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The only risks that the US run are:

(a) conservatism/orthodoxy (freaking out and becoming increasingly xenophobic – happened to the Hindus during Muslim invasions of India and look what that did to Hindu feminism – went down the toilet),

(b) laziness – too many consumers reliant on the creativity of too few producers, and

(c) the joke that is higher education where one learns useless facts to get a piece of paper leading to a dead-end job that has already gone abroad, but not how to learn.

MSH: “I hate to tell you, but innovation has become UnAmerican.”

The current state of American education is to provide the resources by which the well above average high school student can continue on to get vocational-technological training [this used to be called an education of the Vo-Tech variety, where they trained mechanics, and other skilled workers] to achieve the kind of job that has now been sent abroad to be done for a daily wage in China, India, etc., that is lower than the minimum hourly wage in the United States. i.e.– by the time you grow up and get the education to pursue the careers you chose as a child, those careers will have been outsourced!!!

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The University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign is my undergraduate alma mater. We watched with alternating boredom and glee as the Beckman Artificial Intelligence Institute and Grainger Engineering Library went up, and clogged two of CU’s ten or so main traffic arteries. The complex is also situated a block away from my old high school. Check it out at sc.cs.uiuc.edu/index.php This new development is even more amusing:

From /.:

The University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign, one of the top Computer Science programs in the world has just officially opened their new $80 million Siebel Center (with its own espresso bar! –the Ed). The department head describes the building as a single computing entity, meant to be programmed and to interact with those in the building via RFID tags in their ID cards. This is probably one of the biggest and most expensive projects in ubiquitous computing ever launched, touching on all the important issues in this field, from privacy to the ultimate question about the usefulness of such a system. Several papers are covering this including the Chicago Sun Times, and the Chicago Business.

/. responds:

  • So will they use the java smart cards that work when approaching a computer?
  • I’m sorry Dave, I can’t let you in. Your GPA is too low this semester.
  • Does that mean the building is wildly overpriced and requires expensive consultants in suits to do anything right?
  • I’m not sure if I like the idea that anything between me and these 4 walls is now between me and some sort of ubiquitous building-computer.
  • The UIUC bldg sounds extremely cool, but in 5 yrs folks will be smiling politely at the “hokey-ness” of the place.
  • I guess they had to go and install “Microsoft Office… that is, REAL Office”. Now, when you go down the hall, the “Buildy” mascot asks things like. “You appear to be walking to the bathroom. Would you like some help?”
  • This proves the point that all things human go in cycles. First computers were the size of buildings, then they shrunk down to fit in the palm, now they are becoming the size of buildings again.
  • How much their next upgrade is gonna cost??
  • This building isn’t an effort to revive a program (currently ranked #3 in Engineering, #3 in ECE, and #5 in CS), it’s a natural step taking to increase the facilities available to accommodate recent advances by the University, and a continuously growing program which time and time again excels in all areas.
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Eureka!

Archimedes was one cool guy. I just don’t believe that the world had to wait almost two millenia for another of equal prowess (Newton) to come along. Of course, this is celebrating only the western branch of science.

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From SiliconValley.com:

Researchers have developed new search engines that can mine catalogs of three-dimensional objects such as airplane parts or architectural features.

For example, Purdue University professor Karthik Ramani created a system that can find computer-designed industrial parts, and Caterpillar Inc. engineer Rick Jeff says of Ramani’s technology: “If you’ve got to design a new elbow for an oil line, more often than not, we have a plethora of elbows”; Jeff says the problem has been that each has to be examined separately — a tedious task “that isn’t even performed that often, because it isn’t feasible or practical… It seems like there’s ever-greater demands for speed in product development, and it’s those kinds of breakthroughs that are needed to keep up. This would really just add to the efficiency.”

Professor Ramani says happily: “I think this is the beginning of the information age.”

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From AP:

When public outcry forced Congress to eliminate funding for the Pentagon’s Total Information Awareness program, which had been developing powerful tools to mine millions of public and private records for information on U.S. citizens, it left undisturbed a separate but similar $64-million research program at DoD’s Advanced Research and Development Activity (ARDA) unit, using some of the same contractors who had worked on the TIA effort. “The whole congressional action looks like a shell game,” says a spokesman for the Federation of American Scientists. “There may be enough of a difference for them to claim TIA was terminated while for all practical purposes the identical work is continuing.” ARDA sponsors corporate and academic research on information technology for U.S. intelligence agencies, and is developing computer software dubbed “Novel Intelligence from Massive Data,” which performs many of the same kinds of data-mining activities rejected by opponents of TIA. The ARDA project is vastly more powerful than other data-mining activities such as the Department of Homeland Security’s CAPPS II program to classify air travelers or the six-state, Matrix data collection system funded by the Justice Department.

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