Mercurial > thoughts
changeset 65:1c6af9dd64d5
merge.
author | Robert McIntyre <rlm@mit.edu> |
---|---|
date | Fri, 27 Sep 2013 13:07:34 -0400 |
parents | be36b7325a47 (current diff) b838bd76b081 (diff) |
children | eae81fa3a8e0 |
files | |
diffstat | 2 files changed, 124 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) [+] |
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1.1 --- a/org/ideas.org Fri Sep 27 13:07:27 2013 -0400 1.2 +++ b/org/ideas.org Fri Sep 27 13:07:34 2013 -0400 1.3 @@ -26,8 +26,52 @@ 1.4 If you want to use one of these ideas as your own and run with it, 1.5 please feel free. I'd love to hear about it if you do. 1.6 1.7 -/There's no end to what a man can accomplish if he doesn't care about 1.8 -getting credit/ 1.9 +#+begin_quote 1.10 +There's no end to what a man can accomplish if he doesn't care about 1.11 +getting credit. 1.12 +#+end_quote 1.13 + 1.14 +- test dummies :: why don't we clone encephalic humans and use then to 1.15 + test /in vivo/ human organ systems and drugs? It 1.16 + would be ethical as long as there are women who are 1.17 + willing to host the clones, and it would be a 1.18 + trememdous resource for studying the human body. I 1.19 + see nothing wrong with it morally, since no one is 1.20 + suffering, and it stands to save many lives throught 1.21 + more advanced technology. 1.22 + 1.23 +- X-ray telepresence :: given that a doctor is operating on a patient 1.24 + via telepresence, one cool things you can do is shine X-rays into 1.25 + the patient to view the insides during real time. If the system 1.26 + was coupled with a baysean model of the layout of the structure, 1.27 + and the x-rays were only fired whenever the uncertaintity of the 1.28 + model reached a certain threshold, then the radiation damage 1.29 + and surgery risk could be minimized. 1.30 + 1.31 +- superfluid vascular system :: I wonder what would happen if you 1.32 + replaced the blood in a human with a superfluid. What would the 1.33 + physical dynamics be? Would the superfluid flow through the 1.34 + vasculature, or would it ignore it and travel through the cells, 1.35 + or something else entirely. Since superfluids need to be cold to 1.36 + retain their superfluidity, how would the dynamics change during 1.37 + perfusion of a superfluid, where the fluid gains and looses 1.38 + superfluidity as it goes deeper into the body and is cooled by 1.39 + superfluid from upstresm. In summary there are two things to 1.40 + simulate 1.) replace all blood in human with superfluid 1.41 + instantly. 2.) perfuse superfluid into human. 1.42 + 1.43 +- projective guessing :: I think that we read and see things by 1.44 + makeing a really good guess about what we're expecting to see, 1.45 + and then searching for our guess in what we see. If it really 1.46 + doesn't match, then we start to make more guesses / analyze the 1.47 + image from first principles, but most stuff is projective 1.48 + guessing. 1.49 + 1.50 +- Intestinal flora maintainence :: why not innoculate babies at birth 1.51 + with "ideal" gut flora instead of whatever bullshit they 1.52 + naturally get, thus giving them optimal digestive/nutrient 1.53 + extraction capabilities. Might also be abot to make their farts 1.54 + not stink for life, too. 1.55 1.56 - server culture : mirrors :: make a distributed system where people 1.57 can mirror the websites of people they like -- essentially cover
2.1 --- /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 2.2 +++ b/org/server.org Fri Sep 27 13:07:34 2013 -0400 2.3 @@ -0,0 +1,78 @@ 2.4 +#+TITLE: Server Culture 2.5 +#+AUTHOR: Robert McIntyre, Dylan Holmes 2.6 +#+EMAIL: rlm@mit.edu 2.7 +#+SETUPFILE: ../../aurellem/org/setup.org 2.8 +#+INCLUDE: ../../aurellem/org/level-0.org 2.9 +#+MATHJAX: align:"left" mathml:t path:"http://www.aurellem.org/MathJax/MathJax.js" 2.10 + 2.11 +* Purpose 2.12 + 2.13 +- To empower users by providing free (libre), secure, user-friendly, 2.14 + personal servers. 2.15 +- To create software that capitalizes on the personal server model; 2.16 + for example, personal e-mail servers, file serving and transfer. 2.17 +- To provide intuitive and transparent web interfaces for configuration. 2.18 +- To promote a culture of computer literacy in general and personal 2.19 + servers in particular by writing modular 2.20 + free applications with friendly interfaces, transparent configurability, 2.21 + and lucid documentation. 2.22 + 2.23 +* VPS Service 2.24 + 2.25 +- Encrypted storage 2.26 +- Domain registration 2.27 +- Backup service 2.28 +- Software bundles 2.29 + 2.30 +- Hardware 2.31 +- Pricing 2.32 + 2.33 +* Web interface 2.34 + 2.35 +- Server configuration 2.36 +- Package management 2.37 +- File management 2.38 +- Web terminal 2.39 + 2.40 +* Modules 2.41 + These could have user friendly locations as subdomains of the main 2.42 + domain that each person would already have (such as 2.43 + mail.example.com, video.example.com) 2.44 + 2.45 +- user managament -- to give other people access to files, etc. 2.46 +- E-mail 2.47 +- File sharing 2.48 +- Social media (e.g. via RSS feeds) 2.49 + 2.50 +* Brain stoming notes 2.51 + 2.52 + - What about small busineses? They are also entities that need 2.53 + privacy and control over their own information. There's still no 2.54 + really good way to get up and going as a small business with little 2.55 + computer ability. 2.56 + 2.57 + - Bitcoin --- people could store their wallets on their own servers 2.58 + and always have access to money. 2.59 + 2.60 + - Backups --- this should be taught to people and made extremely easy. 2.61 + 2.62 + - Legal issues -- should encrypt the server's hard drive 2.63 + automatically. 2.64 + 2.65 + - Identity -- using openid or something, people can finally have an 2.66 + online presence on the web. 2.67 + 2.68 + - Privacy -- one peoblem with proxy sites or VPNs is that they are 2.69 + only as good as the company's word that they won't keep logs. If 2.70 + people could somehow use their own servers as a VPN or proxy, they 2.71 + they could ENSURE that no logs are kept. 2.72 + 2.73 + - If people have servers running all the time, they could donate 2.74 + hard drive space and CPU power to worthy causes in addition to 2.75 + money. (for example, consider donating hosting power to a favorite 2.76 + comic). 2.77 + 2.78 + - Back up your personal files to your server. 2.79 + 2.80 + - Email lists -- where you can manage lists like at MIT, and people 2.81 + can add themselves, etc. 2.82 \ No newline at end of file