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Pop!Tech Roundup

Some random notes from my three days at the Pop!Tech conference in Camden, Maine:

- The substrate of complexity is irrelevant, whether it’s carbon or silicon. That is, a computer is a computer is a computer, be it a Powerbook or a human being. The level of complexity is the important part.

- Patent clerks spend an average of 4-6 hours per patent on a prior art search. Yikes.

- Lessig imagines an 18th century DMCA: the (D)aguerre (M)achine (C)ontrol (A)ct. I’ve seen Larry speak three times now; it’s interesting to see how he’s refined his argument.

- URLs cribbed from Golan’s presentation: Danny Rozin’s Wooden Mirror and Kelly Heaton’s Furby wall.

- Audience member on the Jewish perspective on stem cell research: “A fetus is a fetus is a fetus until it becomes a lawyer.”

- Cloning + embryonic stem cells is a powerful combination. Cloning takes “old cells” back in time, creating identical young cells. Embryonic stem cells can then be harvested from the cloned embryo and used to create new cells and organs for the original organism. Wild stuff.

- The Methuselah Mouse Prize is encouraging work on anti-aging, giving out prizes for the longest-lived lab mouse.

- Q from the audience about humans possessing indefinite life spans: “But doesn’t this mean there won’t be any children?” Answer from Aubrey de Grey in a most straight-forward tone: “Yes, it would mean a world without children.” At that point, a chill went up my spine.

- A population pyramid for the US from the US Census Bureau’s IDB Population Pyramid page.

- The shortest summary of the past 100 years I’ve ever heard: “the 20th century had its ups and downs.” - Clay Shirky

- James Kunstler: “We are creating places we don’t care about [living in]”

- Overheard about Virginia Postrel’s talk on the Age of Aesthetics: “for someone who thinks aesthetics is so important, you’d think she would have used something better for her slides than Comic Sans on light purple.” That and her increasing shrillness toward the end of her talk turned much of the audience off her argument I think.

- David Martin raised a question I’ve been preoccupied with for a couple of years now: “How much of the global economy is just an hallucination?”

- Geoffrey Ballard on the future: 12% of the population is currently ruining the planet. What happens when the other 88% get involved?

- Here are the goals that the 191 United Nations Member States have committed to meet in the next 12 years.

- An audience member asked space architect Constance Adams about sex is space (within the context of designing habitats for procreation), and she indicated that erections in space are difficult to achieve because in zero gravity, blood tends to collect in the head and feet.

- Robert Wright, author of the excellent Nonzero, is tall, handsome, witty, so very smart, and possesses impeccable timing. I think I am in love.