Curating Content To Support Learning About Humanity's Transition

The Long Now Foundation Feed Sources

Ramez Naam – Enhancing Humans, Advancing Humanity

Techno thriller meets realistic optimism. Ramez Naam, a former Microsoft executive with 19 patents to his name, wrote a riveting just-completed science fiction trilogy (“Nexus”, “Crux”, and “Apex”) that plays out current trends in brain enhancement. As Naam reports in a recent blog, “Neural implants could accomplish things no external interface could: Virtual and augmented

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The Changing Reading Brain in a Digital Culture – Maryanne Wolf

Dr. Maryanne Wolf shares her research on the reading brain: its protean capacities; its surprising differences (e.g., in dyslexia); and its changes for good and ill in a digital culture. “The Changing Reading Brain in a Digital Culture” was given on July 14, 02015 as part of The Long Now Foundation’s “Conversations at The Interval”

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Bay Area Telecommunications Infrastructure History – Rick Prelinger

Rick Prelinger uncovers the diverse histories of
Bay Area telecommunications infrastructure: telephone, radio, television, data, image and sound. A tour of technologies, dead and flourishing, that overlay, underlay and penetrate us all. “Bay Area Telecommunications Infrastructure History” was given on June 16, 02015 as part of The Long Now Foundation’s “Conversations at The Interval” Salon Talks.

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SEVENEVES at The Interval — Neal Stephenson with Stewart Brand

A special daytime talk by celebrated speculative fiction author
 Neal Stephenson on the occasion of his just released novel “SEVENEVES”. After a reading, Long Now co-founder Stewart Brand joins Neal to discuss the research and writing of the new book, plus a little bit about what is coming next. “Seveneves at The Interval” was given

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Coding Ourselves/Coding Others – D. Fox Harrell

Through building and analyzing systems, D. Fox Harrell: http://foxharrell.com’s research investigates how the computer can be used to express cultural meanings through data-structures and algorithms. In his talk he showed that identities are complicated by their intersection with technologies like social networking, gaming, and virtual worlds. Data-structures and algorithms in video games and social media

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