Showing posts with label cool stuff. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cool stuff. Show all posts

Sunday, July 19, 2009

WOAW...

Check out this AWESOME flypast.

A Navy F/A-18F Super Hornet crew got permission for a low-level demonstration flight, as part of the opening ceremony for a speedboat race on the Detroit River, last weekend. This is what it looked like, for Motor City residents.

Read it here.

Monday, July 6, 2009

Nicest shoes ever



Yves Saint Lauren, you've definitely outdone yourself this time.

Kudos.

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Seriously cool animation



Apologies, I've been down with a small bout of "clinical depression". Nope, this isn't some namby pamby feel good animatic but perhaps a poigant reminder of why extraterrestrials don't yet choose to visit our civilisation.

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Breaking News: Terminator Salivation REDUX


Check out the orgasmic goodness of Terminator Salvation- 21 May 2009. TERMINATOR SALVATION!!

I've been cheated by trailers before (ahem Star Wars episodes 2 & 3- GO TO HELL LUCAS) but Terminator Salvation seems to be the real deal!

Thursday, April 16, 2009

Terrible Thursdays: ZOMBIES!



It's been yet another crap day, doing business in Singapore flies against the face of rational decision making when everything exists around a concept of Guan Xi.

Guan Xi by its very nature, implies that even if it's NOT THE BEST deal/rates, the project/supply contract still goes to you- JUST BECAUSE you're a friend or long time partner.

This is great, all this trust and love is wonderful. But it flies in the face of innovative business ideas that depend on you making a RATIONAL rather than EMOTIONAL decision.

Singaporean business executives have a long way to go (which explains the economy is living in the crapper).

That said, I look forward to zombies rising forth and eating all the "set-in-stone" aged decision makers. And when it all goes to hell, I really hope my maid passes muster.

Cheers to the zombie apocalypse and my L4D marathon on friday!

Thursday, April 9, 2009

Societal Mental Conditioning


More to come once I gather my thoughts- Happy Easter weekend.

Schizophrenia sufferers aren't fooled by an optical illusion known as the “hollow mask” that the rest of us fall for because connections between the sensory and conceptual areas of their brains might be on the fritz.

In the hollow mask illusion, viewers perceive a concave face (like the back side of a hollow mask) as a normal convex face. The illusion exploits our brain's strategy for making sense of the visual world: uniting what it actually sees — known as bottom-up processing — with what it expects to see based on prior experience — known as top-down processing.

"Our top-down processing holds memories, like stock models," explains Danai Dima of Hannover Medical University, in Germany, co-author of a study in NeuroImage. "All the models in our head have a face coming out, so whenever we see a face, of course if has to come out."

This powerful expectation overrides visual cues, like shadows and depth information, that indicate anything to the contrary.

But patients with schizophrenia are undeterred by implausibility: They see the hollow face for what it is. About seven out of 1000 Americans suffer from the disease, which is characterized by hallucinations, delusions, and poor planning. Some psychologists believe this dissociation from reality may result from an imbalance between bottom-up and top-down processing — a hypothesis ripe for testing using the hollow mask illusion.

In healthy viewers, the illusion is so powerful that even when aware of the illusion (see video below), they are unable to see the concave face — the mind just flips it back. Though the illusion is strong for faces, it doesn't work well with other objects, or even with upside-down faces. This bias is likely due to the special relationship we humans have with faces. Many neuroscientists believe we have brain regions dedicated to processing faces, and some brain injuries can leave patients unable to recognize faces, even though their vision and other memories remain intact.

Dima and Jonathan Roiser of University College London wanted to understand why people with schizophrenia aren't fooled. They put 13 schizophrenia patients and 16 healthy control subjects in an fMRI scanner that measures brain activity, and showed them 3D images of concave or convex faces. As expected, all of the schizophrenic patients reported seeing the concave faces, while none of the control subjects did.

Dima and Roiser analyzed the fMRI data using a relatively new technique called dynamic causal modeling, which allowed them to measure how different brain regions were interacting during the task. When healthy subjects looked at the concave faces, connections strengthened between the frontoparietal network, which is involved in top-down processing, and the visual areas of the brain that receive information from the eyes. In patients with schizophrenia, no such strengthening occurred.

Dima thinks when healthy subjects see the illusion, which is somewhat ambiguous, their brains strengthen this connection such that what they expect — a normal face — becomes more influential, overpowering the actual, though unlikely, visual information. Schizophrenia patients, meanwhile, may be unable to modulate this pathway, accepting the concave face as reality.

Schizophrenics aren't the only ones who see the concave face — people who are drunk or high can also 'beat' the illusion. A similar disconnect between what the brain sees and what it expects to see may be occurring during these drug-induced states.

Citation: "Understanding why patients with schizophrenia do not perceive the hollow-mask illusion using dynamic causal modelling" by Danai Dima, Jonathan P. Roiser, Detlef E. Dietrich, Catharina Bonnemann, Heinrich Lanfermann, Hinderk M. Emrich, Wolfgang Dillo, NeuroImage, In Press, Available online 24 March 2009.

Saturday, March 28, 2009

Japan gets the cool stuff: Terminator Salvation exhibition

It's so unfair. Japan gets all the cool stuff! Like an exhibition before the May 2009 premiere of Terminator Salvation. The exhibition features all the cyborgs from the Terminator series over at Miraikan (National Museum of Emerging Science and Innovation) Tokyo.

Terminator Exhibition - Battle or Coexistence? Robots and Our Future- features all the Terminator models from the motion pictures Terminator, Terminator 2 & Terminator 3:Rise of the machines and includes the series- Terminator: Sarah Connor Chronicles. Visitors will also catch a glimpse of a "prequel" Terminator- The T-600. A precursor to the T-800 "Arnold" model.

The T-600 is a an early Terminator prototype. Unlike the T-800, the T-600 features an 8ft tall metal endoskeleton covered in synthetic skin instead of living human tissue.

T-800 "Arnold Schwarzenegger" cyborg consists of "living tissue over metal endoskeleton". As the movie unfolded across Terminator and Terminator 2, we learnt that the T-800 possessed excellent learning capabilities, enabling it to understand and adopt human behavior and phrases. It can also mimic voices once it hears them. A slightly improved version of the T-800 — the T-850 — appears in Terminator 3 when it's forced to face off with the T-X.

T-X aka “Terminatrix,” is embodied by babelicious Kristianna Loken incorporating a variety of weapons into its endoskeleton similar to the T-1000 "liquid metal" Terminator. As depicted in Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines, the T-X can conduct DNA analysis by tasting blood, possessing shape-shifting abilities like the T-1000 and can also remotely control other machines and Terminators.
In yet another sneak peak at Terminator Salvation, the Moto-Terminator is on display as well. A motorcycle-based death machine, I look forward to watching it in action during the movie. And finally- Terminator: Sarah Chronicle's Cameron Philips (TOK715), a reprogrammed Terminator.
Terminator Salvation will be out May 2009.

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Monday, December 29, 2008

Nokia: Connecting People in more ways than one

From a marketing perspective. This phone will make a killing in North American markets. No pun intended.