Interacting with Technology

Last week we discussed humans ceding control to AI, technology and robots.  A year-old '60 minutes' video hit one of my feeds and highlighted some of the innovations that MIT's Media Lab is exploring.  Exploring further, the topics and innovations that they are researching will undoubtedly affect the future environments that we work and live in. 

I think that humans will leverage the benefits of human-technology interactions as long as it gets us what we want more accurately, efficiently, and faster.  It's an emerging trend!  Understanding how it will affect the military, economy, business and social environments will provide insights and opportunities.  Time to go down the rabbit hole...

 

https://www.media.mit.edu/research/?filter=groups

https://www.media.mit.edu/projects/alterego/overview/

https://www.media.mit.edu/groups/fluid-interfaces/overview/

 

I'm always looking at more sites, topics and feed to explore that highlight potential catalysts for the OE.  Please post some of the sites, feeds, or accounts that you find interesting.

 

It's interesting how things come to you..

Michael

Parents
  • Michael,

    What an amazing post. I clicked on the projects and, of course, immediately went to the lifelong kindergarten project. I saw that there is a "Scratch in Practice" group and I absolutely love Scratch-a free coding language created by MIT to create animation. Here is a link and I would love to talk to you about it more in class. This is just an amazing program. Thank you again for sharing this link. It is a great resource.

    Kira

    www.media.mit.edu/.../
Reply
  • Michael,

    What an amazing post. I clicked on the projects and, of course, immediately went to the lifelong kindergarten project. I saw that there is a "Scratch in Practice" group and I absolutely love Scratch-a free coding language created by MIT to create animation. Here is a link and I would love to talk to you about it more in class. This is just an amazing program. Thank you again for sharing this link. It is a great resource.

    Kira

    www.media.mit.edu/.../
Children
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