Tagged: Hardware RSS Toggle Comment Threads | Keyboard Shortcuts

  • mazsa 15:08 on February 4, 2012 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , Hardware, ,   

    Before the memristor, it would have been impossible to create something with the form factor of a brain, the low power requirements, and the instantaneous internal communications. Turns out that those three things are key to making anything that resembles the brain and thus can be trained and coaxed to behave like a brain. In this case, form is function, or more accurately, function is hopeless without form. [...]

    A memristor is a two-terminal device whose resistance changes depending on the amount, direction, and duration of voltage that’s applied to it. But here’s the really interesting thing about a memristor: Whatever its past state, or resistance, it freezes that state until another voltage is applied to change it. Maintaining that state requires no power. That’s different from a dynamic RAM cell, which requires regular charge to maintain its state. The upshot is that thousands of memristors could substitute for massive banks of power-hogging memory. Just to be clear, the memristor is not magic—its memristive state does decay over time. That decay can take hours or centuries depending on the material, and stability must often be traded for energy requirements—which is one of the major research reasons memristors aren’t flooding the market yet. [...]

    A biological brain is able to quickly execute this massive simultaneous information orgy—and do it in a small package—because it has evolved a number of stupendous shortcuts. Here’s what happens in a brain: Neuron 1 spits out an impulse, and the resultant information is sent down the axon to the synapse of its target, Neuron 2. The synapse of Neuron 2, having stored its own state locally, evaluates the importance of the information coming from Neuron 1 by integrating it with its own previous state and the strength of its connection to Neuron 1. Then, these two pieces of information—the information from Neuron 1 and the state of Neuron 2′s synapse—flow toward the body of Neuron 2 over the dendrites. And here is the important part: By the time that information reaches the body of Neuron 2, there is only a single value—all processing has already taken place during the information transfer. There is never any need for the brain to take information out of one neuron, spend time processing it, and then return it to a different set of neurons. Instead, in the mammalian brain, storage and processing happen at the same time and in the same place.

    That difference is the main reason the human brain can run on the same power budget as a 20-watt lightbulb. [...]

    To build a brain, you need to throw away the conceit of separate hardware and software because the brain doesn’t work that way. In the brain it’s all just wetware. If you really wanted to replicate a mammalian brain, software and hardware would need to be inextricable. We have no idea how to build such a system at the moment, but the memristor has allowed us to take a big step closer by approximating the biological form factor: hardware that can be both small and ultralow power. [...]

    http://spectrum.ieee.org/robotics/artificial-intelligence/moneta-a-mind-made-from-memristors/0

     
  • mazsa 08:49 on January 21, 2012 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: Hardware, , , , , ,   

    “Quantum physics enables perfectly secure cloud computing: Researchers have succeeded in combining the power of quantum computing with the security of quantum cryptography and have shown that perfectly secure cloud computing can be achieved using the principles of quantum mechanics. They have performed an experimental demonstration of quantum computation in which the input, the data processing, and the output remain unknown to the quantum computer.
    [...] current trend of cloud computing: central remote servers are used to store and process data – everything is done in the “cloud.” The obvious challenge is to make globalized computing safe and ensure that users’ data stays private.
    The latest research, to appear in Science, reveals that quantum computers can provide an answer to that challenge. “Quantum physics solves one of the key challenges in distributed computing. It can preserve data privacy when users interact with remote computing centers [...]
    The scientists in the Vienna research group have demonstrated the concept of “blind quantum computing” in an experiment: they performed the first known quantum computation during which the user’s data stayed perfectly encrypted. The experimental demonstration uses photons, or “light particles” to encode the data. Photonic systems are well-suited to the task because quantum computation operations can be performed on them, and they can be transmitted over long distances.
    The process works in the following manner. The user prepares qubits – the fundamental units of quantum computers – in a state known only to himself and sends these qubits to the quantum computer. The quantum computer entangles the qubits according to a standard scheme. The actual computation is measurement-based: the processing of quantum information is implemented by simple measurements on qubits. The user tailors measurement instructions to the particular state of each qubit and sends them to the quantum server. Finally, the results of the computation are sent back to the user who can interpret and utilize the results of the computation. Even if the quantum computer or an eavesdropper tries to read the qubits, they gain no useful information, without knowing the initial state; they are “blind.”" http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2012-01/uov-qpe011612.php

    Publication: “Demonstration of Blind Quantum Computing” Stefanie Barz, Elham Kashefi, Anne Broadbent, Joseph Fitzsimons, Anton Zeilinger, Philip Walther. DOI: 10.1126/science.1214707

    http://arxiv.org/pdf/1110.1381

     
  • mazsa 10:37 on December 25, 2010 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: Hardware, ,   

    What is Traitorware?: “Your digital camera may embed metadata into photographs with the camera’s serial number or your location. Your printer may be incorporating a secret code on every page it prints which could be used to identify the printer and potentially the person who used it. If Apple puts a particularly creepy patent it has recently applied for into use, you can look forward to a day when your iPhone may record your voice, take a picture of your location, record your heartbeat, and send that information back to the mothership.

    This is traitorware: devices that act behind your back to betray your privacy.” https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2010/12/what-traitorware

     
  • mazsa 21:33 on November 14, 2010 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: Hardware,   

    Self Repair Manifasto 

    Source: http://www.ifixit.com/Manifesto via http://listcultures.org/mailman/listinfo/p2presearch_listcultures.org

     
  • mazsa 21:16 on November 14, 2010 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: Hardware, , ,   

    “Tangible Bit is a project intending to link together all aspects of digitial manufacturing through a series of datasets. The aim is to create a database of sites hosting manufacturing equipment or inventory, objects, materials, manufacturing processes and so on. [...]” http://tangiblebit.com/

    Free Software has been around for a while, and Free Content is coming to be an integral part of our culture. Now we need Free Infrastructue. Tangible Bit is above all a Free Infrastructure project.

    But it’s also a software project, so of course Tangible Bit is free software. It is developed and distributed under the terms of the GNU General Public License v3.0. The datasets made available through Tangible Bit are distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike license.

    The reason for this is simple: We believe that the stated goals cannot be acheived with competition for maximizing profit, but only with cooperation to minimize profit. In the current legal model it is all but impossible to encourage any form of cooperation within the production sector, but we believe that by adopting a copyright policy that allows for free sharing of information and code with the requisite demand that others contribute to the commons we can achieve our goals faster. [...]

    We believe in the freedom of the individual, and we believe that the individual cannot be free while enslaved in the current industrial paradigm. Liberation from this is what we strive for.” http://tangiblebit.com/welcome/free-infrastructure/

    “Industry 2.0 is the movement to redo the industrial revolution with humankind at its core and not the ownership of ideas. This provides an implicit promise for the reduction and demarketization of required work – the golden age of unemployment – and the elimination of artificial scarcity, which has for decades dithered and confused priorities regarding the manufacture of all products worldwide. [...]

    Tangible Bit is an Industry 2.0 application in that it is built around the understanding that the current industrial model is unsustainable, and that only with a deep understanding of the world’s supply chains, materials economy and manufacturing methodology can we avert the demise of humanity. The goal of Tangible Bit is to make the world’s first global scale indstrial information system. No less.” http://tangiblebit.com/welcome/industry-2-0/

     
  • mazsa 10:20 on October 11, 2010 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , Hardware, , , , , ,   

    Our genomes, unzipped: “Over the last year, all the members of Genomes Unzipped have had genome scans performed by personal genomics company 23andMe; several of us have also had additional tests done by other genetic testing companies (Counsyl, deCODEme). From today, we’ll be making all of our raw genetic data and the reports generated from these tests freely available online. As the project proceeds, we aim to obtain data from an ever larger array of tests – ultimately extending to whole-genome sequencing – and release it openly. Right now you can freely download the 23andMe data from everyone in the project from this website http://www.genomesunzipped.org/data .”

    http://www.genomesunzipped.org/2010/10/our-genomes-unzipped.php

     
  • mazsa 07:28 on September 17, 2010 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: Hardware, , ,   

    New approach to quantum computing: exponential leap 

    “An international research group led by scientists from the University of Bristol has developed a new approach to quantum computing [...] The researchers believe that their device represents a new route to a quantum computer – a powerful type of computer that uses quantum bits (qubits) rather than the conventional bits used in today’s computers. [...]

    Unlike conventional bits or transistors, which can be in one of only two states at any one time (1 or 0), a qubit can be in several states at the same time and can therefore be used to hold and process a much larger amount of information at a greater rate.

    “It is widely believed that a quantum computer will not become a reality for at least another 25 years,” says Professor Jeremy O’Brien, Director of the Centre for Quantum Photonics. “However, we believe, using our new technique, a quantum computer could, in less than ten years, be performing calculations that are outside the capabilities of conventional computers.”

    The technique developed in Bristol uses two identical particles of light (photons) moving along a network of circuits in a silicon chip to perform an experiment known as a quantum walk. Quantum walk experiments using one photon have been done before and can even be modelled exactly by classical wave physics. However, this is the first time a quantum walk has been performed with two particles and the implications are far-reaching.

    “Using a two-photon system, we can perform calculations that are exponentially more complex than before,” says Prof O’Brien. “This is very much the beginning of a new field in quantum information science and will pave the way to quantum computers that will help us understand the most complex scientific problems.” [...]

    The leap from using one photon to two photons is not trivial because the two particles need to be identical in every way and because of the way these particles interfere, or interact, with each other. There is no direct analogue of this interaction outside of quantum physics.

    “Now that we can directly realize and observe two-photon quantum walks, the move to a three-photon, or multi-photon, device is relatively straightforward, but the results will be just as exciting” says Prof O’Brien. “Each time we add a photon, the complexity of the problem we are able to solve increases exponentially, so if a one-photon quantum walk has 10 outcomes, a two-photon system can give 100 outcomes and a three-photon system 1000 solutions and so on.”"

    http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2010-09/uob-oce091310.php

    Update: Cf. http://hardware.slashdot.org/story/10/09/16/2314217/Two-Photon-Walk-a-Giant-Leap-For-Quantum-Computing

     
  • mazsa 22:16 on May 18, 2010 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , Hardware, , , , ,   

    The Pirate Party Becomes The Pirate Bay’s New Host – “After its previous bandwidth provider had to take the site offline due to concerns over an aggressive Hollywood injunction, today The Pirate Bay is fully back in operation with a surprising new supplier. From a few hours ago, in a move intended to “stand up for freedom of expression”, the Swedish Pirate Party became the site’s new host. [...]”

    http://torrentfreak.com/the-pirate-party-becomes-the-pirate-bays-new-host-100518/

     
  • mazsa 10:15 on May 17, 2010 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , Hardware, , , , , , , , , ,   

    Should Obama Control the Internet? – A new bill would give the President emergency authority to halt web traffic and access private data. http://motherjones.com/politics/2009/04/should-obama-control-internet

    Cf.

    “Netsukuku is the name of an experimental peer-to-peer routing system, developed by the FreakNet MediaLab (Italian), born to build up a distributed network, anonymous and censorship-free, fully independent but not necessarily separated from Internet, without the support of any server, ISP and no central authority. It does not rely on a backbone router, or on any routing equipment other than normal network interface cards.”

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Netsukuku

     
  • mazsa 19:31 on April 21, 2010 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , Hardware, , , , , , ,   

    “Synthetic biologists try to engineer useful biological systems that do not exist in nature. One of their goals is to design an orthogonal chromosome different from DNA and RNA, termed XNA for xeno nucleic acids. XNA exhibits a variety of structural chemical changes relative to its natural counterparts. These changes make this novel information-storing biopolymer invisible to natural biological systems. The lack of cognition to the natural world, however, is seen as an opportunity to implement a genetic firewall that impedes exchange of genetic information with the natural world, which means it could be the ultimate biosafety tool. Here I discuss, why it is necessary to go ahead designing xenobiological systems like XNA and its XNA binding proteins; what the biosafety specifications should look like for this genetic enclave; which steps should be carried out to boot up the first XNA life form; and what it means for the society at large. [...]

    “When discussing societal aspects of xenobiology today we need to take the following aspects into account:

    • Biosafety: what is the actual probability that XNA life fails on any of the 10 specifications mentioned above? What are the consequences?
    • Biosecurity: is there any way XNA could be misused by someone with criminal or malicious intentions? How could it be prevented?
    • Intellectual property rights: will the XNA world be owned and controlled by someone, or should it be freely available so anybody could use this safety device? Will some XNAs (e.g., TNA) be patented and some (e.g., PNA) free?
    • Governance: which new rules, guidelines or international treaties need to be established to make sure XNA systems remain as useful as possible? For example, is it necessary to prohibit any activities that actively try to undermine the specifications mentioned above, i.e., similar to prohibiting R&D that aims at designing new offensive bioweapons?

    “In contrast to these rather tangible aspects, we might also be confronted with rather intangible implications. The history of science shows several changes to our worldviews, altering our folk-based narratives to more scientifically inspired (semi-)rational approaches. In this context, science has inflicted a series of disappointments and disillusions to our folk-based beliefs, such as: the earth is not the center of the Universe, men and apes share the same ancestors, or that emotions and thinking is correlated to a neurological substrate. The promoters of these ideas were often attacked by those trying to keep the intellectual status quo. Xenobiology could easily trigger the next paradigm change in the way we understand nature and life. Just as the Earth lost its place as the center of the universe, or men lost its unique status in the animal world, our natural world could lose its unique status as being synonymous with ‘‘life.’’ But as with all other paradigm changes, concepts that better explain the world around us cannot be ignored for long.” Schmidt,2010: Xenobiology: A new form of life as the ultimate biosafety tool http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/cgi-bin/fulltext/123315991/PDFSTART

     
  • mazsa 18:05 on April 20, 2010 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , Hardware, ,   


    The Maker’s Bill of Rights ( http://makezine.com/04/ownyourown/ )

    • Meaningful and specific parts lists shall be included.
    • Cases shall be easy to open.
    • Batteries should be replaceable.
    • Special tools are allowed only for darn good reasons.
    • Profiting by selling expensive special tools is wrong and not making special tools available is even worse.
    • Torx is OK; tamperproof is rarely OK.
    • Components, not entire sub-assemblies, shall be replaceable.
    • Consumables, like fuses and filters, shall be easy to access.
    • Circuit boards shall be commented.
    • Power from USB is good; power from proprietary power adapters is bad.
    • Standard connecters shall have pinouts defined.
    • If it snaps shut, it shall snap open.
    • Screws better than glues.
    • Docs and drivers shall have permalinks and shall reside for all perpetuity at archive.org.
    • Ease of repair shall be a design ideal, not an afterthought.
    • Metric or standard, not both.
    • Schematics shall be included.
     
c
compose new post
j
next post/next comment
k
previous post/previous comment
r
reply
e
edit
o
show/hide comments
t
go to top
l
go to login
h
show/hide help
shift + esc
cancel

This site is protected with Urban Giraffe's plugin 'HTML Purified' and Edward Z. Yang's Powered by HTML Purifier. 66561 items have been purified.