Mar. 6th, 2007

ksmith: (Default)
Scientists Try to Predict Intentions; By MARIA CHENG AP Medical Writer

BERLIN (AP) -- At a laboratory in Germany, volunteers slide into a donut-shaped MRI machine and perform simple tasks, such as deciding whether to add or subtract two numbers, or choosing which of two buttons to press. They have no inkling that scientists in the next room are trying to read their minds - using a brain scan to figure out their intention before it is turned into action.

The worrying bit:

"These technologies, for the first time, give us a real possibility of going straight to the source to see what somebody is thinking or feeling, without them having any ability to stop us," said Dr. Hank Greely, director of Stanford University's Center for Law and the Biosciences.

"The concept of keeping your thoughts private could be profoundly altered in the future," he said.


Rest of the article here.
ksmith: (Default)
Scientists Try to Predict Intentions; By MARIA CHENG AP Medical Writer

BERLIN (AP) -- At a laboratory in Germany, volunteers slide into a donut-shaped MRI machine and perform simple tasks, such as deciding whether to add or subtract two numbers, or choosing which of two buttons to press. They have no inkling that scientists in the next room are trying to read their minds - using a brain scan to figure out their intention before it is turned into action.

The worrying bit:

"These technologies, for the first time, give us a real possibility of going straight to the source to see what somebody is thinking or feeling, without them having any ability to stop us," said Dr. Hank Greely, director of Stanford University's Center for Law and the Biosciences.

"The concept of keeping your thoughts private could be profoundly altered in the future," he said.


Rest of the article here.

Welp

Mar. 6th, 2007 05:55 pm
ksmith: (Default)
Don't know what broke, but something did. I reinstalled Flash 8. Upgraded to Flash 9. Trashed Firefox, then reinstalled it. Still no bookcovers on my homepage. Finally went and repaired permissions, which hadnt been done since the 4th. Nope. Back to Camino, I guess.

I should say that I simply moved Firefox to Trash to uninstall--I couldn't find an Uninstall program, and it was always my understanding that Mac apps could simply be kicked to the curb by moving them to Trash. If this is not the case, someone please let me know.

This is obviously an isolated thing. Everyone else can apparently see the bookcovers, which is the most important thing. I've had issues with Firefox before, and I'm not too upset about this. Just hoping that the issue doesn't develop into something bigger.

Welp

Mar. 6th, 2007 05:55 pm
ksmith: (Default)
Don't know what broke, but something did. I reinstalled Flash 8. Upgraded to Flash 9. Trashed Firefox, then reinstalled it. Still no bookcovers on my homepage. Finally went and repaired permissions, which hadnt been done since the 4th. Nope. Back to Camino, I guess.

I should say that I simply moved Firefox to Trash to uninstall--I couldn't find an Uninstall program, and it was always my understanding that Mac apps could simply be kicked to the curb by moving them to Trash. If this is not the case, someone please let me know.

This is obviously an isolated thing. Everyone else can apparently see the bookcovers, which is the most important thing. I've had issues with Firefox before, and I'm not too upset about this. Just hoping that the issue doesn't develop into something bigger.

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