Archive for December, 2009

Geek on the Cheap #118:
Why Can’t the Past Become the Future?

Monday, December 28th, 2009

Professor Richard Feynman,

With the New Year just a few days away, I’m thinking about time. Why must time move in one direction — forward? Why isn’t it reversible? Why can’t the future become the past? Because it just can’t, you say impatiently, already bored by the naiveté of the question.

And yet…

The fundamental physical laws of nature such as gravity, electricity and magnetism are reversible. Even molecular collision is reversible. So why aren’t the phenomena that happen according to these laws of physics reversible — the phenomena that constitute our perception of time?

How do we resolve this paradox?

In Richard Feynman’s lecture, “The Distinction of Past and Future,” he explains how the laws of physics do not have a obvious relevance to the world as we experience it. Don’t know Feynman? He’s a professor famous for a series of lectures taped by the BBC at Cornell University in 1964. Last July, Bill Gates made these lectures publicly available through a Microsoft Research initiative called Project Tuva.

But let’s get back to the question of time: How can it be that our experience of time is so different from the fundamentals that constitute it?

To me, this is similar to the false intuition that a heavy object should fall more swiftly than a light one. It doesn’t. (Gravity, unlike your mother, is blind to how much something weighs, though it might agree that you look fat in those pants.) If you drop a book and a fork, they’ll hit the ground at the same time, even though you might think the heavier object — the book — should hit first. I’m always guilty of thinking this way. I was reminded of my wrong intuition recently as I was reading about Newton’s Second Law of Motion in The Great Equations. (At least Aristotle was wrong, too.)

Why do we get these things wrong? Because, as Feynman explains at the end of “The Distinction of Past and Future,” the world is both fundamentally simple and tremendously complex, “to stand at either end and to walk out off the end of the pier only, hoping out in that direction is the complete understanding, is a mistake.” In other words, maybe our (incorrect) intuition that heavier objects should hit the ground first comes from the fact that they hit the ground harder, and we connect this to the idea of velocity, which takes us around to the idea of heavier falling faster. Makes sense, but it’s wrong. We’re standing at the wrong end of the pier and can’t see what’s really happening.

As for time, what phenomenon could be more straightforward: a simple line of actions connected dot to dot, the single constant in our lives, irrevocable. So why do we wonder and wish to make the past the future — to jump backwards, branching out in a new direction? Because our knowledge of time is complex, our understanding of what could have happened instead as real to us as the memory of what did.

Remorse and regret, hope and aspiration — these complex thoughts and emotions spring from our perception of time passing. They are as real as the law of gravity and sometimes so heavy they sink you into a hole, other times so light you feel as if you’re floating. At this time of year, it’s nice to be reminded that there’s always the other end of the spectrum; it exists all the time. You don’t have to wait until next year for things to turn around because in some way they already are.

But enough of this. All I really wanted to say was Happy New Year! Simple.

Geek on the Cheap #117:
Top 10s for 2009

Monday, December 21st, 2009

PopSci.com’s Robotic Jellyfish (photo: Kai-Uwe Knoth)

I’m jumping right into the year-end top 10s. Here are four (five eluded me — I kept finding a possibility then ditching it); so here are four lists to peruse while you’re recovering from December’s shopping hangover:

  • lifehacker: Most Popular DIY Projects of 2009
    Love lifehacker, love these projects. I have several favs including the inverted bookshelf, under-the-cabinet kitchen PC from an old laptop, and the monitor stand from door stoppers (a version of which will soon be atop my desk).
  • PopSci: The Year’s Most Amazing Scientific Images
    The brain array (image 2) is a silicone mat of 32 electrodes that sits directly on the brain (not on the skull, which is what I initially thought when I looked at the photo). What an amazing and (sort of) noninvasive neural interface, which could help those with brain disease or injury.
  • Technology Review: Top 10 Emerging Technologies of 2009
    In TR’s annual list of the 10 technologies that may change the way we live, my favorite is Michel Maharbiz’s biological machines, such cyborg beetles. Imagine the possibilities!
  • O’Reilly Radar: The Best and the Worst Tech of the Decade
    No, no, no — this isn’t that O’Reilly. James Turner’s list is a nice roundup of tech and I must say I wholeheartedly agree with his choices. In additional to the technical, he covers the social implications of the technical.

For those of you on vacation over the holidays (and especially for those of you stuck at work), hope you have the time to dream and build. Humans are makers — go out and make something!

Geek on the Cheap #116:
Charitable Gift List

Sunday, December 13th, 2009

Are you already done with your holiday shopping? If not, how about a gift that supports a great organization? Or what about that person who’s impossible to shop for? Give a donation in her name and your gift won’t be returned — in fact, it’ll be greatly appreciated. Below are my five suggestions for 2009.

Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF)
EFF is the leading civil liberties group defending your rights in the digital world, such as free speech, innovation, privacy and fair use. What does this mean? Let’s talk digital books. Companies are using copyright law and DRM to restrict what you do with your digital book once you buy it. Okay, there are lots of problems with that in general but, again, let’s talk specifics: what if you’re disabled and would like to convert your digital book to a different format because the text format isn’t accessible to you? If you do, you’re breaking the law. Is that right? Donate and get a cool t-shirt.

Mozilla
I use the Mozilla browser Firefox every day, along with its plethora of add-ons — Web Developer Toolbar, Woot Watcher, ColorZilla, just to name a few — that make my work and personal life easier. But Mozilla isn’t just Firefox, it’s an open source software project, which means its code is readily available to developers, which means they can innovate like crazy. It’s about time you pick up a shirt or some swag and support them.

Creative Commons
Creative Commons provides a modern version of copyright law that makes it easier for people to share their own work and build on the work of others. For example, I’ve been doing a bit of video editing lately and have needed background music. I don’t have any budget for this, so I’ve been using music covered by the Creative Commons license that allows you to use the artistic property as long as you provide attribution — in my case, list the musician in the credits. This is legal, ethical, provides me with a service and provides the artist with some visibility. A win-win all the way around.

Women for Women International
If you don’t know about this organization, you should. Women for Women runs one-year programs where women who’ve survived war in countries such as Afghanistan and Rwanda are initially given financial support to stabilize their lives, then are taught rights awareness, leadership skills, and vocational and technical skills. This process allows each individual to transform from victim into active citizen. What can you do? Give a gift that gives back — starting at $15, you can give okra seeds; for more you can give a sewing machine or a wheel barrow or teach a woman to read. I must admit I’m very biased toward Women for Women because I’ve been involved with them for several years now as a sponsor. I believe in their mission because it allows women to empower themselves, and hopefully empower others.

Donate Your Old Computer
Did you upgrade this year? Why not give away your old tech — it’s a nice cash-free way to give and saves you the trouble of properly recycling your computer. Here are simple instructions on finding a charity in your area. Just remember to wipe your hard drive before the computer goes out the door. Even if the organization tells you they’ll take care of it, do it yourself using a free download like as Eraser or Active@ Kill Disk. Now you’ll have that warm, fuzzy feeling that comes with giving instead of the stress of watching the bid amount not increase on eBay.

Happy Holidays!

Geek on the Cheap #115:
A Visit to the MIT Museum (from your living room)

Sunday, December 6th, 2009

I know I said I’d put up five more gift suggestions this week, and I was going to describe my top five charitable gift opportunities, but I haven’t had time to compile a list. Work has been crazy — between editing a video and building a database, I’ve hardly had time to eat.

But I’m not complaining, because I like my job and my boss rocks. He’s the one who’s sending me to MIT in January for the 4th International TEI Conference on tangible, embedded and embodied interaction — HCI, design, interactive art, user experience — how computing can “bridge atoms and bits into cohesive interactive systems.”

I’m already so excited to be going that I’ve been fantasizing about being a grad student (again), working on research and writing all day in a crappy Boston apartment (again). Though this time around no one is offering me a fellowship — yet.

And it doesn’t help that the MIT Museum is so incredible. If only I were twenty and didn’t have a mortgage. If only I didn’t like my job and were willing to drop it all and move out of this lovely state of Vermont. Am I? Probably not, so this video will have to do. For now.