Tagged: science RSS

  • kahwee 8:51 pm on August 25, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , evolution, fur, human, science   

    Why Humans and Their Fur Parted Ways: http://www.nytimes.com/2003/08/19/science/why-humans-and-their-fur-parted-ways.html

     
  • kahwee 11:31 am on June 30, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: babylon, egypt, explanation, , science, sumer, time   

    Scienceray has a nice explanation why there are 60 minutes in an hour: http://scienceray.com/mathematics/applied-mathematics/why-are-there-60-minutes-in-an-hour/

     
  • kahwee 3:21 pm on June 14, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: captcha, cmu, , recaptcha, research, science,   

    The story of reCaptcha presented by Luis von Ahn of Carnegie Mellon University for Computing Research that Changed the World: Reflections and Perspectives in March 25, 2009. This explains reCaptcha very well and you should take a look at it (just in case someone quizzes you, haha):

    Human Computation

     
  • kahwee 2:13 pm on June 13, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: confidence, expertise, science   

    Humans prefer cockiness to expertise:

    From the start, the more confident advisers found more buyers for their advice, and this caused the advisers to give answers that were more and more precise as the game progressed. This escalation in precision disappeared when guessers simply had to choose whether or not to buy the advice of a single adviser. In the later rounds, guessers tended to avoid advisers who had been wrong previously, but this effect was more than outweighed by the bias towards confidence.

    From New Scientist

     
  • kahwee 1:51 pm on June 7, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: foldit, fun, , magazine, protein, science, , wired   

    Just found out about Fold.it ( http://fold.it/portal/ ) from the WIRED magazine U-Zyn lent me.

    Foldit is a revolutionary new computer game enabling you to contribute to important scientific research. This page describes the science behind Foldit and how your playing can help.

    Read more at the About page: http://fold.it/portal/info/science

    You could also read the article at WIRED: http://www.wired.com/medtech/genetics/magazine/17-05/ff_protein?currentPage=all

    I just gotten the game installed in my computer. It’s an interesting concept, using games to solve a problem.

     
    • kahwee 2:11 pm on June 7, 2009 Permalink

      Okay this game is really hard for me. I think I need something more dumb like Crocodile dentist or something http://www.amazon.com/Winning-Moves-1049-Crocodile-Dentist/dp/B00005N5FA

    • uzyn 5:59 pm on June 7, 2009 Permalink

      How come I don’t remember reading the article. I thought I have covered that issue of Wired cover to cover.

      Was the article encrypted?

    • kahwee 6:20 pm on June 7, 2009 Permalink

      Yes U-Zyn, it’s encrypted on pages 106 to 110. You need to email them to give you the cipher key. Haha

  • kahwee 1:08 pm on June 6, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , ape, baboon, computer, ide, , menu, primate, , , science, , vb.net, zoo   

    Baboons that can program prefer VB.NET? Sounds absurd but since it’s on the internet it must be true.

    Dr. James McAuliffe of the Stamford school of Zoology performed a series of experiments on the baboons using laptop computers. What he discovered was amazing. His findings were reported in the Journal of American Zoology this month.

    “Baboons and chimpanzees can use computers, do software testing, and even program,” explained Dr. McAuliffe. But they had some problems handling simple menu navigation. “Higher primates are very intelligent, but we found that they had problems with deeply nested menus. We found that these animals had trouble with multi-way branches beyond 2 levels. At first, these primates simply could not repeat a multi-way menu navigation.”

    After simple training in Windows® menu navigation, McAuliffe presented the baboons with modern development tools. Predictably, they were baffled by anything to do with modern Java IDEs such as SunONE®, Visual Age® and Jbuilder®. None of the animals understood the Java programming language, even the ‘alpha’ animals.

    However, most subjects immediately understood Visual Basic 3.0, and even displayed some comprehension of the VB3 debugger and simple VB data types. Most subjects could change properties of custom controls in the Properties window, and displayed some understanding of advanced concepts such as read-only properties.

    Hey Ridzuan, you should see this:

    Test subjects with the best results were baboons and bonobo apes. Both primate species demonstrated stressful behaviors when presented with Java tools and utilities.

    It’s okay I can get stress too, haha…

    http://www.newtechusa.com/PPI/pressroom.asp#higher

     
    • uzyn 3:03 pm on June 6, 2009 Permalink

      One of the most incredible BS I’ve ever seen coming from a Dr.

    • ridz84 3:32 pm on June 6, 2009 Permalink

      hahhaha…i like the Java tools being stressful part. hilarious…

      “None of the animals understood the Java programming language, even the ‘alpha’ animals.”

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