Saturday, April 18, 2015

Module 13



Ryan Williams
April 18, 2015
Module 13
            I have really enjoyed this course. Reading from the book The World is Flat by Thomas L. Friedman has been a real eye-opener for me. Never have I thought about how much the world is flattening. Industry has changed in many different ways. Companies today rarely do every single thing with a product. One company could design a product and order materials from another company while a third company is the actual seller of the product. These companies do not even need to be on the same continent. You can have your company in the United States where you design and put together the product while getting the materials from China and then sending the finished product to England for a company to sell.
            In the book, Friedman brings up an example for the flattening of the world. One of the examples he uses is his Dell Inspiron notebook which he wrote the book on. He talks about many of the parts of his computer and where they came from. He says that the memory came from a Korean factory, the cooling fan from a Taiwanese factory, the battery from an American-owned factory in Malaysia, the hard disk drive from an American-owned factory in Singapore and other parts of the computer from many other different places too.
            We did reading other than from the book too.  One thing we read was a short story written in 1946 called “A Logic Named Joe”. The story talked about “logics” being everywhere and people having access to them at any time to do anything. It also talked about how this would turn out bad because people knowing how to do whatever they wouldn’t ever need to get help from anyone else and this would be bad. Another thing we read was an article on Wired called, “Why the future doesn’t need us” written by Bill Joy. In the article, Joy talked about how technology is evolving enough that in the future, technology will have out-evolved us to a point where we are not good enough for technology itself. One example he talks about is robots. We are improving on robots more and more and he talks about how we will evolve them too much and they will begin to work on their own and to succeed they will need to get rid of us. This brought me to talk about I, Robot. In I, Robot, almost the same thing happens as what Joy talks about, but to an extreme.
            Overall, I enjoyed taking this course. The reading was never very dull. At some points it may have been a little slow but for the most part, I was very into the reading and the subjects the authors went over. The writing was never bad either. No one writing was ever “too hard” or “too easy” but seemed to have a balance of not taking a long time to write, but still making me be engaged and having to think about what I had read.

Saturday, April 11, 2015

Ryan Williams 
Module 12 
GNR stands for Genetic engineering, nanotechnology, and robotics. Genetic engineering is the direct modification of DNA. This isn’t always in favor of good. For example, as we create new vaccinations to improve our resistance to bacteria and viruses, the bacteria and viruses are also gaining a resistance to the new vaccinations by having their DNA adapt to them. This basically makes a never-ending war on vaccinations where one side is almost always a little bit ahead of the other side and are always trying to catch up. 
Nanotechnology is the manipulation of matter on a very small scale, more accurately the molecular scale. This also can be used in a variety of helpful ways, but also bad ones. At one point in the article, the author says, "Unfortunately, as with nuclear technology, it is far easier to create destructive uses for nanotechnology than constructive ones." 
Robotics is the use of constructing objects that can move and function to do tasks. Building robots and making uses for them, like the genetic engineering and nanotechnology, can be used for good or evil. In a bunch of movies today, robotics is seen as good for the population but later it turns against them and to survive, they end up having to disable or get rid of the robots in order to regain control. 
I think that Bill Joy has a pretty solid sounding argument on why GNR should be feared. I think movies have done a pretty good job on showing and extreme version of what could happen if technology were to take for, like the movie I, Robot  where robots are made for good and to help people in their everyday lives but the artificial intelligence is allowed to improve the life of humans which results in humans not being good enough to continue and they have to be eliminated which is when people have to take the robots back over and shut them down. 
I really enjoyed reading this article. As I have probably said before, I like reading about technology and where it could be heading and this article was just that. I thought the author also made the article interesting to read and he never lost my attention.

Saturday, April 4, 2015

Module 11

Ryan Williams 
Module 11 
The movie I picked to watch is "Minority Report". In the movie, there are two "types" of computers used. There is one main computer used in this movie. What the computer does is take "precognitive" visions from three different Precogs and sends them all to a computer to be analyzed. The videos are analised by the Precrime police to find out what type of crime is going to happen, where it is going to happen, who it is going to affect, and who is causing the crime. The Precogs brains are wired to the computer and the signals from the Precogs brains are sent through wires to the computer. Once the videos are received, the computer pulls them all up in a 3-d virtual video analysis software. The user of the computer can then fast forward and rewind through the video as well as rotate the angle at which the user is looking. From there, the user identifies key elements from the visions to determine all of the things that they need to stop the crime from happening. 
Of the two parts of the computer, the 3-d video analysis software is definitely probable, the visions of the future from mutated human's brains is pretty ridiculous. The reason I am saying the 3-d video analysis software is probable is because of technologies coming out right now. For one example, Microsoft's "HoloLens" is a type of computer that can be used in a very similar matter to the software in the movie. The HoloLens is a computer that creates an augmented reality around the user and the can interact with holograms through the wearable computer. This is very similar to the software in the movie, the only main difference is that in the movie you do not need to wear any sort of headgear, but you do have to wear a glove to interact with it.