Christmas Comes Early
The Economist’s Quarterly Technology Review is out today, and there are lots of Blindsidey nuggets to chew over.
They note progress being made in using virtual worlds for training and simulations, have a nice article on how DNA samples can be pickled (well use a briney process) for longer storage, and have two articles that I personally hope will be related in the near future: one about how corrective eye surgery is progressing and another about how head-mounted displays (HMDs) are creating a world of augmented reality.
Location-based services gets an article about Bluetooth enabling mobile dating, and another that makes me wonder if anybody is considering the information assurance issues about clustering volunteer computers to look for alien life and cures for cancer.
Surveillance in the stores gets an article–makes me hope this stays in the stores. But it won’t…
Larry Lessig of the EFF gets a nice write-up. Corrupt politicians (at least in the U.S.) should really start evaluating career alternatives.
But the piece I was waiting for, about Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) is a real dud–unless you want the history. The present is much more interesting. Maybe they just ran out of space.
Now I have to wait three more months…

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