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Category Archives: Transhuman News

Shed post-Christmas pounds just by breathing

Posted: December 17, 2014 at 3:41 pm

PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

16-Dec-2014

Contact: Emma Dickinson edickinson@bmj.com 44-020-738-36529 BMJ-British Medical Journal @bmj_latest

Widespread misconceptions about losing weight led Ruben Meerman and Andrew Brown at the University of New South Wales to calculate how we "lose weight."

Human fat cells store triglyceride, which consists of just three kinds of atoms; carbon, hydrogen and oxygen. Shedding unwanted fat requires unlocking the atoms in triglyceride molecules by a process known as oxidation.

By tracing every atom's pathway out of the body, the authors discovered that when 10 kg of fat are fully oxidised, 8.4 kg departs via the lungs as carbon dioxide (CO2). The remaining 1.6 kg becomes water (H2O).

Their analysis shows that the inhaled oxygen required for this metabolic process weighs nearly three times more than the fat being 'lost'. To completely oxidise 10 kg of human fat, 29 kg of oxygen must be inhaled producing a total of 28 kg of carbon dioxide and 11 kg of water.

"None of this biochemistry is new, but for unknown reasons it seems nobody has thought of performing these calculations before," say the authors. "The quantities make perfect sense but we were surprised by the numbers that popped out."

"These results show that the lungs are the primary excretory organ for weight loss," they add. "The water formed may be excreted in the urine, faeces, sweat, breath, tears, or other bodily fluids and is readily replenished."

"The exhaled carbon can only be replaced by eating food or consuming beverages such as milk, fruit juices or sugar-sweetened drinks," the authors say.

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Nice to Be Futurism // Artwork by Vincenzo Paccone – Video

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Exclusive: Shigeto Premieres 'Tide Pools' From 'Ghostly Swim 2'

Posted: at 3:40 pm

In 2014, surprising artistic collaborations have become the norm in popular music. But the record label Ghostly International and the TV network Adult Swim were ahead of the curve: they worked together for the first time back in 2008, creating Ghostly Swim, a compilation album full of "exploratory dance and pop music." To celebrate the 15th anniversary of the label, the two creative entities are connecting again for Ghostly Swim 2.Today, Billboard is exclusively premiering a song from the album, Shigeto's "Tide Pools." Listen below.

Sam Valenti, who founded Ghostly International, says "the collaboration with Adult Swim came naturally. Being a giant Tim and Eric fan the bumps on Adult Swim were part of my psyche." After the success of Ghostly Swim, Valenti would "meet fans at shows, [and] many would say that it was their introduction to electronic music." That made him think a second volume would be well-received.

"For this one," he tells Billboard, "I wanted to focus on the internal, finding a meditative and reflective sound. The artists chosen included weren't on Ghostly Swim, and we sought out some new faces... like harpist Mary Lattimore from Buffalo and Swim Team's AceMo, plus newer Ghostly singings like Lord Raja."

Fitting with Valenti's plan for a more "meditative and reflective sound," the press material accompanying Swim 2 reaches back to Brian Eno, the English musician and producer credited as the primary pioneer of ambient music. That means listeners should prepare for soothing textures, loops, and subtle changes, which Shigeto's "Tide Pools" provides in spades. But the song also has a clear pulse: A gentle, pleasantly glitchy rhythm with chimes and soft bells that drift and wash.

As for Shigeto, he remembers the impact the first edition of Ghostly Swim had on him. "I had brought it home from the Ghostly office," he tells Billboard. "I had it on rotation in my car for years, literally years, so many good tracks on there." At the time, he was interning at the label. "I lasted three days," he jokes. "I could probably type 15 words a minute, and my only reason for being there was to pester them to put my music out." But the combination of his pestering and his production talent paid off, and he's "proud to be a part of a project from two platforms I respect so much."

The compilation Ghostly Swim 2 arrives Dec. 23. Check out the track list below.

1. Pascal - Holo 2. Shigeto - Tide Pools 3. Anenon - Grapevine 4. Heathered Pearls - Supra 5. Babe Rainbow - Don't Tell Me I'm Wrong 6. Dauwd - Kolido 7. Patricia - Spotting 8. Lord RAJA - Spilt Out In Cursive 9. CFCF - Oil 10. Feral - Mirror 11. Mary Lattimore & Jeff Zeigler - I Only Have Eyes for You 12. AceMo - Futurism 13. Nautiluss - Lonely Planet

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Casio Women’s Futurist Alarm Chronograph LCD Watch #LA201W-2A – Video

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Book News: Sci-Fi Writer Signs On As 'Chief Futurist' For Secretive Startup

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In a blog post, Neal Stephenson says it's time that people develop a new medium, "one in which three-dimensionality is a reality and not just an illusion laboriously cooked up by your brain." Madeleine Ball/NPR hide caption

In a blog post, Neal Stephenson says it's time that people develop a new medium, "one in which three-dimensionality is a reality and not just an illusion laboriously cooked up by your brain."

It seems we have a new case of life following art. Over two decades ago, in his seminal novel Snow Crash, science fiction author Neal Stephenson imagined a virtual world he called a "metaverse," a collective virtual reality that brought its users together in a single shared space. Now, Stephenson is trying his hand at helping sculpt another kind of alternate realitythis time not in print, but in life at large.

Stephenson announced that he will be joining the startup Magic Leap as the company's "chief futurist." While the company itself remains something of a mystery, the Wall Street Journal reports that "the startup is developing its own eyeglasses-like device, different from Google Glass, designed to project computer-generated images over a real-life setting." In other words, the technology is said to try to blend seamlessly what's real with what's virtualnot unlike some of the technologies in Stephenson's book.

Though the company has yet to produce anything, Google and several other tech titans have been big backers of the project, to the tune of $542 million in investments.

In a blog post for Magic Leap, Stephenson said his role will not be concerned with business or science, so much as with how to apply the product once it's ready.

"I'm fascinated by the science, but not qualified to work on it. Where I hope I can be of use is in thinking about what to do with this tech once it is available to the general public," Stephenson wrote. "'Chief Futurist' runs the risk of being a disembodied brain on a stick. I took the job on the understanding that I would have the opportunity to get a few things done."

The Punch and the Publisher: Former Minnesota Gov. Jesse Ventura has turned his sights on the publisher of the book American Sniper. According to the StarTribune, Ventura has filed a lawsuit against HarperCollins for alleged defamation of character.

In his best-selling memoir, the late Navy SEAL Chris Kyle told of a scuffle he had with Ventura, whom he identified by the name "Scruff Face" in the text. Kyle wrote that he had punched Scruff Face over disparaging comments the man had made about the United States and the Navy SEALS. After the book's publication, Kyle explained that Scruff Face and Ventura, who is also a Navy veteran, were one and the same.

For his part, Ventura disputes this claim, saying the incident actually never happened. And he's already won a $1.8 million lawsuit against Kyle's estate over the same story.

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Neal Stephenson Named 'Chief Futurist' at Magic Leap

Posted: at 3:40 pm

Stephenson will help Magic Leap figure out "what to do with this tech once it is available to the general public."

Hot off an infusion of cash from Google, augmented reality startup Magic Leap has snagged another high-powered partner.

Science-fiction writer and game designer Neal Stephenson (pictured) has agreed to join the Fort Lauderdale-based firm as "Chief Futurist."

Announcing his new title in a blog post, Stephenson said he was intrigued by Magic Leapfrom what the company had already achieved ("I saw something on that optic table I had never seen before," he teased) to what it is capable of doing.

"Magic Leap is mustering an arsenal of techniquessome tried and true, others unbelievably advancedto produce a synthesized light field that falls upon the retina in the same way as light reflected from real objects in your environment," Stephenson explained.

Known for novels like 1992's Snow Crash, the author and sci-fi fan is familiar with virtual reality and augmented realityboth technologies which he expected to be widespread by the end of the 20th century.

"In practice, it has taken longer than just about anyone expected to get that kind of tech consumer-ready," he said. "The devil has turned out to be in the details of satisfying the amazingly finicky human visual system."

The Facebook-owned Oculus VR has helped to reinvigorate public interest in virtual reality, thanks to its Rift headset (slideshow above). But augmented reality remains a mystery to most peoplea detail Magic Leap hopes to change.

Founded in 2011, the secretive company in October earned $542 million in funding from tech giants like Google and Qualcomm. But details about its "Cinematic Reality" tech have yet to be revealed.

"I'm fascinated by the science, but not qualified to work on it," Stephenson admitted. "Where I hope I can be of use is in thinking about what to do with this tech once it is available to the general public. I took the job on the understanding that I would have the opportunity to get a few things done."

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Neal Stephenson signs on as tech company's 'chief futurist'

Posted: at 3:40 pm

Science fiction writer Neal Stephenson has joined the tech start-up Magic Leap as "chief futurist". The author of "Snow Crash" and "Cryptonomicon," who has also been involved in creating video games, blogs about why he signed on with the company on its website.

"In a teeming, overcrowded hardware lab in a South Florida strip mall, I got the demo from Rony [Abovitz], the founder and CEO. Shortly thereafter, I agreed to become Magic Leaps Chief Futurist.... what fascinated me wasnt what Magic Leap had done but rather what it was about to start doing. Magic Leap is mustering an arsenal of techniques--some tried and true, others unbelievably advanced--to produce a synthesized light field that falls upon the retina in the same way as light reflected from real objects in your environment."

In other words, Magic Leap, which recently raised $542 million, is planning to create augmented reality technology that could project 3-D images in real space. The company's website shows images of schoolchildren sitting at a table surrounded by suspended seahorses, cupped hands holding a levitating elephant or a tiny girl holding a puppy, and dragons flying across the sky.

Stephenson spoke to the website io9 about his role: "[I]f you're not actually doing practical things with the technology and engaging with the engineers and understanding the science, then it's impossible to futurize. So I've been telling Rony and the other people involved with Magic Leap from the very beginning that I wanted to have direct involvement in actually using this hardware as a creative platform."

Stephenson's next novel, "Seveneves," is coming from HarperCollins in May 2015.

Book news and more; I'm @paperhaus on Twitter

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Sci-Fi Author Neal Stephenson Joins Mystery Startup Magic Leap as Chief Futurist

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If nothing else, Magic Leap knows how to capture the imagination.

Silicon Valley is already abuzz over this stealthy augmented-reality startup, mainly due to some funding from Google and a brief glimpse of the companys technology that shows a 3-D virtual elephant floating above someones hands. And now, the company has raised its cachet even higher by teaming up with big-name science fiction writer and game designer Neal Stephenson, author of such sci-fi classics as Snow Crash and Cryptonomicon.

Stephenson will hold the title of Chief Futurist at the mysterious Fort Lauderdale, Florida-based company, which recently announced a $542 million round of funding led by Google. The sci-fi writer revealed his new title with a blog post, saying hed been swayed to join Magic Leap after receiving a demonstration of the companys technology.

Magic Leap is mustering an arsenal of techniquesto produce a synthesized light field that falls upon the retina in the same way as light reflected from real objects in your environment, he writes, saying its a tool that will serve not only gamers but readers, learners, scientists, and artists.

As one of the companys visionaries, Stephenson will work with the startup in a more theoretical, rather than technical, capacity. Where I hope I can be of use is in thinking about what to do with this tech once it is available to the general public, he writes.Hell join other notable names at the company, including founders Rony Abovitz, the former head of a medical robotics company MAKO Surgical, which was sold for $1.65 billion, and Richard Taylor of WETA Workshop, the company that created the props and creatures seen in Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit.

Thus far, the startup has been extremely tight-lipped on what its final product will be. Publicly, it released little more than a GIF of a tiny elephant appearing in an open pair of hands as a puzzling hint of what it would eventually debut. But some have speculated that the company could be making a Google Glass-like wearable that realistically blends computer-generated graphics with real world.

In this manner,Magic Leap adds to a wealth of efforts by othersnotably Google Glass and the Oculus Riftto bring augmented reality and virtual reality into the mainstream. When the company landed that $542-million pile of cash, the investment didnt come from Google Ventures, Google Capital, or any of the search giants other investment armsbut rather Google Inc. itself.

Additionally, Magic Leap nabbed senior vice president Sundar Pichai, the man in charge of Googles core products, as a member of the startups board. And other investors carry their own cachet, including Qualcomm, Legendary Pictures, and venture capitalist bigwigs Andreessen Horowitz, Obvious Ventures, and KPCB.

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Magic Leap recruits writer Neal Stephenson as chief futurist, games hinted

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Magic Leap, a startup which is working on wearable augmented reality tech with games applications -- and which has also been invested in, by Google, to the tune of $500 million dollars -- has hired author Neal Stephenson as its chief futurist.

In a new blog post, Stephenson hints at the potential for the tech, particularly vis-a-vis games.

"I sometimes feel that the creative minds who make games have done about as much as is possible in two dimensions," he writes. "It feels like the right time to give those people a new medium: one in which three-dimensionality is a reality and not just an illusion laboriously cooked up by your brain, and in which itas possible to get up off the couch and move -- not only around your living room, but wherever on the face of the earth the story might take you."

The company has recruited game industry veterans including 7th Guest creator Graeme Devine, and is currently recruiting for game projects involving Devine and Weta Workshop (Lord Of The Rings) concept designer Greg Broadmore - Weta's Sir Richard Taylor is an advisor to the firm.

Stephenson's latest game-related project was a Kickstarter-funded prototype called Clang aimed at creating realistic swordplay for games, which ran out of money before getting picked up for production; the project was ultimately killed.

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Magic Leap adds Neal Stephenson as VR chief futurist

Posted: at 3:40 pm

Chris Davies

If you thought Google-invested startup of augmented reality mystery Magic Leap couldn't get any more intriguing, think again: famed science-fiction author Neal Stephenson is now onboard. The writer - perhaps best known for his novel Snow Crash, which included plenty of augmented and virtual reality technology - will be Magic Leap's Chief Futurist, it was announced today, joining the hype-causing team experimenting with ways to project light fields onto the retina and use them to deliver believable three-dimensional environments. Turns out, Magic Leap's demonstration was enough to convince the award-winning author that the technology has some serious potential.

Published back in 1992, Snow Crash was Stephenson's third novel, set in the near-future - or what the author believed was nearly possible given the technological landscape at the time - and making heavy thematic use of the so-called Metaverse.

This, a successor to the internet, was a virtual environment in which users were each represented as digital avatars. While public access terminals offering simple black and white access were available in the novel's universe, the most common method of access were personal display goggles, though which a first-person view of the Metaverse would be delivered.

At the time, Stephenson says, he believed that sort of personal virtual reality environment would be just around the corner. Instead, it's taken considerably longer to get anywhere close, and the nearest to mass-market wearable display approaches have either focused on delivering basic notifications, like Google Glass, or some sort of game arena, like Oculus Rift.

Magic Leap surged from near-unknown status back in October, after it was revealed that Google - among others - had made an investment totaling more than half a billion dollars.

The technology that's paying for is far from detailed at this stage, though Stephenson describes it as "a synthesized light field that falls upon the retina in the same way as light reflected from real objects in your environment."

What the author is clear on, however, is that tech alone won't be enough to make Magic Leap a success. Instead, he writes, it will demand a whole new world of entertainment like games, specially written to take advantage of the virtual reality potential.

"I sometimes feel that the creative minds who make games have done about as much as is possible in two dimensions. Its hard to imagine how the current crop of games, for example, could be more finely tuned to deliver that particular kind of entertainment. It feels like the right time to give those people a new medium: one in which three-dimensionality is a reality and not just an illusion laboriously cooked up by your brain, and in which its possible to get up off the couch and move--not only around your living room, but wherever on the face of the earth the story might take you. Making such games is not going to be a matter of porting existing ones to the new system. Its going to mean redefining the medium from the ground up" Neal Stephenson, Chief Futurist, Magic Leap

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