Steve --

No worry, we'll do the research while riding in driverless cars, and the
cars will monitor the eyeballs of the pedestrians for inattention to
surroundings.  All the eyeballs in parallel and all the driverless cars in
the intersection pooling their views.

Yes, they've bundled up all that futurama into the promo video, but the
idea of using a game to sort things out sounds intriguing.  I wonder if I
get to express my feelings about insurance companies ala GTA.

-- rec --

On Tue, Sep 10, 2013 at 11:28 AM, Steve Smith <[email protected]> wrote:

> On 9/10/13 10:12 AM, Roger Critchlow wrote:
>
>> UCSF is running an online game to explore possible avenues of development
>> for medical research, education, and practice, from 8AM Sep 11 to 8PM Sep
>> 12 at http://www.ucsf2025.org/.  There are some interesting ideas in the
>> promotional video already, such as open sourcing the biomedical research
>> literature and getting insurance companies to microfund medical research.
>>
> Roger -
>
> This is a very slick vision-caste/vision-quest worthy of the best "day
> after tomorrow" piece of fiction.  Each of the elements they identify: New
> models of education with ad-hoc components built in; Crowd sourced data,
> research, and funding;  Viz - Big as well as ubiquitous; etc.  are very
> compelling.
>
> I could take a curmudgeon stance on all of these elements and poke holes
> in them based on existing "tried and true" paradigms, and I'm sure many
> will, just as others will grasp at the shiny new toys and hope-triggers
> implied by it all and declare a premature "success".
>
> This vision is probably familiar to many of us in technology as we have
> probably helped in small ways to build the collective consciousness of the
> possibilities suggested here.  In some sense, it is a "ripe" future.
>
> The only fundamental criticism I have of the vision involves *further*
> speeding up and fragmenting human attention and awareness.   It suggests
> something like becoming part of a hive mind.   The vision as caste here,
> suggests that we would only experience the benefits of such. If Utopian
> literature is of any use, it illustrates for us how Utopias and Dystopias
> are duals.
>
> Fortunately I trust the young (and not so) people in my life to be able to
> both embrace the possibilities suggested here and consider the downsides of
> what this type of vision offers them for their careers, their health, and
> the very qualitative quality of life that is being suggested.
>
> If we thought texting while driving was unsafe, just imagine "doing
> research while driving"...
>
> - Steve
>
>
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