health
Thursday, January 21st, 2010
A friend of mine sent me a link to a couple pages (PDF) in H+ Magazine… a transhumanist publication. The first page covers the phenomenon of “self-tracking” and CureTogether, an open source health research platform where people collaboratively posit hypotheses and track anecdotal results. The “power of many” in this forum far outweigh the relative […]
Tags: culture, hack, health, implant, rfid
Posted in Adventures in RFID, Life in general | No Comments »
Saturday, January 9th, 2010
Last May I posted about my adventures with gout and the things I was doing to try and fight off acute attacks. Well, since then I’ve had a couple tinglings of pain in various joints but had been able to avoid a full blown attack. Today I’m hobbled, unable to walk because my left ankle […]
Tags: health
Posted in Personal Health | 2 Comments »
Thursday, January 7th, 2010
A couple days ago I read the latest h+ Ray Kurzweil interview (pdf), and one part of it stood out for me. RUS: I think when most people think of utopia, they probably just think about everybody being happy and feeling good. RK: I really don‘t think that‘s the goal. I think the goal has […]
Tags: culture, health, religion
Posted in Life in general | 1 Comment »
Sunday, December 20th, 2009
So I’ve got a lot of plants/weeds around my place, and I want to kill most of them… but herbicides are expensive when you start looking at buying gallons of it, and I don’t want my house sitting in the middle of a chemical soup bath either. Fortunately, the answer is simple; 1 cup vinegar […]
Tags: green, hack, health
Posted in Life in general | 3 Comments »
Friday, December 18th, 2009
Manufacturers have started adding wireless capabilities to many implantable medical devices, including pacemakers and cardioverter defibrillators. This allows doctors to access vital information and send commands to these devices quickly, but security researchers have raised concerns that it could also make them vulnerable to attack. A couple guys from the local University of Washington… …showed […]
Tags: culture, hack, health, implant, law, rfid, security
Posted in Adventures in RFID | No Comments »
Tuesday, December 8th, 2009
I’ve heard a lot of people looking to get an RFID tag implanted by their doctor eventually run into trouble because their doctors don’t have any kind of release that adequately covers the situation. I’ve been asked about it several times but never had the time to dig one up. I was just asked again […]
Tags: health, implant, law, rfid
Posted in Adventures in RFID | No Comments »
Monday, November 30th, 2009
Something that has really gotten on my nerves lately has been the absolute insanity when it comes to cleanliness. It’s like everyone became OCD just because they could. By that, I mean the following: 1) As the tools of society constantly evolve, they reduce the need for a person to think for themselves and increase […]
Tags: culture, health, psychology, stupid
Posted in Life in general | No Comments »
Monday, November 23rd, 2009
I was recently contacted by a student from Clemson University asking permission to use my x-ray image in a project they were doing. Unfortunately a lot of “chip haters” out there tend to jump all over using my image without permission in their crazy website graphics and doomsday videos. The funny part is, I typically […]
Tags: health, implant, privacy, rfid, security
Posted in Adventures in RFID | No Comments »
Thursday, November 19th, 2009
Researchers at Intel are confident we will be using brain implants to surf the web using only our thoughts. The first goal is to decode common human brain signals. Back in the 50s and 60s, both the US and the Russians were doing some pretty bizarre brain experiments… some of which were of the “open […]
Tags: hack, health, implant, privacy, psychology, software
Posted in Life in general | 2 Comments »