Mercurial > thoughts
view org/good-ideas.org @ 145:f5a56e2241fb
finally creating a good-ideas page.
author | Robert McIntyre <rlm@mit.edu> |
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date | Sun, 12 Apr 2015 17:31:34 -0700 |
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children | e9c46842080b |
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1 #+title: Big List O' Ideas2 #+author: Robert McIntyre3 #+email: rlm@mit.edu4 #+description: list of ideas from Robert McIntyre5 #+keywords: aurellem ideas half-baked random6 #+SETUPFILE: ../../aurellem/org/setup.org7 #+INCLUDE: ../../aurellem/org/level-0.org8 #+babel: :mkdirp yes :noweb yes :exports both9 #+HTML_HEAD_EXTRA: <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="../css/ideas.css" />10 #+OPTIONS: num:nil12 * Ideas13 # :PROPERTIES:14 # :HTML_CONTAINER_CLASS: ideas15 # :END:17 This is a list of all the good ideas I've had that I felt like writing18 down for the past ~ 10 years. Some of them could be practical19 inventions and are "just" waiting for that 95% perspiration to bring20 them to fruition, some are ideas for science fiction, and some are21 simple observations. They are arranged roughly in reverse22 chronological order, with the most recent ideas at the top of the23 list. The ones at the bottom of the list are heavily influenced by my24 time at MIT, the ones at the top, by my time at 21st Century Medicine.26 If you find some of these interesting and would like to collaborate on27 them with me or discuss them in more detail, I'd love to hear from28 you. You can email me at ideas@aurellem.org.30 If you want to use one of these ideas as your own and run with it,31 please feel free. I'd love to hear about it if you do.33 #+begin_quote34 There's no end to what a man can accomplish if he doesn't care about35 getting credit.36 #+end_quote39 #+BEGIN_HTML40 <hr/>41 #+END_HTML43 ** The Ocean becomes a Drop44 Upload faces challenges to grow into they type of person that can45 join the greater society -- a god. They have to go though quests46 that replicate all the things that humanity had to accomplish, like47 going to the moon, by themselves.49 ** Butterfly Drone50 If big butterflies used to exist, then maybe we could make51 butterfly-inspired drones!53 ** Methylation Sex-Symmetry Breaking54 Human sex cells have methylation patterns that encode male/female55 origin. If you combine two male patterns, the fetus grows "too56 fast" and dies. Two female patterns causes the fetus to enter a57 "vegatable" state and fail to develop. Evolutionary biologists say58 that this reflects the asymmetry of energy investement for creating59 offspring. If that's true, then species that cast-spawn will lack60 this asymmetry, and give clues about how to remove it in humans. If61 even cast spawners like sea urchins have it, then that means62 there's something deeper going on!64 ** Homosexual Reproduction65 You take genetic material from two males and put it into an egg66 cell that has had all genetic material removed. Or, you take the67 genetic material from one egg and put it in another egg. This would68 allow homosexual couples to genetically reproduce. One technical69 challenge blocking this technique is that human gametes have70 methylation patterns that encode male/female origin, and only a71 male+female pattern gives rise to viable offspring. You could72 "recondition" male / female gametes to give them the opposite73 pattern, perhaps by incubating them in the appropriate74 environment. You also could try taking stem cells and making them75 form the appropriate structures in vitro.77 ** Poly-Vitrification78 Large molecules such as PVP are able to vitrify at around -20C, and79 at farily small concentrations. IF they could be introduced into80 cells, they would be quite useful as vitrification agents. However,81 it's difficult to get them in because they are so big. So instead,82 use smaller agents which combine together into polymers at low83 temperature. In particular, Fructose, trehalose, and glycerol seem84 to have the desired properties (though you need to make versions of85 fructose and trehalose that can penetrate).87 ** Whole Brain Perfusion Embedding88 Do the standard EM embedding protocol, but skip the osmium step,89 and use the "perfusion pausing" method to prevent overextraction90 during the dehydration and embedding steps. I think that you can91 perfuse resins into the brain, simply because you can perfuse92 viscous rubber when doing vascular casts.94 ** Very Slow Physiological Pressure Perfusion95 Less extreme example of the "perfusion pausing" trick -- just keep96 the perfusion running and don't put the perfusion target into the97 liquid as deep.99 ** Perfusion Pausing100 One problem with doing perfusion of heads / organs where the veins101 freely leak fluid is that if you STOP the perfusion, you rapidly102 loose pressure in the organ as your perfusate leaks out. You can103 prevent this by submerging the organ/head/rat whatever in fluid at104 an appropriate deepness. You would have to slowly decrease the flow105 rate while simultaneously lowering the perfusing object into the106 fluid. To start again, reverse the process -- reengage the107 peristaltic pump slowly while removing the organ from the fluid.109 ** Textbook Mimiricy Evolution110 As surgery becomes more common, there develops a distinct selective111 pressure for individuals' organ layouts to look more like the112 medical textbooks!114 ** Transparent Skin115 Temporary / permament transparent skin. Allows for examination of116 organs / muscles and visual prevention of disease and detection or117 abnormalities / good things eg. excercise optimization.119 ** Sweet Information120 Candy with a whole book written in it. Eat a book!122 ** Targeted Immunosuppressant123 Just kill off the B-cells and friends that would cause problems in124 a organ-transplant / other situation. AIDS is good at killing these125 cells -- maybe make it can be modified to just target the ones that126 will cause problems. Then you can premptively kill off that part of127 someone's immune system before a transplant. ALSO, you can kill off128 everyone's defenses against other blood types and make people129 effectively type AB+ w.r.t blood transfusions. Actually, why not130 give babies this treatment so that they're automatically compatable131 with all blood types? It would be like a blood transfusion132 vaccine. The immune system does this already when it's first133 growing; maybe it can be "retrained" to accept new things, or the134 mechanism of immune cell death be co-opted for these purposes.136 ** Fuck-you Tetris137 Tetris that actively gives you the worst possible piece.139 ** Pockets140 More things should have them! Chairs, tables, cups, hats,141 trashcans, basically anything is better with a pocket.143 ** Colored Shower Head144 A shower head add-on that measures the temp of the water and145 changes the color of the water streams w/ an LED to show you the146 temperature. That way you can align to the color you want and see147 the temperature without feeling it.149 ** Giant Dragonflies150 We could rapidly MAKE giant dragonflies by evolving modern151 dragonflies in an very oxygen rich environment!153 ** Whirlpool of Light154 Shine a laser out into space. But the planet is spinning! What you155 get is a spiral of light! And as this signal expands, does it156 eventually reveal it's quantized nature?158 ** Perfusion Cooking159 You do cardiac bypass on an animal like a pig, then pump in tasty,160 tasty perfusate (like marinade) into the animal's161 vasculature. Then, you switch out to saline and increase the162 temperature of the saline to rapidly and uniformly cook the163 animal. It could be the tastiest meat ever!165 ** Timestamp Verification166 You sign your message, and it has a timestamp at the top, with a +-167 percision number. Then you send it over to the public timestamp168 server, which only signs the message if it gets the message within169 the timestamp window. Or the computer just signs the message but170 puts a timestamp at the beginning. So if everyone trusts the171 timestamp server, you can get reliable timestamps, and prove172 priority on ideas, etc.174 ** The Great Computing Slow-Down175 In general, our computers are getting faster and faster according176 to Moore's law. However, eventually our brains will be made of the177 same stuff our computers are made of! This has very interesting178 consequences -- I can add 2+2 and get four in about a second. Since179 my neurons actually work at around 10-60 hertz in parallel, this180 means that it takes me around 10-30 operations to do this181 addition. That's actually not bad in terms of computing time. If my182 neurons were as fast as the latest transitors, then most183 calculators (made with earlier transistors) would be SLOWER than me184 at adding numbers. Only the newest, most optimized calculators185 would be faster, and then only about 10 times faster! This means186 that once we begin to think at the speed of our technology, that187 technology will suddenly seem pitifully slow in comparison to how188 it seems now. And no amount of technical progress will remedy it,189 because that same progress will also make us all think190 faster. We'll either have to settle with living in "slow time" to191 do some computations, or learn to make smarter hardware with192 special optimizations. But this is actually really hard, because193 we'll be working with machines that will appear to us about as fast194 as MECHANICAL computers. So, in the future, all the cool parties195 will be in cyperspace at vastly accelerated speeds compared to how196 we exist now. But at these parties, the computers will SUCK! Of197 course, this is one of the few things that can save us from AI198 risk, because those AI's won't seem so scary when the're build out199 of rickety old mechanical parts form our perspective.201 ** Unitary Reverse Evolution of Chaos+Minds202 Chaotic systems diverge exponentially in state space. Do you get203 anything interesting when part of the physical system associated204 with the chaotic system is a object that performs some sort of205 computation? Is it possible for the computational system to play a206 percision-enabling role in determining the final/initial conditions207 of the chaotic system, just by tracing out thoughts in its decision208 paths? This is probably too vague of an idea right now, I just209 wanted to write it down.211 ** Microwave-Time212 The cooking time you enter on most microwaves is insane. It's213 expressed in what I call a "hybrid base", a combination of base 10214 and base 60. You can get absurd things like 100 < 61, and 120 ==215 80! I wonder if these hybrid base systems could be very useful for216 some purposes!218 ** Three Eyes219 If you had three eyes, would you still draw cubes like we currently220 draw them? Or would all 2D-representations of 3D space always look221 hopelessly fake?223 ** Digital Taste/Smell Assay224 Get a grid of bacteria, each expressing a human taste/smell225 receptor linked to some sort of fluorscent activity or ion226 pump. Use a camera / electrical grid to transduce the smell / taste227 signal into bits! Inspired by gel-sight from MIT.229 ** Childrens' Tool Shop230 I think that kids should be provided with tool shops -- these would231 be nice sheds with a good collection of tools to do various things232 -- circuit components and soldering irons, wires, a small lathe,233 drill press, belt sander, a centrifuge, microscope, and telescope,234 etc. The idea is that the kid can now think, "I could use X to do235 this thing that I'm thinking about" -- the building becomes an236 extension of the kid's body & mind.238 ** Fluid Display239 Like the previous idea about matching refractances between glass240 and liquid, except you make a lot of switchable glass tubes in241 various patterns in the glass, and actively pump colored liquid242 through the tubes (the tubes have glass-like fluid in them by243 default.) The result is that you can cause the tubes to appear and244 dissappear, and vary their colors as well!246 ** Immunoincompatibility247 Take the human genome, and refactor it so that it doesn't use a248 particular codon at all. Then remove the support from our ribosomes249 for that codon. What does this do for us? It makes us immune to250 almost all viruses! There is at least one bacteria that already251 does this to great effect.253 ** Life Cycle254 It's called a cycle, right? So, the thing that repeats itself over255 and over, right? Not much of a cycle if you don't come back after256 you die, if you ask me!258 ** Car with no Blind Spots259 Use some cameras in the back of the car to augment the rear-view260 mirror so that you never have to turn around in order to lane261 change.263 ** Metabolic Windows and Freezing264 You freeze a set of cells using some cryo protocol and 60%265 survive. How can this be explained? It seems to me that if the266 cells are the same, and the conditions homogoneous, then all the267 cells should either die or live. However, suppose that there is a268 metabolic cycle that needs to be in a certain phase for the cell to269 survive. If the cells are asynchronous, then you might end up with270 some cells dying because there were in the wrong part of their271 cycle. This implies that you might be able to cryoprotect cells by272 causing them to enter a certain metabolic mode before freezing.274 ** Cryonics Color Appeal275 Perfusate used by cryonics companies could have red food coloring276 in it. It's just a nice touch so that the cryonics patient looks277 more life-like than with clear CPAs, and hopefully might get278 treated with more respect.280 ** Paramagnetic CPA281 you take a CPA that can be influenced by magnetic fields so that282 its degrees of freedom are limited. Then, you release the field,283 instantaly increasing the size of the state space of the system and284 dramatically decreasing the temperature enough to plunge the system285 past homogenous nucleation temperature and directly to the glass286 transition temperature, creating a doubly unstable glass at much287 lower CPA concentrations than possible at conventional CPA288 concentrations. A major technical limitation facing this technique289 is that it's a very minor effect -- you can only get about 0.1C290 with most systems that have been studied so far.292 - room temp noodles :: how does the physics of cooking noodles work?293 Could you use a vacuum instead of heat to force water into the294 noodle?296 - personal carbon offset :: feel bad about contribuiting to global297 warming by using electricity / driving a car? Forget trying to298 "conserve" or "minimize your carbon footprint". Follow the299 Platinum rule -- make the world BETTER off than you found it!300 This would be a small, self contained system that sucks C02 out301 of the air. It uses electricity, but it's so efficient at302 removing CO2 that it more than offsets the CO2 produced by even a303 coal plant to produce that electricity. This way, you can still304 drive even a gas guzzler, but have a net negative carbon305 footprint! Maybe something cool could be done with the carbon as306 well. Use as much electricity as you want, but negate the damage307 to the enviroment with more technology.309 - undoing spermogenesis :: with enough sperm, you can derive the310 donor's entire genome. You gain more confidence in the alleles311 for a particular gene the more sperm you have. Each additional312 sperm gives you the same sort of information you'd get flipping a313 coin and trying to decide whether the coin is H/T of H/H. Is314 there enough sperm in the the average load for you to be as315 confident as mitosis?317 - mars life :: we could engineer life that could survive on mars318 (probably some non-vascular photosynthetic poikilohydric creature319 like a lichen) by taking an extremophile from Antarctica and320 evolving it in increasingly Martian conditions. This could be an321 easy start to a terraforming process.323 - problem with Aubrey de Grey's ideas :: Aubrey de Grey says that we324 might be able to live forever by continually repairing our bodies325 at the cellular level -- he details 7 different mechanisms of326 damage and says that if all of them are dealt with /together/327 that it would stop aging. (You can't miss even one because328 they're all fatal.) However, it doesn't take into account that329 we are also beings of information and that there is a very real330 software component to our existence. Even if our biological331 chassies can be maintained forever, I think it is unlikely that332 our minds will operate well far outside of the design constraints333 that we've evolved to handle. Say I programmed a webserver with334 the express goal of it being able to serve webpages for month on335 some stock server. I'll do fairly rigorous testing to make sure336 that it can handle the expected load then then some. Now say that337 you want to keep a particular instance of this webserver running338 indefinitely. (The program instance is like your mind and the339 computer it's running on is like your body). You might very well340 be able to keep the physical computer infrastructure running for341 forever by replacing hard drives / ram / CPUs, etc. However,342 since I designed the webserver to work for a month, it probably343 has memory leaks, rare stochastic bugs, or other built in limits344 / constraints (think log files or some date rollover shenanigans)345 that will ultimately kill the webserver even with eternally346 perfect hardware. Do you really expect that a webserver347 engineered to work for 1 month will run for 10 years without348 catastrophically crashing? Not even Apache can do this! In fact,349 if I put in the extreme effort to make it that robust, I've350 wasted time that I could have spent on other projects by pursuing351 an unnecessary engineering goal. Likewise, human minds have only352 ever run for at most 122 years before they are destroyed due to353 hardware degradation. Fixing the hardware doesn't change any354 software bugs that are almost certainly present in the human355 mind. Think of all the pathological things that can go wrong with356 a webserver, multiply it by a million, and that likely how357 evolution has designed our minds. For example, consider memory :358 why should you expect that we have evolved the ability to359 coherently organize memories past say 150 years? There's been360 absolutely no selective pressure for this ability, so you can bet361 that if there's any fitness to be gained from not having362 unlimited memory potential (such as better metabolic efficiency),363 we have it! You might think that maybe we would just forget364 things the same way that we sort of forget things that happen365 earlier in our lives, but complicated information processing366 systems don't have to fail gracefully when they're pushed far367 past their design constraints. A 150 year old person is just as368 likely to suffer a catastrophic psychosis due to software369 limitations associated with memory as he is to do something with370 all those memories we might consider reasonable. More likely, in371 fact, since there are so very many ways for a complicated372 software system to break and so few ways for it to run373 successfully. Therefore, I think Aubrey de Grey's "hardware-only"374 approach is missing a very important component of longevity375 science, and any successful effort to make people live orders of376 magnitude longer than they do naturally will need to deal with377 people's software as well as their hardware.379 - validating neurocryopreservation :: Problem : you want to test380 whether a brain is functionally preserved through vitrification,381 but you don't want to figure out how to preserve all the other382 organs in the animal. It might be possible to keep the rest of383 the body at almost 0C and vitrify just the head for only a few384 minutes. Induce hypothermia, then separate out the head's blood385 supply from the rest of the body, then just cryoptotect and386 vitrify the head. Might need some sort of thermal guard to keep387 the outer head / neck from becoming too cold. You leave the388 spinal cord intact! Then you devitrify to 0C, remove389 cryoprotectant, and then reattach the blood supply. You can390 determine brain preservation using behavioral assays!392 - freezing water purifier :: you slowly freeze water, but also run393 liquid water over the frozen mass. This takes away basically all394 impurities and creates "washed ice" then you melt the ice. Maybe395 you could re-use the heat from creating the ice to melt the ice?397 - ultra strength :: allow a person to visualize their muscle398 recruitment patterns. Give them adrenaline and let them feel what399 it's like to have the normal limits removed. See if they can400 replicate the effects.402 - phone names :: make a PX record for domain names that's like the MX403 record, except that it is a phone number instead of an IP404 address. That way, you can use the domain name registration405 system to provide names for phone numbers. Then, as long as you406 control the domain, you can point people to your current phone407 number by updating that record.409 - edible flowers :: Edible white flowers that you put in a colored410 solution with flavor. When the flower turns the right color, it411 is also flavored and ready to eat!413 - lead bone :: Could you fill in all the empty spaces in a bone with414 lead? Might be cool!416 - the quest for life :: Many stories that have immortal characters417 have the "immortal who wants to become mortal" trope. I want to418 story where the protagonist loses their immortality and feels419 /angry/ and ashamed about losing something that's so absolutely420 crucial to their identity. A reverse of "death makes life worth421 living", they feel that living forever is what makes life worth422 living. Now they've "lost their sunrise" or their "connection to423 the timeless universe" or something. So they go on a quest to get424 it back, learning about themselves along the way, and regaining425 the precious thing they lost in the beginning. Which, it they can426 actually gain their immortality back, means that they never lost427 it in the first place!429 - world-map :: take a small table and paint the continents in430 toothpaste on the table. Make a slightly raised barrier around431 the table. Slowly pour water onto the table, and it will form the432 oceans!434 - stage magic rituals :: rituals should incorporate elements of stage435 magic. For example in Teller's rendition of Shakespeare's436 Tempest, they have a scene where they levitate a crown in front437 of someone, then put it on his head. They also have a wedding438 ceremony where they levitated the bride as well. Actual weddings439 and other ceremonies should incorporate stage magic as an440 enhancement to the gravitas!442 - isotope time dilation :: use a cyclotron to speed up rare isotopes443 developed in nuclear fusion experiments. The relativistic time444 dilation will stop the isotopes from decaying, and allow time to445 study them. This is based on radioactive isotopes that fall446 through the earth's atmosphere that take hundreds of times longer447 to decay than normal.449 - marsupial stimulation :: You take a freshly pouched marsupial baby,450 and show it videos and other interactive things while it matures451 in the pouch. What mental effects would this have?453 - The dynamically well tempered clavier :: Some older ways of tuning454 instruments sound better, but we use the even-tempered scale455 today because it makes it easier to switch keys. With electronic456 music, why not make key-annotations and dynamically re-tune the457 piece to sound good in the current key? Could be done as a458 midi+annotation -> midi compiler for initial experimentation.460 - death always implies damage :: is is possible for a corpse to differ461 from a living person only in the fact that one is dead and the462 other is alive? NO! A corpse must always have some sort of463 molecular damage which causes the loss of function!465 - inner eye :: Surgically install a bunch of tiny cameras inside a466 person. Then, you can activate them all and get a picture of your467 internal organs for diagnostic purposes.469 - chaos rails :: The homoclinic tangle (which I call the "rails of470 chaos") is very beautiful. We couldn't even visualize it before471 computers because it's so complicated! Someone should make a472 visualization of it. Here's my inital [[/thoughts/images/rails-of-chaos.png][The Rails of Chaos]]474 - cryonics middle ages :: some people say that cryonics is an475 experiment and that it is foolish to wait until we have revived a476 human. There is a middle ground where the procedure has a dismal477 success rate on humans, say 1 in 20, so that you'd be a fool to478 try revival. Nonetheless, this very risky procedure could be the479 legal proof of concept needed to create a new class of life480 between "living" and "dead": "stasis".482 - Minds and Mirrors :: neat thought experiment -- if you take a mirror483 of someone by actually reversing a person's chirality molecule by484 molecule, then will the only be able to read mirror writing? The485 answer is yes, by analogy to a purely mechanical scan-tron486 device. This is one of the only interesting transforms I know487 that can take a human brain and change it in subtle,488 non-destructive ways. It's also an argument against dualism.490 - biosphere in a bottle :: There are around 15 million species. 15491 million stem cells will fill only a tiny size, far less than a cubic492 inch. Preserve a single cell from every species on earth in this493 small space, and you will have a record of our current biosphere494 that can be protected. "Hold the genetic data of all species in495 your hand!"497 - chaos lock :: The "arrow of time" points in the direction of498 increasing entropy. The time evolution of chaotic systems depend499 exquisitely on their initial state. If you take a measurement of500 a chaotic system at any given point of time, you can evolve that501 system backwards or forwards based on your measurement. So let's502 say you start the chaotic system in a VERY low entropy state,503 then let it run for a while, then take a measurement with some504 uncertainty. Your measurement is pretty good, but obviously not505 PERFECT. If you evolve the chaotic system back in time, then you506 will see that you don't really reach a state with low entropy an507 hour before (the entropy is easy to measure with surrogates like508 alignment, etc). So use this technique to SEARCH for a more509 accurate measurement! This potentially can give you many more510 orders of magnitude than you could get alone just using an511 instrument. Sometimes it will give you bad results, the the odds512 of it doing that are infinitesimal, and you can just measure a513 couple of times.515 - cryo-evolution :: perhaps there would be a way to rapidly evolve a516 symbiotic bacterial organism that could protect human tissues517 from freezing damage.519 - suicide parasite :: sometimes, people kill themselves for no good520 reason. We often explain this with things like "hidden521 depression" or we say that they had something like chronic jaw or522 back pain. I think that smells of rationalization. I don't buy523 it. I propose that in many suicide cases there is a disease that524 causes the suicidal behavior. We already know that certain525 parasites have mind-bending properties in other animals, even526 mammals like mice. It's not much of a stretch to imagine a527 parasite that causes suicides in humans. Some problems:528 - What does the suicide parasite get out of it? :: This might be529 answered by the whole thing being a glitch caused by530 cross-species contamination. Toxoplasma works this way.531 - What predictions does a disease model make :: suicide should532 be more common among people who share a contagion533 vector. There should be suicides that don't make any534 sense : people who weren't really depressed, who had no535 reason to kill themselves. People who have killed themselves536 should have a higher incidence of some unknown parasite in537 their brains.539 - domestic insects :: People should eat more bugs because they're much540 more efficient, so why not do some major domestication research541 to make very appealing bugs? Beetles, in particular, seem to be542 excellent targets for domestication because they have extreme543 levels of genetic malleability. Remember that lobster was once544 seen as an animal only fit for prisoners to consume!546 - birth-clones :: What if each person was intentionally split at birth547 into a normal embryo and a few "backup" cells which are then548 frozen. The backup cells are created just the same way as natural549 identical twins. The backups can be used to regenerate550 organs. etc. Also, it would be a good sci-fi concept, because you551 could have a culture where people reward people who were552 especially awesome are "reborn" from their backups. Imagine553 having a young Bach every generation, etc.555 - pronunciation guide :: a simple webpage where you type in a word and556 it returns a simple, English sentence describing exactly how to557 pronounce the word. For people who don't want to learn IPA.559 - Learning to Teleport :: This is a story about a person who is560 struggling with his/her society's ideas about teleportation. It's561 considered a fundamental part of being a member of that society562 (after all, the difference between animals and humans is that563 humans are creatures of pure information while animals are564 burdened with base matter, "that's how you travel the stars,565 etc") Humans are born normally, grow up, and then eventually566 transcend via destructive upload. Analogies to jumping off a567 diving board into a pool (which I simply /could not do/ for a568 long time), etc.570 - no-float-ice :: cup that has cross beams at the bottom where ice571 forms. Then when you drink liquid from the glass, the ice stays572 at the bottom and doesn't hit your lips. For bars and fancy573 things.575 - bitcoins for immigrants :: A common case with Mexican immigrants576 (illegal or not) is that they want to send money they've earned577 in the US back to their families in Mexico. They currently do578 this through things like Money Gram or Western Union, and they579 get fleeced in the process with fees. Bitcoin could greatly580 reduce the cost of sending money from America to Mexico, but I581 don't believe that it's currently used for that among Mexican582 immigrants currently due to lack of knowledge. I bet you could583 set up physical locations like those obnoxious Western Union huts584 in places like Texas, Arizona, etc, and greatly undercut585 them. Or, perhaps some educational seminars about bitcoin might586 be in order. There's some money to be made there because there is587 great demand, and it's a good thing to boot!589 - reverse eye-tracking :: A painting that is actually a digital screen590 with a camera. It records people's eye tracks permanently. It's591 "artistic" because paintings are normally these things that you592 look at without changing, but this one is changed the second you593 look at it, recording where /you/ looked forever for others to594 see. Make it be a painting of a woman and see the trolling as the595 breasts and groin area light up with interest from all the males596 passing by.598 - smart toilets :: Instead of using indirect measures like infrared599 detectors of the presence of a person, use computer vision to600 directly measure whether the toilet needs to be flushed. I think601 a lot of things will end up going this way as we get better602 computer vision.604 - validate chemopreservation :: chemopreservation is difficult to605 validate because it destroys the functionality of a brain, and606 brain simulation will take a long time to mature as a607 technology. However, one very powerful way to validate608 chemopreservation would be to have a person/animal learn609 something with high complexity such as a number or the solution610 to a maze, or a flashbulb memory. Then you preserve their brain611 chemically, slice it up, and read /that specific memory/ from the612 detailed brain scan. Much more difficult, but much more doable.614 - candy screw :: edible candy screw with candy nuts that you can screw615 as well.617 - better bibliography :: when writing a thesis or paper, have the618 bibliography not just be an opaque list of resources, but have it619 be a list of /summaries/ and /qualities/ that each paper has in620 the context of the paper being written. When examining a621 bibliography, I want to know if reading the papers in the622 bibliography are worth my time, and I also am probably also623 interested in exactly the things that are being discussed in the624 paper I'm reading. The bibliography is the perfect place to625 provide information about the referenced papers from the626 author's perspective. I will use this biographic form in my own627 thesis!629 - chess visual :: to show the vast size of the game trees considered630 by computers, show two people playing chess in a void. They are631 floating in space, and there is a simple chess board between632 them. Then, as they play, the game tree's they are considering633 are drawn behind him. The root of the tree starts centered in634 their heads or whatever they use to think, and the tree grows out635 from behind, never crossing the dividing plane between the two636 players. Each player's tree is a different color. As they grow,637 there are animations for pruning, etc. Eventually, they look like638 the hemispheres of a brain, wings, etc. A human's tree might639 occasionally have a long chain, while the computer tree would be640 more uniform. You could compare deep blue and a modern641 laptop. Use actual data when fighting two computers!643 - tamper proof gold bars :: [[http://www.tungsten-alloy.com/gold-plated-tungsten-alloy-bar.html][this site]] offers gold plated tungsten bars644 as "novelty" items. One reason to prefer coins is because they645 are much harder to counterfeit because there is less surface area646 to mass ratio. However, gold bars are still a great design647 because they can hold a lot of value in a small space. A gold bar648 could be given the same protections (and more) that gold coins649 have to offer by changing it into a "gold book", which would have650 hundreds of "pages" of gold bound together. This could be651 implemented with multiple steel rods going through the book which652 can be removed, or some more classier mechanism for holding the653 pages. The point is that the bar can be EASILY subdivided (and654 people would perform this test before buying), thus guaranteeing655 it's authenticity.657 - high school science :: this is a lesson in scientific ethics. The658 goal is to calculate /g/, the local gravitational659 acceleration. The students are told that the textbook says it's660 /exactly/ 9.81 before they start the experiment. See how they661 doctor their results to get closer to the textbook value. It's662 neat because for any given school, /g/ is probably *not* exactly663 equal to 9.81, because that is just an average!665 - opencourseware subtitles :: there are people who type up lectures at666 MIT while they are being given, so that hearing impared students667 can follow along. These recordings should be kept and given to668 OCW for subtitles. If the timestamps of keys are recorded, then669 it is easy to make subtitles.671 - screen locking timing :: you use your computer camera to see if you672 are sitting in front of the computer. If you are, then the screen673 will never lock. If you are, then the screen will lock with a674 30-40 second timeout. It's an extension of using inactivity to675 initiate the countdown, just with more information.677 - mirror toilet :: a toilet with a square basin made of mirror instead678 of porcelain. That way, you can see how good of a wipe job you679 have done / watch how your excretion system works.681 - X-ray telepresence :: given that a doctor is operating on a patient682 via telepresence, one cool things you can do is shine X-rays into683 the patient to view the insides during real time. (This doesn't684 expose either the doctor or patient to chronically damaging685 amounts of X-rays) If the system was coupled with a Bayesian686 model of the layout of the structure, and the x-rays were only687 fired whenever the uncertainty of the model reached a certain688 threshold, then the radiation damage and surgery risk could be689 minimized.691 - superfluid vascular system :: I wonder what would happen if you692 replaced the blood in a human with a superfluid. What would the693 physical dynamics be? Would the superfluid flow through the694 vasculature, or would it ignore it and travel through the cells,695 or something else entirely. Since superfluids need to be cold to696 retain their superfluidity, how would the dynamics change during697 perfusion of a superfluid, where the fluid gains and looses698 superfluidity as it goes deeper into the body and is cooled by699 superfluid from upstream. In summary there are two things to700 simulate 1.) replace all blood in human with superfluid701 instantly. 2.) perfuse superfluid into human.703 - projective guessing :: I think that we read and see things by704 making a really good guess about what we're expecting to see,705 and then searching for our guess in what we see. If it really706 doesn't match, then we start to make more guesses / analyze the707 image from first principles, but most stuff is projective708 guessing.710 - Intestinal flora maintenance :: why not inoculate babies at birth711 with "ideal" gut flora instead of whatever bullshit they712 naturally get, thus giving them optimal digestive/nutrient713 extraction capabilities. Might also be able to make their farts714 not stink for life, too. MORE IMPORTANTLY, might help to715 preventatively stop some forms of /colic/, which affects 1 in 5716 babies and causes constant screaming and pain for about 5 weeks.718 - server culture -- mirrors :: make a distributed system where people719 can mirror the websites of people they like -- essentially cover720 the server costs of favored websites. This could make popular721 websites run at no cost. The system would require that the722 mirrored content be the same as the official source. Sort of like723 bit-torrent for websites.725 - map programming :: one problem with functional programming is that726 in order to remain functional, you have to pass up arguments up727 into each calling function to get the full range of behavior728 from the lower level functions. Normally people come to a729 compromise involving abstraction and sparing use of dynamic730 variables to configure runtime behavior. What would be the731 advantages of making a programming language where every function732 receives one argument, a map, which contains all the symbol733 bindings it would ever need? This map is passed on to all734 subordinate functions. This way, you could replace functions on735 the fly, and arrange for there to be sensible defaults,736 etc. Might cause more harm than good but is an interesting idea.738 - rest nest :: a small EEG device you would attach to your head when739 you go to sleep at night. ML algorithms would determine your740 particular sleep cycles. This would mostly be an alarm clock that741 you could give a time range, say 7:00AM - 7:15AM, and it would742 wake you up during an ideal time corresponding to then end of one743 of your 90 min sleep cycles. You would feel much more rested upon744 waking up, and would wake up faster. There might be some other745 uses for the EEG data as well.747 - image compression :: use a library like gimp or opencv to process an748 image to make it have less entropy, then store the reverse of749 those operations along with the compressed simpler image as a750 super-compressed image file (possibly accepting some751 losses). Trades file size for decompression time, and allows one752 to cheat by using information in gimp/opencv to compress the753 image.755 - aldehyde-stabalized cryopreservation :: why not use a fixative to756 buy enough time to ramp up cryoprotectants to an acceptable level757 at room temperature? Then, the whole system can be rapidly cooled758 and vitrified. This method "severs the biological link" in that759 the fixatives are highly toxic, but current vitrification760 procedures do this anyway since there can be a lot of freezing761 damage.763 - dilated security camera :: a security camera that would capture764 full video footage of everything at 60fps but then decide to keep765 only every 1 frame every 5 seconds unless there's something766 "interesting" happening.768 - bitcoin wallet :: Part of "server culture", this would be something769 like "coin.your-domain.com" which would serve as770 your personal trusted access to your own bitcoins771 from anywhere.773 - libpay :: this would be a free library which would enable774 micro-donations to software projects and other projects,775 so that you could donate a penny to "emacs" and it would776 be automatically split up to every person who has ever777 contributed to emacs in proportion to the amount of778 community esteem, code quantity, bugs fixed, whatever the779 community decides. This might make it possible for780 programmers to live entirely off of free programming.782 - pronouns :: use capital letters A-Z instead of pronouns. They solve783 pronoun referents and gender neutrality, are short to784 say, and you can encode useful information into the785 choice of letter. For example, instead of "Meetings786 shall be presided over by the president, unless she is787 absent." USE "Meetings shall be presided over by the788 president, unless P is absent." We already use this a789 little, since I and U are reserved for the subject and790 object respectively.792 - phone DSP :: software app that inserts an audio DSP between the793 input to a phone and the output. The DSP is delicious794 and configurable, and can allow men to make their795 voices deeper, etc. The app would allow you to hear796 your own voice as others hear it. Most people hate how797 their own voice sounds. The app would also allow one to798 immediately change the parameters of the DSP using good799 presets.801 - restaurant receipts :: use a carbon copy receipt instead of two stupid802 copies.804 - crossdressing :: Easiest way to disguise oneself as a woman is to805 wear a burka.807 - book-mode :: intelligent color highlighting for books and808 articles. It would disambiguate pronouns and involved809 references. For example, if "Rachael" was assigned the810 color red, and "the blonde haired girl" refers to811 "Rachael", then "the blonde haired girl" would be812 colored red. Also, you could disambiguate multi part813 run-on sentences by highlighting each814 subcomponent. Maybe would also have applications to815 scientific reading.817 - Handheld light Rain measurement :: this would be a clear, teflon818 coated plastic disk with a camera underneath the disk. You would819 be able to hold the device out and it would measure the rate of820 accumulation of water droplets from fine mists and light rain by821 using computer vision to measure the diameters of the drops.823 - Big Brother Farming :: This would be a vision system that would824 individually monitor each plant and turn on water, etc to ensure825 maximum/uniform growth for each plant.827 - Discrete Faucet :: A faucet with discrete ticks instead of828 continuous.830 - Laser Circle :: take a glass microfiliment and shine a laser at one831 end at an oblique angle. It will make a perfect,832 large circle on the wall, converting a laser beam833 into a laser cone, preserving most of the energy of834 the laser.836 - Invisible Glass :: Take a container of liquid and embed a837 glass sculpture made out of glass that has exactly the same index838 of refraction and color of the liquid. Then the sculpture will be839 totally invisible in the container, and will only be revealed840 when the liquid is drained. The container might be a fancy841 wine/spirit bottle or an hourglass.843 - Caterpillar people :: A race of caterpillar like creatures gains844 intelligence after eons of predation by birds, etc. These845 caterpillar creatures still undergo metamorphosis into a large846 butterfly-like creature. The metamorphosis process turns the847 caterpillar's brain into mush and reforms it into a minimal,848 dumb, truly insect-like mind, completely destroying the person849 the caterpillar was. The society develops all sorts of customs and850 religious interpretations of the metamorphosis. It is viewed as851 good and natural by some since it is part of their life cycle and852 necessary to propagate the species, as only the butterflies can853 mate. Some think that the butterflies are still the same person854 because they have the same soul, even they no longer posses the855 memories or personality of the original caterpillar. Some see the856 butterfly form as the "true form" of the species, since the857 butterflies can fly, mate, and are beautiful. Many make a big858 deal out of the fact that 1-2% of the caterpillar's mind is859 actually preserved in the butterfly. Some see it as a terrible860 tragedy and argue that the caterpillars should try to stop the861 metamorphosis by technology. Practically, some very important862 members of society undergo hormone therapy and/or surgery to863 prevent metamorphosis so that they can live longer as themselves.865 This is a continuation of Marvin Minsky's ideas about pain being866 something that preserves our bodies while destroying our minds,867 something that is a remnant from our too harsh animal days that868 hasn't caught up to the fact that we have very complex brains869 now. It's a worst-case scenario about a maladaptive genetic870 legacy. Also, it's inspired by "There She Is!!!", which makes a871 compelling point about homosexuality by introducing a second872 gender characteristic (bunny/cat, male/female), which makes873 homophobia look very silly. Here, our own biological legacy of874 pain and death is made to look like the tragedy it is through the875 lens of the the caterpillar people.877 - relationships as a business :: [[http://thedailywtf.com/Articles/Up-or-Out-Solving-the-IT-Turnover-Crisis.aspx][Turnover-Crisis]] is an excellent talk878 about the "culture of quitting," which is about better business879 by letting people go instead of keeping them around past their880 "apex". Focuses on information transfer. Cool idea of an alumni881 network, which for relationships would be a group of satisfied882 ex-lovers, who would recommend new people your way, and who might883 consider coming to you again, refreshed from their time away with884 new stories/experiences. I should look for examples of this and885 how they worked out.887 - psychic crystal :: in a science fiction story, this would be an888 object that is very easy to move physically but is extremely889 difficult to move with telekinesis.891 - true reflection :: There's a "true mirror" in the MIT student center892 -- it's two normal mirrors at right angles, like staring at a893 corner of a room. The light reflects so that it shows you what894 you actually look like, instead of your mirror image.896 - remote control wasp :: use computer to drive wings with remote897 power/logic.899 - encrypted email phone book :: public (distributed?) database of900 email->private-key pairs, to enable automatic encryption.902 - universal eye color :: every equivalent creature will see each903 others' eyes as black -- it's universal. Even if the creatures904 see in radio waves, and their eyes are 2m long pieces of jagged905 metal, when those creatures look at each other, they will see906 black, the absence of light and color (since it's being absorbed907 by the sensor array).909 - intelligent microwave :: it learns where the hot nodes of its fields910 are, and uses them to evenly heat any food item. It has an infrared911 camera or something to keep track of how hot the food is. That way,912 you don't get bowls where the edges are boiling, while the center is913 still frozen. Requires a little bit of intelligence/vision, since914 the exact pattern of heating totally depends on the exact shape of915 the food. Wouldn't need a carousel, and wouldn't need a timer,916 just a desired temperature. Could also detect ice, and automatically917 defrost the parts which are frozen. Might be able to work much918 faster since it can avoid overheating; might have problems with919 heating the insides of thick things, might need a weight sensor too.921 + Would be much cleaner than other microwaves, since food would922 "sputter" and splash liquid much less.924 + Throw in some SIFT+R processing to match previously cooked foods925 and learn the exact heating profiles for things that have been926 cooked before -- it can get faster the more it's used.928 - Flesh pillow :: a pillow like the arm or torso of a human, complete929 with simulated temperature, bones, and heartbeat.931 - light filter :: (like light tweezers) to mechanically separate932 fluids with different index of refraction934 - silver socks :: socks laced with silver for the antimicrobial935 properties.937 - Rod of Moses :: device to distill urine through evaporation and938 easily dispose of urea crystals for use in desert -- produce939 drinkable water and live an extra few days!941 - lottery scraper :: web scraper which monitors various lotteries,942 looking for "special" gimmick changes in the rules (like 4x943 winnings on Wednesdays) and computes expected value...945 - Memristiors novel design :: make an evolutionary algorithm to make946 old stuff using all four basic circuit elements.948 - Conductive concrete :: concrete that has embedded metal fibers so949 that it can conduct electricity.951 - little bitty melting pot :: might be useful for some types of952 manufacturing/3D printing -- how small can an induction melter be953 made, for example.955 - true pure tones :: hear a true pure tone by direct stimulation of the956 nerves of the ear958 - mechanical analogue to the electrical op-amp :: would be an object959 with two levers -- you pull on one lever and the other moves the960 same way, no matter what's in the way or what it is driving. This961 analogy could be useful to teach op amps to people.963 - light capacitor :: suspend some ball of material with a high index964 of refraction and shine light into it so it gets stuck -- would965 the light stay trapped forever? Could you build up unlimited966 quantities of light inside the sphere (which could then be967 released slowly by frustrated internal reflection?969 - reading comprehension :: use the screen capture routine to make a970 quiz program that constructs questions about the content you971 seemed to gloss over while reading. could be easy if the pdf came972 with embedded questions. Dylan: automatically generate973 word-cloud about the parts you found most interesting; help974 others who read the same stuff by drawing attention to the975 interesting parts.977 - optimize an article :: capture reading of a scientific article via978 screen capture while people read it, then use it to make the979 article better. like the movie-pruning idea.981 - movie pruning :: Movies always are too long at first. One way to982 shorten them ``scientifically" is to record blink rate during the983 move and then remove / shorten the frames of the parts in which984 there are a lot of blinking (average this over multiple people)985 better yet, put it online and do it across thousands of people. I986 got this from youtube in which there is an episode of kill bill987 which is composed entirely of the parts in which people had their988 eyes closed. slogan: want to make a movie people can't take their989 eyes off of? Just take those parts out!991 - explosive thermite epoxy putty :: one part would contain the rust,992 one part the aluminum.994 - concrete epoxy :: epoxy with sand/ some other solid material.996 - hard sword :: make a samurai sword, but use osmiridum instead of997 martensite for the cutting part; it should be a better998 sword.1000 - close range wireless :: use the induction technology used to1001 recharge electric toothbrushes with no metal links to send data1002 without any metal at all!1004 - perfect pitch :: learn perfect pitch using another sense in1005 combination (sight or touch)1007 - bio metallic structure :: metal grids with seeds inside, which grow1008 together and form a durable biological matrix. The metal1009 substrate delivers water. (maybe use plastic instead of metal?)1010 Dylan: enrich plants with inorganic compounds; electrical1011 interfaces in cellular plant matter => remote-controlled1012 photosynthetic/bioluminescent structures.1014 - conducting extracellular matrix :: to allow better control of1015 organic systems and an enhanced nervous system.1017 - cross-modal memory hashing :: a way to retrieve memories more1018 robustly.1020 - wooden refrigerator :: to give food a better taste Dylan: like1021 barrels for wine, or planks for salmon. Maybe just have "flavor1022 planks" for your pre-existing fridge. Need to mitigate effect of1023 temperature on volatility?1025 - radioactive transmutation molecule by molecule :: create precious1026 metals or something else economically advantageous. Best1027 transmutation I can come up with is mercury into gold, but it's1028 not economically viable.1030 - preservation via crowding :: inoculate food with tons of harmless1031 bacteria so that there's no room for bad bacteria as a method of1032 preservation1034 - old school preservation :: Pasteur - style holding jar with siphon1035 as a way to store sterilized liquids at room temperature1036 indefinitely w/o refrigeration.1038 - restaurant policy :: Throw rude people out of restaurant as a matter1039 of course -- make ambiance much better.1041 - clean windows :: make something that mixes soap with fire hydrant1042 water (and reduces the pressure a bit) and use it1043 to clean windows of buildings.1045 - ocarina :: make an ocarina out of pure silver1047 - fire pen :: pen which burns words on to the page, thus never needing1048 any ink. Is there a way to make it runnable from body heat?1050 - website to design your own soda :: and label, and have it mailed to1051 you / sell it from your own online store.1053 - solar panels :: that float on the ocean1055 - handcuffs with more than two cuffs (3?) :: great for daisy chaining1056 people, binding them to environment, etc.1058 - vector based SOUND files :: like the pictures but with SOUND. codify1059 sound in a language with enough symbols so that it can describe1060 everything and encode it in that. would be like going from speech1061 to text or smtg. Could also store sound as an image of the1062 wavefront encoded as a vector image.1064 - genetically engineered glowing fruit :: They have some animals that1065 can glow, but glowing fruit that you eat would be AWESOME!1067 - The body as a key to memory :: IF memories are encoded using1068 particular sensory impressions, what happens if the sensory organ1069 itself changes? those memories would become inaccessible. maybe1070 this is why we can't remember much from our childhoods. also,1071 could this happen throughout life as well? Could S remember stuff1072 from his childhood?1074 - lighter flint on spring :: make hot, throw it at something, and it1075 makes sparkles!1077 - rare bubbles :: Engineer a material which has both ductility and high1078 surface tension to make the "third"1079 minimal-surface-energy solution to a bubble suspended1080 between two equal-diameter rings. (Solutions are1081 cylindrical catenary curve, two separated half-bubbles,1082 and a double-cone)1084 - Textbook whose content can be varied continuously :: alter level of1085 difficulty, rigor, diction, emphasize crossover with certain1086 other discipline, etc. Content generated dynamically from1087 knowledge base, along with questions that are moreover altered to1088 guide knowledge acquisition. Motivation: One book of1089 knowledge. /One./1092 #+BEGIN_HTML1093 <p class="end"> Still want more? Visit the <a href="./ideas.html">Raw1094 Ideas</a> page, but prepare for extreme half-bakedness. </p>1095 #+END_HTML