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Monthly Archives: December 2010

This middleware, with some tweaks, lets FAAST quickly facilitate “integration of full-body control with games and VR applications,” via a clever processing server that streams the user’s skeleton pattern, including body position and gestures which can be mapped onto keyboard controls.

The code is free for non-commercial use, because the Institute has big plans for it–including simple, medically inspired games for rehabilitation of motor-skills after a stroke, and even for reducing childhood obesity through “healthy gaming”

Via Fast Company

 

Porra, como que eu não conhecia esse jogo?? Pancada nas orelhas.

Você tem a possibilidade de criar fases, do jeito que quiser, e como quiser. Na ferramenta de construção de fases, é possível utilizar qualquer material para criar praticamente qualquer coisa. A customização varia desde cores, tipo do material, formato, assim como a criação de monstros, de explosivos, de mecanismos, de sons… Depois da criação, a fase é colocada no servidor da Media Molecule para que qualquer pessoa possa jogar. Veja o trailer mostrando a criação de fases e a ideia de poder criar qualquer coisa:

Via

What’s the case for Constructive Capitalism? Why should you be a Constructive Capitalist? The simplest reason is: because Constructive Capitalists don’t just outperform—they redraw the boundaries of disruptive outperformance. The chart shows the performance of Constructive Capitalists vis a vis market indices (the Nasdaq, S&P 500, and Dow Jones) over the last decade.

Nesse link tem uma análise mais detalhada desse gráfico. Encerro com esse parágrafo:

What’s more significant is that the performance of Constructive Capitalists isn’t just countercyclical, skyrocketing during the downturn, and then collapsing during today’s nascent, halting recovery. Rather, they are rebounding harder and more intensely than the markets—suggesting that their performance is structurally disruptive. They’ve built stronger economic foundations, that underpin structural outperformance, deeply rooted superiority in 21st century terms—because, as I discuss in the Manifesto, Constructive Capitalists aren’t just seeking industrial age efficiency, productivity, and effectiveness: they’re taking a quantum leap beyond them.

Dev Patnaik of Jump has his own answer to the [innovation] why-now question. He contends that advances in technology over the past three decades have gradually forced management to reconceive its role in the corporation, shifting its focus from processing data to something more esoteric. “My dad was a midlevel manager for I.B.M.,” Patnaik explains, “and I remember him in the ’70s, sitting there with plastic 3M transparencies, by hand, with marker, to make presentations. For years, the good manager was one who had data at their fingertips. What’s our sales in Peoria? ‘It’s actually 47 percent above last year.’ People say, ‘Oh, he’s a good manager.’ ” By the early ’90s, though, companies like Microsoft and SAP were selling software that digitized this task. The days when a manager at, say, the Gap could earn a bow just for knowing how many sweaters to ship to Seattle were over. “When that happens, what is the role of the manager?” Patnaik asks. “Suddenly it’s about something else. Suddenly it’s about leadership, creativity, vision. Those are the differentiating things, right?” Patnaik draws an analogy to painting, which for centuries was all about rendering reality as accurately as possible, until a new technology — photography — showed up, throwing all those brush-wielding artists into crisis. “Then painters said: ‘Well, wait, you can tell what is but you can’t tell me my impression of what is. Here’s how it looks to me, like Seurat. Or the Cubists who said, ‘You can’t capture what is going on from multiple angles.’ ” Technology forced painters to re-evaluate, which transformed their work. Something similar has happened in corporate America. As Patnaik puts it, “We’re in the abstract-expressionist era of management.”

Do NYT, via Noah Brier

Do PES, coisa fina. Referência obrigatória em Motion.

Via UoD

Via UoD

A Slate fez um puta infográfico sobre a “viralização” da diabetes nos states.

As três imagens são, na ordem, 2004, 2006 e 2008.

By now, a clear pattern is emerging: Diabetes is spreading like a virus across the south and Appalachia, across regions known for weak economies. The map is perhaps the most bracing confirmation possible that low incomes and diabetes develop in lockstep.

Obrigado, Ross Dawson.

É só clicar nas imagens para ampliá-las.

Instalação interativa feita na frente de um cinema por conta do filme Tron: Legacy.

Via UoD

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