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World’s First Original Imitation Game

World’s First Original Imitation Game

alice.jpgI played this on Saturday and guessed 2 of them correctly… Turing’s Original Imitation Game was played for the first time ever at Simon’s Rock College of Bard in Great Barrington, MA on Saturday, April 16, 2005. The experiment was organized by Cameo Wood, Melissa Leventhal and Allyson Sgro…The participants were asked to chat with two companions over AOL instant messenger for five minutes, and then to guess which was a man and which was a woman. Full story here.

 Steadycam catching on…

$14 Steadycam catching on…

cam.jpgMrJerm says…“When I went to my local hardware store and showed them the list of materials, they already knew what it was for…the $14 steadicam must be catching on….I added a $10 “fitness set” from Sports Authority. The neoprene girdle is a good thing to wrap around the handle, providing grip and smoother (for me) pans. The jogging weights easily slip on the bottom, making it possible to gradually increase the weight as I become more comfortable with the setup. And when the steadicam is not in use, the jogging weights make good…jogging weights….”.

Motion Induced Blindness

Motion Induced Blindness

motion.jpgFrom Michael’s “Optical Illusions & Visual Phenomena…This is pretty freaky, you stare at the green dot in the middle, as the background grid turns the yellow dots will disappear. Steady fixation favours disappearance, blinks or gaze shifts induce reappearance. All in all reminiscent of the Troxler effect, but stronger and more resistant to residual eye movements. Might be cool to make a video game that has this effect.

iChatNotifyBT

iChatNotifyBT

ichatnotifybt.jpgI’m going to use this script to have my Mac message a hacked up phone with dummy SIM that will be attached to the TV so I can see when I received an IM- check it out- “…this script is intended to work with iChat to detect new incoming messages, and send a notification (address book contact) to your bluetooth phone that the instant message has arrived. Many cellular carriers offer AIM forwarding services for mobile devices, however, they often use SMS and therefore cost per message. If your phone has bluetooth, why not take advantage of that functionality?”