Saturday 16 June 2012

Australia’s Digital Future Museum Apps and Uncanny Valley

Voyager has departed solar system with a map to where we are & an anatomical chart of our meaty bodies.Wait! Maybe not such a good idea? Howard Rheingold - @hrheingold

A Snapshot of Australia’s Digital Future to 2050 report
.
A world-first, the report reveals information and communications technology (ICT) enhanced with ubiquitous high-speed broadband is becoming Australia’s new utility – as historic and game changing as electricity or telephony.

Written by Phil Ruthven, Founder and Chairman, IBISWorld, and commissioned by IBM, the report looks ahead of existing research to examine how Australia can harness this new utility to transform our lives, our cities and the way we interact.

The report rates all Australia’s industry classes (509) against the impact of the new utility. Ruthven and his extended Industry Impact Panel assessed the prospects of the 509 classes of industry in the Australian economy over the next 40-50 years.

The report predicts that 10 per cent of Australia’s 509 industries, accounting for 23 per cent of the nation’s revenue, will not function without this new utility. A further 23 per cent of industry revenue will use it to drive step-changes in their business. 15 industry classes are likely to demise if they do not reinvent themselves to embrace the digital future; and some may simply be unable to do so.

The report finds that Australia will no longer be known for its dependency on the export of natural resources over the next half century. It will become known as much an exporter of services such as tourism, business services, health and education services. The export of tourism alone could match the 2012 mineral exports totalling around $175 billion by 2030.


John Hodgman, comedian and resident expert, "explains" the design of three iconic modern objects.

Museum app - Exploring old Sydney: The Rocks (Free)
This week Nico, Einar and I finished another museum walking tour app for android and IPhone. Exploring old Sydney: The Rocks is a self-guided walking tour of The Rocks features a selection of historic images and maps from the Powerhouse Museum collection.

A really nice idea - PeerJ - lifetime Peer review Publishing Model
PeerJ provides academics with two Open Access publication venues: PeerJ (a peer-reviewed academic journal) and PeerJ PrePrints (a 'pre-print server'). Both are focused on the Biological and Medical Sciences, and together they provide an integrated solution for your publishing needs. Submissions open late Summer.

An Uncanny Mind: Masahiro Mori on the Uncanny Valley and Beyond. A post in which Norri Kageki interviews Masahiro Mori, who, as a professor of engineering at Tokyo Institute of Technology in the 1970s, proposed the now-famous concept of the uncanny valley. [Read the first authorized translation of his seminal article here.] Mori's insight was that people would react with revulsion to humanlike robots, whose appearance resembled, but did not quite replicate, that of a real human. He called this phenomenon bukimi no tani (the term "uncanny valley" first appeared in the 1978 book Robots: Fact, Fiction, and Prediction, written by Jasia Reichardt.

Do we need specialist curators?
Commented on Giles Miller's post on Do we need specialist curators where he makes a case for the continued employment of specialised curators to manage museum collections.As a curator I agree with his sentiments but I do think that there is no one size fits all solution - different museum collections are curated in different ways and perhaps a range of curatorial styles is a better approach for some of these. I also think resourcing is an issue for large diverse collections like the ones here at the Powerhouse and as a result specialised curators in one area can also lead to no curators in other areas. While I would love to think just employing more specialised curators to cover all collection areas would solve some of the problems museums face I think the solution may be a little more complicated.

David S. Linthicum CTO and founder of Blue Mountain Labs slideshare on Redefining cloud computing again - what cloud computing is, and what it should be. The way it’s defined today, and how should be defined tomorrow.


Immediately thought there could be all kinds of uses for this great idea - Evian introduces smart fridge magnet, schedules deliveries of water.


My post on Photographing the 1874 Transit of Venus looks at the 1874 transit and how it led to some major advances in the use of photography for astronomical observations.

Saturday 9 June 2012

Weekly Update on Museums, Tech, Social-Media Bell Labs etc - open source zombie gnomes



"We've evolved from being a pack of monkeys to being a pack of monkeys with a dream" Terence McKenna

Nikola Tesla comments in 1926 on wireless "the whole earth will be converted into a huge brain connected by instruments carried in vest pockets."



'Lawn of the Dead' - Zombie garden gnomes chow down on a pink flamingo - being sold on Etsy - great idea wonder why no one has done this this earlier




An interview with Jon Gertner on Bell Laboratories which from the 1920s to the 1980s was the most innovative and productive institution of the twentieth century. These ingenious, often eccentric men would were responsible for some of the major innovations of the twentieth century and Jon talks about how they aided in the development of radar, lasers, transistors, satellites, mobile phones, and much more.

Australian Heritage Strategy is nearing its closing time for public consultation - given this is the first review in 20 years you have until next Friday to put in a submission.

A Free Mandelbrot Fractal Generator Application for iphone and PC's

The opportunity to make a submission to the UK consultation on open standards has closed. But Glyn Moody's introduction entitled Open Season on Open Standards is still well worth a read - "In the face of the continuing move to such open standards, there has been a rearguard action by traditional proprietary software companies to push FRAND - Fair, Reasonable And Non-Discriminatory - as an acceptable default for "open" standards. Except that it is not, as I have discussed at length before ...."



My favourite album this week has been Electric Moon's Inferno. Melkezedek's review pretty much sums it up ".... Chock full of the prime spaced out explorations you expect from the trio, Lunatics Revenge is a perfect bridge to Inferno, where things get even meatier and a shade darker, and deeper..."

A new macrowikinomics video animation featuring some of the world's brightest innovators.

What To Do When Attacked by Pirates - The music industry fought the future and created a black market; book publishers tried another tack - an article on ebook publishing and responses to Piracy by Rob Reid.

A nice guide on how to chemically develop your own photographic film

Another nice pdf guide to Digital Archiving in the 21st century put out by Zotero

Post by Science Insider - Horizon 2020: A €80 Billion Battlefield for Open Access
by Jop de Vrieze on how the next installment of Europe's gargantuan research funding programs called Horizon 2020 will be on Open Access. Hopes ... the program will have "dedicated support to dissemination (including through open access to research results), communication and dialogue actions" and that "open access shall apply under the terms and conditions laid down in the grant agreement." read more

A nice post on the new features of Adobe Creative Suite 6 (CS6)

Jean Burgess posted her slides for her presentation on the role of social media in crises and risk management during the Queensland floods at the 6th Annual Enterprise Risk Management for Government conference in Sydney.