TED Talk Michael Rubinstein (link to Livescribe pdf notes)
Hand Fixing Hand, A Sci-Fi Homage to M. C. Escher’s Drawing Hands
Hand Fixing Hand, A Sci-Fi Homage to M. C. Escher’s Drawing Hands http://t.co/GajFnGbwAE via @LaughingSquid #mscedc
The real cyborgs: forget wearable tech, these people are implanting technology in to their bodies and brains
The real cyborgs: forget wearable tech, these people are implanting technology in to their bodies and brains http://t.co/h3ZqUX5Ak7 #mscedc
Interview with Stefan Herbrechter, author of Posthumanism: A Critical Analysis
Interview with Stefan Herbrechter, author of Posthumanism: A Critical Analysis http://t.co/QdePCvor4D #mscedc
Transhumanism v posthumanism
Google fight recorded by jindarling
So much more difficult to get a clear picture of posthumanism. Struggling to understand the differences, I get that it is a philosophical thing but philosophy and humanism are not stuff that I have studied before so a steep learning curve ahead of me. Still I have a couple of weeks, no need to do it all in one day!
How Drugs Helped Invent the Internet & The Singularity: Jason Silva on “Turning Into Gods”
The coming transhuman era: Jason Sosa at TEDxGrandRapids
Livescribe Echo pen enhancing memory #mscedc
Tonight is serious study time #mscedc
Human-machine relationships
human-machine relationships can be characterised in a number of ways which relate to the function that the technology performs (Gray et al., 1995):
- Restorative Tools or machines that restore lost functions or limbs. Artificial hearts and prosthetic limbs are examples.
- Normalising Technologies that return existing limbs or organs to normality, such as hearing aids, spectacles, pacemakers or reconstructive surgery.
- Enhancing Technologies that improve human performance, such as night vision goggles, forklifts or communication technologies.
- Reconfiguring Technologies that create differences, but do not enhance human bodies, such as cosmetic breast implants, collagen injections, tattooing and body modification.
From: Miller, V. (2011) The Body and Information Technology. In: Understanding digital culture. London: Sage. pp. pp. 207–223.

