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Archive for November 19, 2007
Migatti, Mobile Intelligence
November 19, 2007 by sean.
Migatti, PARC’s artificial intelligence software for mobile devices, could soon be data-mining your life:
(R)esearchers at Palo Alto Research Center (PARC)… have developed software that turns a phone into a thoughtful personal assistant, one that helps people find fun things to do. The software, called Magitti, uses a combination of cues–including the time of day, a person’s location, her past behaviors, and even her text messages–to infer her interests. It then shows a helpful list of suggestions, including concerts, movies, bookstores, and restaurants [via Technology Review]
Posted in pervasive computing, software, augmented cognition, mobile computing | No Comments »
How To Think: Logarithmic Time Planning
November 19, 2007 by sean.
From MIT’s Ed Boyden’s recently published article on How To Think:
I really like what I call logarithmic time planning, in which events that are close at hand are scheduled with finer resolution than events that are far off. For example, things that happen tomorrow should be scheduled down to the minute, things that happen next week should be scheduled down to the hour, and things that happen next year should be scheduled down to the day. Why do all calendar programs force you to pick the exact minute something happens when you are trying to schedule it a year out? I just use a word processor to schedule all my events, tasks, and commitments, with resolution fading away the farther I look into the future. (It would be nice, though, to have a software tool that would gently help you make the schedule higher-resolution as time passes…). [via Technology Review]
Posted in work, learning theory | No Comments »