Computer-Generated Paper Accepted at Conference

This is hysterical. Three MIT grad students wrote a computer program designed to generate scientific papers (complete with charts and graphs). They submitted two of the papers to the upcoming “World Multi-Conference on Systemics, Cybernetics and Informatics” (WMSCI), and one of the papers was accepted! Amazingly, as of now, the students have not been disinvited from presenting at the conference and are raising money through donations to go. They plan on presenting a computer-generated talk.

Download a PDF of the paper.

Create your own paper using their SCIgen – An Automatic CS Paper Generator.

Update: According to their website, they now HAVE been disinvited to the conference. I tell ya, those Systematic Cybernetic Informatic fellas: No sense of humor.

Uber-Geek Trading Cards

I like cards: collectable card games, baseball cards, Tarot cards, Iraqi bad guy cards, etc. And then there are geek trading cards. I love the idea. In fact, Mark Frauenfelder and I created robot geek trading cards illos for my robot book. Now some guy has created cards of the Tiger OS X engineering team. Not as compelling as Rabbi Trading Cards (“Woot, you have the Rabbi Shnerson rookie card!”), but where else are you going to see “Can Summon a Master Device Port” as a stat line?

1GB Online Storage for $3/month

Has anyone here tried Box.net? After my old iMac committed Hari-Kari and I lost a bunch of data I was too lazy to back up (like my entire iTunes library), I subscribed to .Mac with my new machine and now do regular remote backups. But .Mac is costly if you want to back up everything. Box.net might be a nice, cheap addition. Their service is entirely Web-based, so there’s no software to download. It works on any computer. Of course, no software means no auto-backup feature, but it does support drag and drop. In these digital media days, 1GB ain’t much, but it beats the paltry 250MB you get from .Mac for $10/month.

PSP Linux?

You knew it was only a matter of time: The PSP Linux Project is just getting under way, looking for developers. Wonder how long it’ll be before we see a distro on that gorgeous 480 x 272 wide-screen display.

The Blogs of Yesteryear

Sorry I haven’t blogged in a few days. I was in Philadelphia for the opening of a zine show I co-curated with Street Tech co-founder Sean Carton (now a Dean at the school). The show, housed at the Design Center, features most of my late ’80s/early ’90s zine and mail art collections, with additional zines from Scott Huffines’s collection (he used to run Atomic Books in Baltimore).

Kudos to the Design Center for doing such a creative job of hanging the show. There are three rooms, the first is set up like a viney jungle of zines, with dozens of pubs in plastic bags hanging from fishing line at different heights, filling the volume of the space. The second room has two shelving insets densely packed with my mail and collage art collections and a few zine reading stations. The third room has a ratty reading couch and a coffee table covered with zines and more reading stations along the walls. There are also giant posters of zine covers on the walls.

It was mind-blowing to see my collection (stored in the attic for years) spread over these rooms and to realize that each item represented an exhange, either a literal exchange of my zine (Going Gaga) or a piece of mail art for someone else’s, or at least a letter with a few bucks in it, asking for a copy of someone’s pub. Scanning over the material hanging there, thinking about this connectivity (from all corners of the globe), it was like looking at a primitive, analog version of one of those network node maps. This was the “sneakernet” days of cyberspace and the blogosphere. We had the desktop computers, laser printers, copiers, and recording equipment to make this indie media, we just had to rely on a glorified pony express (the international postal systems) to distribute it.

The show is running through June 10th. Check it out if you get a chance.

UPDATE: Here are some images from the show on Sean’s Bad Blog.

Silver lining of RFID

As you can see from this market report about the RFID market, there’s a very large silver lining: Printed Electronics.

Keep an eye on companies like Conductive InkJet Technologies developing these manufacturing processes.

From an environmental perspective, there are some big advantages to using an additive manufacturing process like this, particularly the reduction in wasted material. Traditional printed circuit board (PCB) manufacturing processes are subtractive – you start with a copper-clad board and remove all the unwanted metal.

From an individual designer/hacker perspective, rapid prototyping circuits at your desk, literally on a piece of paper or mylar, is a very exciting prospect.

Origami robotics, anyone?

This USB Device STINKS!

Here’s another device to add to the growing collection of goofy USB-powered oddities. This one is a Japanese-made room deodorizer called the Thanko USB P@D Aroma Generator. Available smells it’ll puff out include cinnamon, woody, fruit, and “herb.” Wait, what kinda “herb” are we talking about, mon? I thought incense was supposed to be used to MASK that odor. At least, that’s what I told my mother: “It’s sandlewood, mom. And it DOES smell a little like burning leaves, doesn’t it?”

And is it just me or does this thing look a little bit like Hewey and Dewey from Silent Running?

[Via I4U]

New TiVo Desktop Sneak Peek

Our fine feathered friends over at Engadget have an exclusive first look at the new TiVo Desktop Software (version 2.1). It looks as though TiVo, Inc is already fully engaged in the cat and mouse game of fighting against unauthorized file copying. There appearsto be a built in access control list that prevents certain apps (such as Dr. DivX) from accessing the .tivo media files. Some other format conversion/disc-burner programs still work (for now anyway). On the TiVoToGo playback interface, Dave Zatz writes:

It offers the familiar green status bar, Tivo functions such as replay, and TiVo sound effects. The software makes it pretty easy to see which codecs and filters are being used and to make changes if needed. Second a little more good news. It seems they are phasing out the TiVo Playback Password…