Engadget have been having some fun with their photoshop contest in advance of tomorrow’s keynote from Lord Jobs. My favourite the iPod yocto.

Now let us pray at the feet of his holyness Lord Jobs for an Apple tablet.
John Griffin is just another media junkie
Engadget have been having some fun with their photoshop contest in advance of tomorrow’s keynote from Lord Jobs. My favourite the iPod yocto.

Now let us pray at the feet of his holyness Lord Jobs for an Apple tablet.
The government are trying to push ID cards through the commons again but they still don’t seem to realise we don’t want them for a number of important reasons.
Firstly the cost is astronomical and it could increase to £19 billion according to the LSE, looks like we will wind up with another over priced system, something that the NHS can tell us all about.
Will it prevent terrorism? What terrorism? I am sure the police, intelligence services and the army are doing their best to insure this country does not come under attack from extremists but the simple fact is that the threat to this country has been exaggerated to a ridiculous and unrealistic level. The terrorists are not a well oiled machine with an international network that the Bush and Blair administrations would have us believe. So the impact of any such scheme would be minimal, if at all, on the small threat we face.
Immigration is the other justification but this is completely the wrong approach. Biometrics are already being taken on entry into the country and that seems to be doing its job very well. No ID card and you get deported? I some how doubt that.
Which brings me to the flawed biometrics part of the scheme. It looks like it will be finger, 2D face and iris so that’s one good, two bad. It’s widely known iris can be beaten with clever contact lenses. 2D face is pretty lackluster from what I have seen and for a supposedly foreword looking system they really need to be scanning 3D face maps from day one to guarantee a good level of accuracy.
Of course let’s not forget about the civil liberties issues involved. There will be a central database of biometrics data for everybody in the country, something that is only currently done with criminals and immigrants. I don’t even want to think what would happen if your finger prints were found at the scene of a crime you didn’t commit and they ran a search against the ID card database. This could have the effect of devaluing the biometric data currently held on criminals, a very bad thing indeed.
The card is pretty useless in day to day exchanges apart from a proof of identity so it will be good for people without driving licenses (all three of you). If they phased in biometrics onto passports that would be a cheaper and more effective way of accomplishing some of their goals but right now that seems like it’s falling on deaf ears. They want to be seen to be doing something about terrorism and immigration and this is a very public way of doing it. It is just a shame that it will have no affect on either of those issues in the long run.
Great article over at MSNBC about the future of human evolution, kind of the opposite of what I was talking about last month. I think the Unihuman concept is only going to happen when the entire world becomes globalised, so that won’t happen anytime in the next few centuries, more like a few thousand years.
The excellent Mars trilogy by Kim Stanley Robinson goes into what happend to the children born on Mars is great detail. With a third of Earth’s gravity they became much taller and thinner making them incredibly weak in higher g environments. After a few generations the ones that try to return to Earth simply cannot take it and must remain on Mars. So basically any planet we settle will wind up with a whole different species of human living there. Got your ticket booked for the Mars colony ship yet?
The BBC are reporting on a new study to investigate human migration routes from our origins in Africa. This is a fascinating topic which raises so many questions about where we came from and why the human race has so much diversity in it. Some of my favourite questions from the article that I would like to see answered are:
One of the early shows I listened to when podcasting first started was Spencer Wells’ lecture at PopTech 2004 which was probably one of the reasons I got hooked on podcasting in the first place due it’s ability to entertain and educate unlike conventional radio. Wells had been going around the world testing people from different regions to determine, using genetics, where their ancestors came from with an end goal of discovering the paths ancient humans traversed.
Micheal Palin’s recent escapades in the Himilayas saw him meeting with the so called ‘Children of Alexander’ in the The Kalash Valleys. They have unusually light skin for the area and as Alexander’s army once passed through the area a connection was made. Maybe this new study will shed some light on that mystery.
I thought the recent Horizon programme on the Neanderthal would have mentioned the potential of interbreeding as a reason for their extinction but it never came up. Instead they claimed Neanderthals simply starved to death when they found themselves unable to adapt to the changing climate.
It’s nice to see IBM putting their weight behind the project, especially with all the anti-evolution sentiment that seems to be cropping up in the US in recent years, just ask James Cameron how stupid people are becoming.
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