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Immortal computing

immortality
by Naccarato

The Seattlepi reports that Microsoft is patenting solutions to store digital information indefinitely, data preserved and revealed to future generations, and maybe even to future civilizations. MS dubs it “immortal computing” (from Pasta and Vinegar).

One scenario the researchers envision: People could store messages to descendants, information about their lives or interactive holograms of themselves for access by visitors at their tombstones or urns.

And here’s where the notion of immortality really kicks in: The researchers say the artifacts could be symbolic representations of people, reflecting elements of their personalities. The systems might be set up to take action — e-mailing birthday greetings to people identified as grandchildren, for example.

How much will information last seems to be a concern. Nowadays, what happens to my information legacy if I die? if all my login/password combinations, key to my web presence (flickr, youtube, myspace, etc), are written down maybe my family will keep the memory of me by paying regular fees to these services. If in some services automatic actions are scheduled, such as birthday emails, the recipients - given their “infinite” email address at gmail for example - would keep receiving them.

Therefore, as in the the paper blogged by Marc, in which an autonomous agent survives on a server by earning money in virtual environments to sustain itself for ever, the interesting bit is the importance of actions over reflection and even, in this case, life. Even if not clever the agent is believed to be human “most of the time”; with immortal computing people will believe I am alive “most of the time” when they will get news and information, depending on the amount and the smartness of our residual activity, forgetting for a moment that no one is there anymore.

And if my residual actions represent more than just sending birthday emails, and happen to break the law, immortality may end there, with a judge’s decision to close a few accounts.

What About?

question mark
by -bast-

New theme, new blog title, and the late New Year’s resolution of blogging more often…

Search engines united

search engine
by Matt McGee

(is it ok to reuse a blog post title? I guess now with the copybot around it doesn’t really matter anymore) Important news this morning, Google’s sitemap protocol has been adopted by Yahoo! and Microsoft. The so called protocol is an xml file the webmaster has to publish. It describes urls in a webpage and information such as how frequently the page is likely to change. Interestingly the sitemap protocol can be extended using ones own namespace. Who said ‘rdf’? (link)

Heard in the podosphere

podcast
by scottpartee

‘Podosphere’ not even sure the word exists…, just ‘heard’ it. Other podcasts subculture vocab you may come accross are ‘to itune’ (e.g. ‘for those of you out there who just ituned here…’), and others, that not remembered right now. Will update when I hear them again!

update: “..you can gmail us at…”, love that one.

Google Desktop: Paranoid Tip

Google Desktop Screenshot

If you cannot imagine life without Google Desktop anymore - I can’t, despite its outrageous disk space usage and stealth update policy - AND if you use more or less the same password for all less important stuff (online shopping, online newspapers, etc) AND if you tend to keep all your emails jealously only deleting the ones with large attachments when you get the dreaded ‘Administrator notice: your mailbox is over size limit’, then try to type in your password in GDesktop to see how many mails you’ve got which contain it. [breathe now] If you simply type in ‘password’ your may even gather more of them, with a bit of work.

However it is also a good solution to discover what you HAVE TO erase from your computer.

Less anecdotally one can wonder whether privacy issues can be handled by semantic Desktop Crawlers without dropping out simple (text, non annotated) formats.

Don’t forget to lock your computer and happy programming!

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