• 78,000 Apply for A One-Way Ticket to Colonize #Mars | Singularity Hub
    http://singularityhub.com/2013/05/28/78000-apply-for-a-one-way-ticket-to-colonize-mars

    78,000 Earthlings (and counting) share that dream. Since late April, the not-for-profit organization, Mars One, has been flooded with applications for a one-way ticket to colonize Mars in 2023.

    The trip will be funded in part by proceeds from a reality television show (or as the firm calls it, a “global media event”) covering the epic journey from crew selection to colonization. The Mars One team hopes this media coverage will provide a significant influx of income to help back the estimated $6 billion project.

    #espace #télévision

  • Matternet Building Quadcopter Drone Network To Transport Supplies | Singularity Hub
    http://singularityhub.com/2013/05/21/matternet-building-quadcopter-drone-network-to-transport-supplies-in

    réseaux autonomes de #drones (y compris sur le plan énergétique) permettant d’assurer le #transport de matériels en absence de routes

    à noter : #Haïti sert encore une fois de lieu pour l’expérimentation de « solutions geek »

    • Oui, Haïti est de notoriété publique le pays où les lobbies libéraux vont montrer les merveilles que ce de donnerait la levée de telle ou telle interdiction au US :

      Commercial drone use is currently illegal in the US. The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) is required to establish the ground rules and open the skies to commercial drones by 2015. The topic is now and will likely continue to be a touchy subject.

      Santana thinks it’s important to tell folks, especially in the US where drones have a negative image, about the potential good robotic aircraft can do. “You can use drones for filming, for agriculture, for protecting animals from illegal hunting, for transportation.” But it’s also imperative to write good regulations, establishing what you can and can’t do with drones.

      Outside the US, it’s a little easier and leaders are more open to the idea. Santana says in places like the Dominican Republic they are leading the conversation. “The people who most understand this technology are the people who most need it.”

  • Moshe Vardi, a computer science professor at Rice University, thinks that by 2045 artificially intelligent machines may be capable of “if not any work that humans can do, then, at least, a very significant fraction of the work that humans can do.”

    http://singularityhub.com/2013/05/15/moshe-vardi-robots-could-put-humans-out-of-work-by-2045

    Are machines really replacing humans faster now than say in the early 19th or 20th centuries ? And are workers really falling behind at a greater rate ? We can’t say with certainty.

    However, we can say that accelerating technology over the last few centuries has consistently erased some jobs only to replace them with other jobs. In the short and medium term, these transition periods have caused discomfort and vicious battles in the political arena. But the long-term outcome has been largely positive—that is, improving living standards thanks to cheaper, better goods and services.

    By dismissing qualitative historical evidence as newly irrelevant, you’re left with a quantitative vacuum into which you can inject any number of competing theories, fascinating but as yet impossible to prove or disprove.

    As you may have gathered, I fall into the boring mainstream on the subject. To me, the technological unemployment thesis is too dire and what humans will do too hard to imagine. But just because we can’t imagine something, doesn’t mean it won’t exist.

    Le travail humain ne contribuera bientôt plus que marginalement à la satisfaction des besoins réels de l’humanité. L’appropriation locale des technologies apparentées est certainement la clé de l’émancipation du système d’exploitation capitaliste.