the system past homogenous252 nucleation temperature and directly to the glass transition253 temperature, creating a doubly unstable glass at much lower CPA254 concentrations than possible at conventional CPA concentrations.256 </div></div>257 <div class="project"><h2>room temp noodles</h2><div class="description">how does the physics of cooking noodles work?258 Could you use a vacuum instead of heat to force water into the259 noodle?261 </div></div>262 <div class="project"><h2>personal carbon offset</h2><div class="description">feel bad about contribuiting to global263 warming by using electricity / driving a car? Forget trying to264 "conserve" or "minimize your carbon footprint". Follow the265 Platinum rule – make the world BETTER off than you found it!266 This would be a small, self contained system that sucks C02 out267 of the air. It uses electricity, but it's so efficient at268 removing CO2 that it more than offsets the CO2 produced by even a269 coal plant to produce that electricity. This way, you can still270 drive even a gas guzzler, but have a net negative carbon271 footprint! Maybe something cool could be done with the carbon as272 well. Use as much electricity as you want, but negate the damage273 to the enviroment with more technology.275 </div></div>276 <div class="project"><h2>undoing spermogenesis</h2><div class="description">with enough sperm, you can derive the277 donor's entire genome. You gain more confidence in the alleles278 for a particular gene the more sperm you have. Each additional279 sperm gives you the same sort of information you'd get flipping a280 coin and trying to decide whether the coin is H/T of H/H. Is281 there enough sperm in the the average load for you to be as282 confident as mitosis?284 </div></div>285 <div class="project"><h2>mars life</h2><div class="description">we could engineer life that could survive on mars286 (probably some non-vascular photosynthetic287 poikilohydric creature like a lichen) by taking an288 extremophile from Antarctica and evolving it in289 increasingly Martian conditions. This could be an easy290 start to a terraforming process.292 </div></div>293 <div class="project"><h2>problem with Aubrey de Grey's ideas</h2><div class="description">Aubrey de Grey says that we294 might be able to live forever by continually repairing our bodies295 at the cellular level – he details 7 different mechanisms of296 damage and says that if all of them are dealt with <i>together</i>297 that it would stop aging. (You can't miss even one because298 they're all fatal.) However, it doesn't take into account that299 we are also beings of information and that there is a very real300 software component to our existence. Even if our biological301 chassies can be maintained forever, I think it is unlikely that302 our minds will operate well far outside of the design constraints303 that we've evolved to handle. Say I programmed a webserver with304 the express goal of it being able to serve webpages for month on305 some stock server. I'll do fairly rigorous testing to make sure306 that it can handle the expected load then then some. Now say that307 you want to keep a particular instance of this webserver running308 indefinitely. (The program instance is like your mind and the309 computer it's running on is like your body). You might very well310 be able to keep the physical computer infrastructure running for311 forever by replacing hard drives / ram / CPUs, etc. However,312 since I designed the webserver to work for a month, it probably313 has memory leaks, rare stochastic bugs, or other built in limits314 / constraints (think log files or some date rollover shenanigans)315 that will ultimately kill the webserver even with eternally316 perfect hardware. Do you really expect that a webserver317 engineered to work for 1 month will run for 10 years without318 catastrophically crashing? Not even Apache can do this! In fact,319 if I put in the extreme effort to make it that robust, I've320 wasted time that I could have spent on other projects by pursuing321 an unnecessary engineering goal. Likewise, human minds have only322 ever run for at most 122 years before they are destroyed due to323 hardware degradation. Fixing the hardware doesn't change any324 software bugs that are almost certainly present in the human325 mind. Think of all the pathological things that can go wrong with326 a webserver, multiply it by a million, and that likely how327 evolution has designed our minds. For example, consider memory :328 why should you expect that we have evolved the ability to329 coherently organize memories past say 150 years? There's been330 absolutely no selective pressure for this ability, so you can bet331 that if there's any fitness to be gained from not having332 unlimited memory potential (such as better metabolic efficiency),333 we have it! You might think that maybe we would just forget334 things the same way that we sort of forget things that happen335 earlier in our lives, but complicated information processing336 systems don't have to fail gracefully when they're pushed far337 past their design constraints. A 150 year old person is just as338 likely to suffer a catastrophic psychosis due to software339 limitations associated with memory as he is to do something with340 all those memories we might consider reasonable. More likely, in341 fact, since there are so very many ways for a complicated342 software system to break and so few ways for it to run343 successfully. Therefore, I think Aubrey de Grey's "hardware-only"344 approach is missing a very important component of longevity345 science, and any successful effort to make people live orders of346 magnitude longer than they do naturally will need to deal with347 people's software as well as their hardware.349 </div></div>350 <div class="project"><h2>validating neurocryopreservation</h2><div class="description">Problem : you want to test351 whether a brain is functionally preserved through vitrification,352 but you don't want to figure out how to preserve all the other353 organs in the animal. It might be possible to keep the rest of354 the body at almost 0C and vitrify just the head for only a few355 minutes. Induce hypothermia, then separate out the head's blood356 supply from the rest of the body, then just cryoptotect and357 vitrify the head. Might need some sort of thermal guard to keep358 the outer head / neck from becoming too cold. You leave the359 spinal cord intact! Then you devitrify to 0C, remove360 cryoprotectant, and then reattach the blood supply. You can361 determine brain preservation using behavioral assays!363 </div></div>364 <div class="project"><h2>freezing water purifier</h2><div class="description">you slowly freeze water, but also run365 liquid water over the frozen mass. This takes away basically all366 impurities and creates "washed ice" then you melt the ice. Maybe367 you could re-use the heat from creating the ice to melt the ice?369 </div></div>370 <div class="project"><h2>ultra strength</h2><div class="description">allow a person to visualize their muscle371 recruitment patterns. Give them adrenaline and let372 them feel what it's like to have the normal limits373 removed. See if they can replicate the effects.375 </div></div>376 <div class="project"><h2>phone names</h2><div class="description">make a PX record for domain names that's like the MX377 record, except that it is a phone number instead of378 an IP address. That way, you can use the domain name379 registration system to provide names for phone380 numbers. Then, as long as you control the domain, you381 can point people to your current phone number by382 updating that record.384 </div></div>385 <div class="project"><h2>edible flowers</h2><div class="description">Edible white flowers that you put in a colored386 solution with flavor. When the flower turns the387 right color, it is also flavored and ready to eat!389 </div></div>390 <div class="project"><h2>suicide cryonics</h2><div class="description">according to <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2008/07/06/magazine/06suicide-t.html">this</a>, people who commit impulsive391 suicides have a newfound sense of the importance of life. Perhaps392 they are good cryonics targets.394 </div></div>395 <div class="project"><h2>lead bone</h2><div class="description">Could you fill in all the empty spaces in a bone with396 lead? Might be cool.398 </div></div>399 <div class="project"><h2>the quest for life </h2><div class="description">Every stupid story has the "immortal who400 wants to become mortal" or some other such idea. I want to story401 where the protagonist loses their immortality and feels <i>angry</i>402 and ashamed about losing something that's so absolutely crucial403 to their identity. A reverse of "death makes life worth living",404 they feel that living forever is what makes life worth405 living. Now they've "lost their sunrise" or their "connection to406 the timeless universe" or something. So they go on a quest to get407 it back, learning about themselves along the way, and regaining408 the precious thing they lost in the beginning.410 </div></div>411 <div class="project"><h2>world-map</h2><div class="description">take a small table and paint the continents in412 toothpaste on the table. Make a slightly raised barrier413 around the table. Slowly pour water onto the table, and414 it will form the oceans!416 </div></div>417 <div class="project"><h2>stage magic rituals</h2><div class="description">rituals should incorporate elements of stage418 magic. Foe example in Teller's tempest, they have a scene where419 they levitate a crown in front of someone, then put it on his420 head. They also have a wedding ceremony where they levitated the421 bride as well. Actual weddings and other ceremonies should422 incorporate stage magic as an enhancement.424 </div></div>425 <div class="project"><h2>isotope time dilation</h2><div class="description">use a cyclotron to speed up rare isotopes426 developed in nuclear fusion experiments. The relativistic time427 dilation will stop the isotopes from decaying, and allow time to428 study them. This is based on radioactive isotopes that fall429 through the earth's atmosphere that take hundreds of times430 longer to decay than normal.432 </div></div>433 <div class="project"><h2>marsupial stimulation</h2><div class="description">You take a freshly pouched marsupial baby,434 and show it videos and other interactive things while it matures435 in the pouch. What mental effects would this have?437 </div></div>438 <div class="project"><h2>dynamic re-keying</h2><div class="description">Some older ways of tuning instruments sound439 better, but we use the even-tempered scale today because it makes440 it easier to switch keys. With electronic music, why not make441 key-annotations and dynamically re-tune the piece to sound good442 in the current key? Could be done as a midi+annotation -> midi443 compiler for experimentation.445 </div></div>446 <div class="project"><h2>death always implies damage</h2><div class="description">is is possible for a corpse to differ447 from a living person only in the fact that one is dead and the448 other is alive? NO! A corpse must always have some sort of449 molecular damage which causes the loss of function!451 </div></div>452 <div class="project"><h2>inner eye</h2><div class="description">Surgically install a bunch of tiny cameras inside a453 person. Then, you can activate them all and get a454 picture of your internal organs for diagnostic455 purposes.457 </div></div>458 <div class="project"><h2>chaos rails</h2><div class="description">should make a visualization of the homoclinic tangle,459 it's truly beautiful.461 </div></div>462 <div class="project"><h2>context gobbler</h2><div class="description">this would be in "inside-out macro" that takes463 the context (like you use for things like error, continuations,464 and friends) and transforms it to something else. Maybe useful?466 </div></div>467 <div class="project"><h2>cryonics middle ages</h2><div class="description">some people say that cryonics is an468 experiment and that it is foolish to wait until we have revived a469 human. There is a middle ground where the procedure has a dismal470 success rate on humans, say 1 in 20, so that you'd be a fool to471 try revival. Nonetheless, this very risky procedure could be the472 legal proof of concept needed to create a new class of life473 between "living" and "dead": "stasis".475 </div></div>476 <div class="project"><h2>philosophy of the mirror</h2><div class="description">neat thought experiment – if you take a477 mirror of someone by actually reversing a person's chirality478 molecule by molecule, then will the only be able to read mirror479 writing? The answer is yes, by analogy to a purely mechanical480 scan-tron device. This is one of the only interesting transforms I481 know that can take a human brain and change it in subtle,482 non-destructive ways. It's also an argument against dualism.484 </div></div>485 <div class="project"><h2>biosphere in a bottle</h2><div class="description">There are around 15 million species. 15486 million stem cells will fill only a tiny size, far less than a cubic487 inch. Preserve a single cell from every species on earth in this488 small space, and you will have a record of our current biosphere489 that can be protected. "Hold the genetic data of all species in490 your hand!"492 </div></div>493 <div class="project"><h2>chaos lock</h2><div class="description">The "arrow of time" points in the direction of494 increasing entropy. The time evolution of chaotic495 systems depend exquisitely on their initial state. If496 you take a measurement of a chaotic system at any497 given point of time, you can evolve that system498 backwards or forwards based on your measurement. So499 let's say you start the chaotic system in a VERY low500 entropy state, then let it run for a while, then take501 a measurement with some uncertainty. Your502 measurement is pretty good, but obviously not503 PERFECT. If you evolve the chaotic system back in504 time, then you will see that you don't really reach505 a state with low entropy an hour before (the entropy506 is easy to measure with surrogates like alignment,507 etc). So use this technique to SEARCH for a more508 accurate measurement! This potentially can give you509 many more orders of magnitude than you could get alone510 just using an instrument. Sometimes it will give you511 bad results, the the odds of it doing that are512 infinitesimal, and you can just measure a couple of513 times.515 </div></div>516 <div class="project"><h2>cryo-evolution</h2><div class="description">perhaps there would be a way to rapidly evolve a517 symbiotic bacterial organism that could protect518 human tissues from freezing damage.520 </div></div>521 <div class="project"><h2>suicide parasite</h2><div class="description">sometimes, people kill themselves for no good522 reason. We often explain this with things like "hidden523 depression" or we say that they had something like chronic jaw or524 back pain. I think that smells of rationalization. I don't buy525 it. I propose that in many suicide cases there is a disease that526 causes the suicidal behavior. We already know that certain527 parasites have mind-bending properties in other animals, even528 mammals like mice. It's not much of a stretch to imagine a529 parasite that causes suicides in humans. Some problems:531 <dl><dt>What does the suicide parasite get out of it?</dt>532 <dd>This might be answered by the whole thing being a glitch caused by cross-species contamination. Toxoplasma works this way.533 </dd>534 <dt>What predictions does a disease model make</dt><dd>suicide should535 be more common among people who share a contagion536 vector. There should be suicides that don't make any537 sense : people who weren't really depressed, who had no538 reason to kill themselves. People who have killed themselves539 should have a higher incidence of some unknown parasite in540 their brains.542 </dd>543 </dl>544 </div>546 </div></div>547 <div class="project"><h2>domestic insects</h2><div class="description">People should eat more bugs because they're much548 more efficient, so why not do some major domestication research549 to make very appealing bugs? Beetles, in particular, seem to be550 excellent targets for domestication because they have extreme551 levels of genetic malleability.553 </div></div>554 <div class="project"><h2>birth-clones</h2><div class="description">What if each person was intentionally split at birth555 into a normal embryo and a few "backup" cells which556 is then frozen. The backup cells are created just557 the same way as natural identical twins. The backups558 can be used to regenerate organs. etc. Also, it559 would be a good sci fi concept, because you could560 have a culture where people reward people who were561 especially awesome are "reborn" from their562 backups. Imagine having a young Bach every563 generation, etc.565 </div></div>566 <div class="project"><h2>pronunciation guide</h2><div class="description">a simple webpage where you type in a word and567 it returns a simple, English sentence describing exactly how to568 pronounce the word. For people who don't want to learn IPA.570 </div></div>571 <div class="project"><h2>cortex-search</h2><div class="description">use the repertoire of actions learned to limit the572 search space of possible actions.574 </div></div>575 <div class="project"><h2>learning to teleport</h2><div class="description">scifi idea, this is a story about a person576 who is struggling with his/her society's ideas about577 teleportation. It's considered a fundamental part of being a578 member of that society (after all, the difference between animals579 and humans is that humans are creatures of pure information while580 animals are burdened with base matter, "that's how you travel the581 stars, etc") Humans are born normally, grow up, and then582 eventually transcend via destructive upload. Analogies to jumping583 off a diving board into a pool (which I simply <i>could not do</i> for584 a long time), etc.586 </div></div>587 <div class="project"><h2>no-float-ice</h2><div class="description">cup that has cross beams at the bottom where ice588 forms. Then when you drink liquid from the glass,589 the ice stays at the bottom and doesn't hit your590 lips. For bars and fancy things.592 </div></div>593 <div class="project"><h2>bitcoins for immigrants</h2><div class="description">A common case with Mexican immigrants594 (illegal or not) is that they want to send money they've earned595 in the US back to their families in Mexico. They currently do this596 through things like Money Gram or Western Union, and they get597 fleeced in the process with fees. Bitcoin could greatly reduce598 the cost of sending money from America to Mexico, but I don't599 believe that it's currently used for that among Mexican600 immigrants currently due to lack of knowledge. I bet you could601 set up physical locations like those obnoxious Western Union huts602 in places like Texas, Arizona, etc, and greatly undercut603 them. Or, perhaps some educational seminars about bitcoin might604 be in order. There's some money to be made there because there is605 great demand, and it's a good thing to boot!607 </div></div>608 <div class="project"><h2>reverse eye-tracking</h2><div class="description">A painting that is actually a digital screen609 with a camera. It records people's eye tracks permanently. It's610 "artistic" because paintings are normally these things that you611 look at without changing, but this one is changed the second you612 look at it, recording where <i>you</i> looked forever for others to613 see. Make it be a painting of a woman and see the trolling as the614 breasts and groin area light up with interest from all the males615 passing by.617 </div></div>618 <div class="project"><h2>smart toilets</h2><div class="description">Instead of using indirect measures like infrared619 detectors of the presence of a person, use computer620 vision to directly measure whether the toilet needs621 to be flushed. I think a lot of things will end up622 going this way as we get better computer vision.624 </div></div>625 <div class="project"><h2>validate chemopreservation</h2><div class="description">chemopreservation is difficult to626 validate because it destroys the functionality of a brain, and627 brain simulation will take a long time to mature as a628 technology. However, one very powerful way to validate629 chemopreservation would be to have a person/animal learn630 something with high complexity such as a number or the solution631 to a maze, or a flashbulb memory. Then you preserve their brain632 chemically, slice it up, and read <i>that specific memory</i> from the633 detailed brain scan. Much more difficult, but much more doable.635 </div></div>636 <div class="project"><h2>candy screw</h2><div class="description">edible candy screw with candy nuts that you can screw637 as well.639 </div></div>640 <div class="project"><h2>better bibliography</h2><div class="description">when writing a thesis or paper, have the641 bibliography not just be an opaque list of resources, but have it642 be a list of <i>summaries</i> and <i>qualities</i> that each paper has in643 the context of the paper being written. When examining a644 bibliography, I want to know if reading the papers in the645 bibliography are worth my time, and I also am probably also646 interested in exactly the things that are being discussed in the647 paper I'm reading. The bibliography is the perfect place to648 provide information about the referenced papers from the649 author's perspective. I will use this biographic form in my own650 thesis.652 </div></div>653 <div class="project"><h2>digital inter-library loan</h2><div class="description">libraries at universities already do654 inter-library loans for books, so why not do the same for access655 to stupid paywalled digital papers? All the universities could656 allow access to articles for registered students to all the files657 available through any participating university. This could be658 achieved by sending requests through proxies at participating659 universities. Each university would decide who at the university660 can access the proxy network. Access to the proxy network could661 be made easy using something like <a href="http://libx.org/">http://libx.org/</a>.663 </div></div>664 <div class="project"><h2>chess visual</h2><div class="description">to show the vast size of the game trees considered665 by computers, show two people playing chess in a666 void. They are floating in space, and there is a667 simple chess board between them. Then, as they play,668 the game tree's they are considering are drawn669 behind him. The root of the tree starts centered in670 their heads or whatever they use to think, and the671 tree grows out from behind, never crossing the672 dividing plane between the two players. Each673 player's tree is a different color. As they grow,674 there are animations for pruning, etc. Eventually,675 they look like the hemispheres of a brain, wings,676 etc. A human's tree might occasionally have a long677 chain, while the computer tree would be more678 uniform. You could compare deep blue and a modern679 laptop. Use actual data when fighting two computers!681 </div></div>682 <div class="project"><h2>time verification</h2><div class="description">some standard way to verify that some piece of683 data was recorded at a specific time. Might involve a time684 server, a key for each time period, something like that.686 </div></div>687 <div class="project"><h2>tamper proof gold bars</h2><div class="description"><a href="http://www.tungsten-alloy.com/gold-plated-tungsten-alloy-bar.html">this site</a> offers gold plated tungsten bars688 as "novelty" items. One reason to prefer coins is because they689 are much harder to counterfeit because there is less surface area690 to mass ratio. However, gold bars are still a great design691 because they can hold a lot of value in a small space. A gold bar692 could be given the same protections (and more) that gold coins693 have to offer by changing it into a "gold book", which would have694 hundreds of "pages" of gold bound together. This could be695 implemented with multiple steel rods going through the book which696 can be removed, or some more classier mechanism for holding the697 pages. The point is that the bar can be EASILY subdivided (and698 people would perform this test before buying), thus guaranteeing699 it's authenticity.701 </div></div>702 <div class="project"><h2>aurellem shirt</h2><div class="description">I should make an aurellem star symbol tee-shirt.704 </div></div>705 <div class="project"><h2>touch vision</h2><div class="description">inspired by GelSight, I want to reexamine cortex and706 see if I could implement touch as a very low range707 form of vision.709 </div></div>710 <div class="project"><h2>high school science</h2><div class="description">this is a lesson in scientific ethics. The711 goal is to calculate <i>g</i>, the local gravitational712 acceleration. The students are told that the textbook says it's713 <i>exactly</i> 9.81 before they start the experiment. See how they714 doctor their results to get closer to the textbook value. It's715 neat because for any given school, <i>g</i> is probably <b>not</b> exactly716 equal to 9.81, because that is just an average!718 </div></div>719 <div class="project"><h2>opencourseware subtitles</h2><div class="description">there are ladies who type up lectures720 while they are being given. These recordings should be kept and721 given to OCW for subtitles. If the timestamps of keys are722 recorded, then it is easy to make subtitles.724 </div></div>725 <div class="project"><h2>screen locking timing</h2><div class="description">you use your computer camera to see if you726 are sitting in front of the computer. If you are, then the screen727 will never lock. If you are, then the screen will lock with a728 30-40 second timeout. It's an extension of using inactivity to729 initiate the countdown, just with more information.731 </div></div>732 <div class="project"><h2>mirror toilet</h2><div class="description">a toilet with a square basin made or mirror instead733 or porcelain. That way, you can see how good of a734 wipe job you have done / watch how your excretion735 system works.737 </div></div>738 <div class="project"><h2>test dummies</h2><div class="description">why don't we clone anencephalic humans and use then to739 test <i>in vivo</i> human organ systems and drugs? It740 would be ethical as long as there are women who are741 willing to host the clones, and it would be a742 tremendous resource for studying the human body. I743 see nothing wrong with it morally, since no one is744 suffering, and it stands to save many lives throughout745 more advanced technology.747 </div></div>748 <div class="project"><h2>X-ray telepresence</h2><div class="description">given that a doctor is operating on a patient749 via telepresence, one cool things you can do is shine X-rays into750 the patient to view the insides during real time. If the system751 was coupled with a Bayesian model of the layout of the structure,752 and the x-rays were only fired whenever the uncertainty of the753 model reached a certain threshold, then the radiation damage754 and surgery risk could be minimized.756 </div></div>757 <div class="project"><h2>superfluid vascular system</h2><div class="description">I wonder what would happen if you758 replaced the blood in a human with a superfluid. What would the759 physical dynamics be? Would the superfluid flow through the760 vasculature, or would it ignore it and travel through the cells,761 or something else entirely. Since superfluids need to be cold to762 retain their superfluidity, how would the dynamics change during763 perfusion of a superfluid, where the fluid gains and looses764 superfluidity as it goes deeper into the body and is cooled by765 superfluid from upstream. In summary there are two things to766 simulate 1.) replace all blood in human with superfluid767 instantly. 2.) perfuse superfluid into human.769 </div></div>770 <div class="project"><h2>projective guessing</h2><div class="description">I think that we read and see things by771 making a really good guess about what we're expecting to see,772 and then searching for our guess in what we see. If it really773 doesn't match, then we start to make more guesses / analyze the774 image from first principles, but most stuff is projective775 guessing.777 </div></div>778 <div class="project"><h2>Intestinal flora maintenance</h2><div class="description">why not inoculate babies at birth779 with "ideal" gut flora instead of whatever bullshit they780 naturally get, thus giving them optimal digestive/nutrient781 extraction capabilities. Might also be able to make their farts782 not stink for life, too. MORE IMPORTANTLY, might help to783 preventatively stop some forms of <i>colic</i>, which affects 1 in 5784 babies and causes constant screaming and pain for about 5 weeks.786 </div></div>787 <div class="project"><h2>server culture : mirrors</h2><div class="description">make a distributed system where people788 can mirror the websites of people they like – essentially cover789 the server costs of favored websites. This could make popular790 websites run at no cost. The system would require that the791 mirrored content be the same as the official source. Sort of like792 bit-torrent for websites.794 </div></div>795 <div class="project"><h2>map programming</h2><div class="description">one problem with functional programming is that796 in order to remain functional, you have to pass up arguments up797 into each calling function to get the full range of behavior798 from the lower level functions. Normally people come to a799 compromise involving abstraction and sparing use of dynamic800 variables to configure runtime behavior. What would be the801 advantages of making a programming language where every function802 receives one argument, a map, which contains all the symbol803 bindings it would ever need? This map is passed on to all804 subordinate functions. This way, you could replace functions on805 the fly, and arrange for there to be sensible defaults,806 etc. Might cause more harm than good but is an interesting idea.808 </div></div>809 <div class="project"><h2>rest nest</h2><div class="description">a small EEG device you would attach to your head when810 you go to sleep at night. ML algorithms would determine811 your particular sleep cycles. This would mostly be an812 alarm clock that you could give a time range, say813 7:00AM - 7:15AM, and it would wake you up during an814 ideal time corresponding to then end of one of your 90815 min sleep cycles. You would feel much more rested upon816 waking up, and would wake up faster. There might be817 some other uses for the EEG data as well.819 </div></div>820 <div class="project"><h2>image compression</h2><div class="description">use a library like gimp or opencv to process an821 image to make it have less entropy, then store the reverse of822 those operations along with the compressed simpler image as a823 super-compressed image file (possibly accepting some824 losses). Trades file size for decompression time, and allows one825 to cheat by using information in gimp/opencv to compress the826 image.828 </div></div>829 <div class="project"><h2>fixed cryopreservation</h2><div class="description">why not use a fixative to buy enough time830 to ramp up cryoprotectants to an acceptable level at room831 temperature? Then, the whole system can be rapidly cooled and832 vitrified. This method "severs the biological link" in that the833 fixatives are highly toxic, but current vitrification procedures834 do this anyway since there can be a lot of freezing damage.836 </div></div>837 <div class="project"><h2>dilated security camera</h2><div class="description">a security camera that would capture838 full video footage of everything at 60fps but then decide to keep839 only every 1 frame every 5 seconds unless there's something840 "interesting" happening.842 </div></div>843 <div class="project"><h2>bitcoin wallet</h2><div class="description">Part of "server culture", this would be something844 like "coin.your-domain.com" which would serve as845 your personal trusted access to your own bitcoins846 from anywhere.848 </div></div>849 <div class="project"><h2>libpay</h2><div class="description">this would be a free library which would enable850 micro-donations to software projects and other projects,851 so that you could donate a penny to "emacs" and it would852 be automatically split up to every person who has ever853 contributed to emacs in proportion to the amount of854 community esteem, code quantity, bugs fixed, whatever the855 community decides. This might make it possible for856 programmers to live entirely off of free programming.858 </div></div>859 <div class="project"><h2>distributed graphics</h2><div class="description">Browser based graphics-card accelerated860 distributed computing API.862 </div></div>863 <div class="project"><h2>pronouns</h2><div class="description">use capital letters A-Z instead of pronouns. They solve864 pronoun referents and gender neutrality, are short to865 say, and you can encode useful information into the866 choice of letter. For example, instead of "Meetings867 shall be presided over by the president, unless she is868 absent." USE "Meetings shall be presided over by the869 president, unless P is absent." We already use this a870 little, since I and U are reserved for the subject and871 object respectively.873 </div></div>874 <div class="project"><h2>phone DSP</h2><div class="description">software app that inserts an audio DSP between the875 input to a phone and the output. The DSP is delicious876 and configurable, and can allow men to make their877 voices deeper, etc. The app would allow you to hear878 your own voice as others hear it. Most people hate how879 their own voice sounds. The app would also allow one to880 immediately change the parameters of the DSP using good881 presets.883 </div></div>884 <div class="project"><h2>predestined body learning</h2><div class="description">a good example of predestined learning885 might be the mirror neurons.887 </div></div>888 <div class="project"><h2>restaurant receipt</h2><div class="description">use a carbon copy receipt instead of two stupid889 copies.891 </div></div>892 <div class="project"><h2>anti google glass</h2><div class="description">glasses with mounted lasers and computer vision893 that targets the cameras in google glass and destroy them.895 </div></div>896 <div class="project"><h2>wearable towel</h2><div class="description">towel with clasp, velcro, whatever, that allows897 one to wear the towel more securely than just898 wrapping it tightly and hoping for the best.900 </div></div>901 <div class="project"><h2>crossdressing</h2><div class="description">Easiest way to disguise oneself as a woman is to902 wear a burka.904 </div></div>905 <div class="project"><h2>book-mode</h2><div class="description">intelligent color highlighting for books and906 articles. It would disambiguate pronouns and involved907 references. For example, if "Rachael" was assigned the908 color red, and "the blonde haired girl" refers to909 "Rachael", then "the blonde haired girl" would be910 colored red. Also, you could disambiguate multi part911 run-on sentences by highlighting each912 subcomponent. Maybe would also have applications to913 scientific reading.915 </div></div>916 <div class="project"><h2>Handheld light Rain measurement</h2><div class="description">this would be a clear, teflon917 coated plastic disk with a camera underneath the disk. You would918 be able to hold the device out and it would measure the rate of919 accumulation of water droplets from fine mists and light rain by920 using computer vision to measure the diameters of the drops.922 </div></div>923 <div class="project"><h2>Big Brother Farming</h2><div class="description">This would be a vision system that would924 individually monitor each plant and turn on water, etc to ensure925 maximum/uniform growth for each plant.927 </div></div>928 <div class="project"><h2>Discrete Faucet</h2><div class="description">A faucet with discrete ticks instead of929 continuous.931 </div></div>932 <div class="project"><h2>Laser Circle</h2><div class="description">take a glass microfiliment and shine a laser at one933 end at an oblique angle. It will make a perfect,934 large circle on the wall, converting a laser beam935 into a laser cone, preserving most of the energy of936 the laser.938 </div></div>939 <div class="project"><h2>Invisible Glass</h2><div class="description">Take a container of liquid and embed a940 glass sculpture made out of glass that has exactly the same index941 of refraction and color of the liquid. Then the sculpture will be942 totally invisible in the container, and will only be revealed943 when the liquid is drained. The container might be a fancy944 wine/spirit bottle or an hourglass.946 </div></div>947 <div class="project"><h2>Caterpillar people</h2><div class="description">A race of caterpillar like creatures gains948 intelligence after eons of predation by birds, etc. These949 caterpillar creatures still undergo metamorphosis into a large950 butterfly-like creature. The metamorphosis process turns the951 caterpillar's brain into mush and reforms it into a minimal,952 dumb, truly insect-like mind, completely destroying the person953 the caterpillar was. The society develops all sorts of customs and954 religious interpretations of the metamorphosis. It is viewed as955 good and natural by some since it is part of their life cycle and956 necessary to propagate the species, as only the butterflies can957 mate. Some think that the butterflies are still the same person958 because they have the same soul, even they no longer posses the959 memories or personality of the original caterpillar. Some see the960 butterfly form as the "true form" of the species, since the961 butterflies can fly, mate, and are beautiful. Many make a big962 deal out of the fact that 1-2% of the caterpillar's mind is963 actually preserved in the butterfly. Some see it as a terrible964 tragedy and argue that the caterpillars should try to stop the965 metamorphosis by technology. Practically, some very important966 members of society undergo hormone therapy and/or surgery to967 prevent metamorphosis so that they can live longer as themselves.969 <p>970 This is a continuation of Marvin Minsky's ideas about pain being971 something that preserves our bodies while destroying our minds,972 something that is a remnant from our too harsh animal days that973 hasn't caught up to the fact that we have very complex brains974 now. It's a worst-case scenario about a maladaptive genetic975 legacy. Also, it's inspired by "There She Is!!!", which makes a976 compelling point about homosexuality by introducing a second977 gender characteristic (bunny/cat, male/female), which makes978 homophobia look very silly. Here, our own biological legacy of979 pain and death is made to look like the tragedy it is through the980 lens of the the caterpillar people.981 </p>982 </div></div>983 <div class="project"><h2>relationships as a business</h2><div class="description"><a href="http://thedailywtf.com/Articles/Up-or-Out-Solving-the-IT-Turnover-Crisis.aspx">Turnover-Crisis</a> is an excellent talk984 about the "culture of quitting," which is about better business985 by letting people go instead of keeping them around past their986 "apex". Focuses on information transfer. Cool idea of an alumni987 network, which for relationships would be a group of satisfied988 ex-lovers, who would recommend new people your way, and who might989 consider coming to you again, refreshed from their time away with990 new stories/experiences. I should look for examples of this and991 how they worked out.993 </div></div>994 <div class="project"><h2>coffee with tea</h2><div class="description"><i>rlm-tea</i> contains 2% sugar, 10% cream, and 20%995 dylan coffee. <i>dylan coffee</i> contains 5% sugar,996 20% cream, and 10% rlm-tea. Start your mornings997 with recursion!999 </div></div>1000 <div class="project"><h2>psychic crystal</h2><div class="description">in a science fiction story, this would be an1001 object that is very easy to move physically but is extremely1002 difficult to move with telekinesis.1004 </div></div>1005 <div class="project"><h2><a href="http://betsofbitco.in/">http://betsofbitco.in/</a></h2><div class="description">what a great place for an AI/person to1006 prove themselves as a good predictor. I wish this could be1007 automated.1009 </div></div>1010 <div class="project"><h2>true reflection</h2><div class="description">don't forget about that mirror in the student1011 center!, it's two mirrors at right angles, like staring at a1012 corner of a room. The light reflects so that it shows you what1013 you actually look like, instead of your mirror image.1015 </div></div>1016 <div class="project"><h2>remote control wasp</h2><div class="description">use computer to drive wings with remote1017 power/logic.1019 </div></div>1020 <div class="project"><h2>encrypted email phone book</h2><div class="description">public (distributed?) database of1021 email->private-key pairs, to enable automatic encryption.1023 </div></div>1024 <div class="project"><h2>universal eye color</h2><div class="description">every equivalent creature will see each1025 others' eyes as black – it's universal. Even if the creatures1026 see in radio waves, and their eyes are 2m long pieces of jagged1027 metal, when those creatures look at each other, they will see1028 black, the absence of light and color (since it's being absorbed1029 by the sensor array).1031 </div></div>1032 <div class="project"><h2>intelligent microwave</h2><div class="description">it learns where the hot nodes of its fields1033 are, and uses them to evenly heat any food item. It has an infrared1034 camera or something to keep track of how hot the food is. That way,1035 you don't get bowls where the edges are boiling, while the center is1036 still frozen. Requires a little bit of intelligence/vision, since1037 the exact pattern of heating totally depends on the exact shape of1038 the food. Wouldn't need a carousel, and wouldn't need a timer,1039 just a desired temperature. Could also detect ice, and automatically1040 defrost the parts which are frozen. Might be able to work much1041 faster since it can avoid overheating; might have problems with1042 heating the insides of thick things, might need a weight sensor too.1044 <ul>1045 <li>Would be much cleaner than other microwaves, since food would1046 "sputter" and splash liquid much less.1048 </li>1049 <li>Throw in some SIFT+R processing to match previously cooked foods1050 and learn the exact heating profiles for things that have been1051 cooked before – it can get faster the more it's used.1053 </li>1054 </ul>1056 </div></div>1057 <div class="project"><h2>compression</h2><div class="description">brain-aware image compression algorithm1059 </div></div>1060 <div class="project"><h2>Credit card proxy</h2><div class="description">would be a company which works like paypal1061 except for real world transactions1063 </div></div>1064 <div class="project"><h2>Flesh pillow</h2><div class="description">a pillow like the arm or torso of a human, complete1065 with simulated temperature, bones, and heartbeat.1067 </div></div>1068 <div class="project"><h2>super screw</h2><div class="description">a screw which has only one or two threads and instead1069 uses compression to fit into a hole (the whole shank1070 of the screw is split into multiple pieces to1071 accomplish this; the tip is a point, then the middle1072 bulges out and gets compressed when screwed in.1074 </div></div>1075 <div class="project"><h2>light filter</h2><div class="description">(like light tweezers) to mechanically separate1076 fluids with different index of refraction1078 </div></div>1079 <div class="project"><h2>chalk eraser project</h2><div class="description">maybe make a directional eraser, for easy1080 release of chalk dust, like fur, and how it likes to rest in a1081 certain direction.1083 </div></div>1084 <div class="project"><h2>silver socks</h2><div class="description">socks laced with silver for the antimicrobial1085 properties.1087 </div></div>1088 <div class="project"><h2>UROP</h2><div class="description">magnet gear/metal teeth tape1090 </div></div>1091 <div class="project"><h2>Rod of Moses</h2><div class="description">device to distill urine through evaporation and1092 easily dispose of urea crystals for use in desert --1093 produce drinkable water.1095 </div></div>1096 <div class="project"><h2>UROP</h2><div class="description">Make the LED in line with the flow for the micro injector, so1097 that it may transmit maximum flow. Motor that changes1098 distance of internal magnet from windings depending on1099 desired speed so as to obtain maximum power efficiency.1101 </div></div>1102 <div class="project"><h2>lottery scraper</h2><div class="description">web scraper which monitors various lotteries,1103 looking for "special" gimmick changes in the rules (like 4x1104 winnings on Wednesdays) and computes expected value…1106 </div></div>1107 <div class="project"><h2>Memristiors novel design</h2><div class="description">make an evolutionary algorithm to make1108 old stuff using all four basic circuit elements.1110 </div></div>1111 <div class="project"><h2>Conductive concrete</h2><div class="description">concrete that has embedded metal fibers so1112 that it can conduct electricity.1114 </div></div>1115 <div class="project"><h2>little bitty melting pot</h2><div class="description">might be useful for some types of1116 manufacturing/3D printing – how small can an induction melter be1117 made, for example.1119 </div></div>1120 <div class="project"><h2>power strip/timer programmable combination</h2><div class="description">meh1121 </div></div>1123 <div class="project"><h2>algorithms...</h2><div class="description">which learn what their inputs are and in what order,1124 and can adapt to changing circumstances – they1125 remember previous arguments and adapt so as to respond1126 to different connections.1128 </div></div>1129 <div class="project"><h2>true pure tones</h2><div class="description">hear a true pure tone by direct stimulation of the1130 nerves of the ear1132 </div></div>1133 <div class="project"><h2>mechanical analogue to the electrical op-amp</h2><div class="description">would be an object1134 with two levers – you pull on one lever and the other moves the1135 same way, no matter what's in the way or what it is driving. This1136 analogy could be useful to teach op amps to people.1138 </div></div>1139 <div class="project"><h2>paper folding device</h2><div class="description">make it convenient to fold lots of papers in1140 various ways.1142 </div></div>1143 <div class="project"><h2>concrete epoxy</h2><div class="description">epoxy with sand/ some other solid material.1145 </div></div>1146 <div class="project"><h2>light capacitor</h2><div class="description">suspend some ball of material with a high index1147 of refraction and shine light into it so it gets stuck – would1148 the light stay trapped forever? Could you build up unlimited1149 quantities of light inside the sphere (which could then be1150 released slowly by frustrated internal reflection?1152 </div></div>1153 <div class="project"><h2>movie screening</h2><div class="description">Movies always are too long at first. One way to1154 shorten them ``scientifically" is to record blink rate during the1155 move and then remove / shorten the frames of the parts in which1156 there are a lot of blinking (average this over multiple people)1157 better yet, put it online and do it across thousands of people. I1158 got this from youtube in which there is an episode of kill bill1159 which is composed entirely of the parts in which people had their1160 eyes closed. slogan: want to make a movie people can't take their1161 eyes off of? Just take those parts out!1163 </div></div>1164 <div class="project"><h2>optimize an article</h2><div class="description">capture reading of a scientific article via1165 screen capture while people read it, then use it to make the1166 article better. like the movie-pruning idea.1168 </div></div>1169 <div class="project"><h2>super reading program</h2><div class="description">teaches people the ideal mental mask to1170 apply during reading so as to read very fast.1172 </div></div>1173 <div class="project"><h2>explosive thermite epoxy putty</h2><div class="description">one part would contain the rust,1174 one part the aluminum.1176 </div></div>1177 <div class="project"><h2>reading comprehension</h2><div class="description">use the above screen capture routine to1178 make a quiz program that constructs questions about the content1179 you seemed to gloss over while reading. could be easy if the pdf1180 came with embedded questions. Dylan: automatically generate1181 word-cloud about the parts you found most interesting; help1182 others who read the same stuff by drawing attention to the1183 interesting parts.1185 </div></div>1186 <div class="project"><h2>hard sword</h2><div class="description">make a samurai sword, but use osmiridum instead of1187 martensite for the cutting part; it should be a better1188 sword.1190 </div></div>1191 <div class="project"><h2>close range wireless</h2><div class="description">use the induction technology used to1192 recharge electric toothbrushes with no metal links to send data1193 without any metal at all!1195 </div></div>1196 <div class="project"><h2>reading</h2><div class="description">is a form of synsethesia1198 </div></div>1199 <div class="project"><h2>DNA printer</h2><div class="description">A machine which translates the text eg, "ACTGAC" into1200 actual DNA1202 </div></div>1203 <div class="project"><h2>black generator</h2><div class="description">ferro-fluid magnetic field suspended micro1204 generator to make electricity1206 </div></div>1207 <div class="project"><h2>alcohol battery</h2><div class="description">alcohol/fluid flow powered battery1209 </div></div>1210 <div class="project"><h2>folding razor blade sword</h2><div class="description">1212 </div></div>1213 <div class="project"><h2>perfect pitch</h2><div class="description">learn perfect pitch using another sense in1214 combination (sight or touch)1216 </div></div>1217 <div class="project"><h2>kaleidoscope projector</h2><div class="description">1219 </div></div>1220 <div class="project"><h2>razor blade de-sharpener</h2><div class="description">for guilt free disposal1222 </div></div>1223 <div class="project"><h2>bricks</h2><div class="description">filled with luminescent plant material1225 </div></div>1226 <div class="project"><h2>bio metallic structure</h2><div class="description">metal grids with seeds inside, which grow1227 together and form a durable biological matrix. The metal1228 substrate delivers water. (maybe use plastic instead of metal?)1229 Dylan: enrich plants with inorganic compounds; electrical1230 interfaces in cellular plant matter => remote-controlled1231 photosynthetic/bioluminescent structures.1233 </div></div>1234 <div class="project"><h2>conducting extracellular matrix</h2><div class="description">to allow better control of1235 organic systems and an enhanced nervous system.1237 </div></div>1238 <div class="project"><h2>cross-modal memory hashing</h2><div class="description">a way to retrieve memories more1239 robustly.1241 </div></div>1242 <div class="project"><h2>flossing thimble-guards</h2><div class="description">(these actually exist)1244 </div></div>1245 <div class="project"><h2>rules + lattice learning</h2><div class="description">integrate lattice learning with rules by1246 generating hypothetical examples1248 </div></div>1249 <div class="project"><h2>wooden refrigerator</h2><div class="description">to give food a better taste Dylan: like1250 barrels for wine, or planks for salmon. Maybe just have "flavor1251 planks" for your pre-existing fridge. Need to mitigate effect of1252 temperature on volatility?1254 </div></div>1255 <div class="project"><h2>radioactive transmutation molecule by molecule</h2><div class="description">create precious1256 metals or something else economically advantageous.1258 </div></div>1259 <div class="project"><h2>crowd preservation</h2><div class="description">inoculate food with tons of harmless1260 bacteria so that there's no room for bad bacteria as a method of1261 preservation1263 </div></div>1264 <div class="project"><h2>old school preservation</h2><div class="description">Pasteur - style holding jar with siphon1265 as a way to store liquids at room temperature indefinitely w/o1266 refrigeration.1268 </div></div>1269 <div class="project"><h2>restaurant policy</h2><div class="description">Throw rude people out of restaurant as a matter1270 of course – make ambiance much better.1272 </div></div>1273 <div class="project"><h2>clean windows</h2><div class="description">make something that mixes soap with fire hydrant1274 water (and reduces the pressure a bit) and use it1275 to clean windows of buildings.1277 </div></div>1278 <div class="project"><h2>ocarina</h2><div class="description">make an ocarina out of pure silver1280 </div></div>1281 <div class="project"><h2>fire pen</h2><div class="description">pen which burns words on to the page, thus never needing1282 any ink. Is there a way to make it runnable from the1283 human's energy?1285 </div></div>1286 <div class="project"><h2>website to design your own soda</h2><div class="description">and label, and have it mailed to1287 you / sell it from your own online store.1289 </div></div>1290 <div class="project"><h2>solar panels</h2><div class="description">that float on the ocean1292 </div></div>1293 <div class="project"><h2>handcuffs with more than two cuffs (3?)</h2><div class="description">great for daisy chaining1294 people, binding them to environment, etc.1296 </div></div>1297 <div class="project"><h2>vector based SOUND files</h2><div class="description">like the pictures but with SOUND. codify1298 sound in a language with enough symbols so that it can describe1299 everything and encode it in that. would be like going from speech1300 to text or smtg. Could also store sound as an image of the1301 wavefront encoded as a vector image.1303 </div></div>1304 <div class="project"><h2>Mouse</h2><div class="description">with a horizontal scroll wheel in addition to the vertical1305 scroll wheel1307 </div></div>1308 <div class="project"><h2>logic maintenance system for big institutions</h2><div class="description">to make sure the1309 things they are thinking about doing are not retarded1311 </div></div>1312 <div class="project"><h2><a href="http://www.regulations.gov/">http://www.regulations.gov/</a></h2><div class="description">cool site1314 </div></div>1315 <div class="project"><h2>genetically engineered glowing fruit</h2><div class="description">sell seeds?1317 </div></div>1318 <div class="project"><h2>memory slide</h2><div class="description">IF memories are encoded using particular sensory1319 impressions, what happens if the sensory organ1320 itself changes? those memories would become1321 inaccessible. maybe this is why we can't remember1322 much from our childhoods. also, could this happen1323 throughout life as well? Could S remember stuff from1324 his childhood?1326 </div></div>1327 <div class="project"><h2>make a completely indestructible phone</h2><div class="description">no moving parts or display1328 you should be able to slam it around all you want, and it will1329 just work. brutally simple. aerogel around the battery, minimal1330 interface - never gets too hot, and can be dropped into water. no1331 holes – uses field effects for everything from the buttons to1332 inductive charging and data transfer.1334 </div></div>1335 <div class="project"><h2>midi to ocarina "tabs" program</h2><div class="description">(online website? buy ocarinas from1336 it too)1338 </div></div>1339 <div class="project"><h2>3d printing with sound pulses (or just patterns)</h2><div class="description">like the 8.031340 lecture1342 </div></div>1343 <div class="project"><h2>lighter flint on spring</h2><div class="description">make hot, throw it at something, and it1344 makes sparkles!1346 </div></div>1347 <div class="project"><h2>nuclear energy</h2><div class="description">Rebranding New+Clear Energy with informational1348 campaign and public debate forum to enforce its1349 transparent and open nature. France needn't be the1350 world leader in nuclear energy. (Dylan)1352 </div></div>1353 <div class="project"><h2>bubbles</h2><div class="description">Engineer a material which has both ductility and high1354 surface tension to make the "third"1355 minimal-surface-energy solution to a bubble suspended1356 between two equal-diameter rings. (Solutions are1357 cylindrical catenary curve, two separated half-bubbles,1358 and a double-cone)1360 </div></div>1361 <div class="project"><h2>Textbook whose content can be varied continuously</h2><div class="description">alter level of1362 difficulty, rigor, diction, emphasize crossover with certain1363 other discipline, etc. Content generated dynamically from1364 knowledge base, along with questions that are moreover altered to1365 guide knowledge acquisition. Motivation: One book of1366 knowledge. <i>One.</i>1367 </div></div>1368 </div>1372 </div>1374 <div id="outline-container-1-1" class="outline-3">1375 <h3 id="sec-1-1"><span class="section-number-3">1.1</span> From Jacob's idea list</h3>1376 <div class="outline-text-3" id="text-1-1">1379 <ul>1380 <li>Roommate-canceling headphones: uses roommate's laptop mic to seed1381 noise cancellation alg in your headphones (would this1382 work?). -Update on sound canceling headphones that take feed from1383 tv: how about ones that cancel people talking on the phone by1384 receiving the phone signals and playing inverse sound1385 waves. #signalprocessing ~jcole@mit.edu1387 </li>1388 <li>ClackerAlert – tells if you slam the keys too hard using sound data1389 (and speed/jerkiness data)!.Prevents RSI ~jcole@mit.e1391 </li>1392 <li>separate pin that you can tell someone if forced to1393 identify your PIN (idea from idea about credit cards)1394 </li>1395 </ul>1397 </div>1398 </div>1399 </div>1400 </div>1402 <div id="postamble">1403 <p class="date">Date: 2015-02-04 23:52:02 EST</p>1404 <p class="author">Author: Robert McIntyre</p>1405 <p class="creator">Org version 7.7 with Emacs version 23</p>1406 <a href="http://validator.w3.org/check?uri=referer">Validate XHTML 1.0</a>1408 </body>1409 </html>