Starlab “Time Travel” Party : 無料・フリー素材/写真
Starlab “Time Travel” Party / cohærence *
ライセンス | クリエイティブ・コモンズ 表示-継承 2.1 |
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説明 | Starlab Time travel Party – Hugo De Garis (artificial intelligence), Sergeui Krasnikov tube (time travel), Roman R. Zapatrin (quantum topology), Christopher Altman, entanglement amplification (at the confluence of all three ;) ) –http://christopheraltman.com/2014/10/an-excerpt-from-my-press-interview.htmlI began my scientific career at a Deep Future, multidisciplinary research institute—Starlab—located deep in the serene and secluded forests outside Brussels, Belgium. Our research institute, co-founded by MIT Media Lab founder Nick Negroponte and established in partnership with MIT, Oxford and Ghent University, was created as a "Noah's Ark" to bring together the world's most brilliant and creative scientists to work on far-ranging projects that hold the potential to convey a profound and positive impact on future generations. My group's artificial intelligence project at the lab was recognized by the Guinness Book of World Records in 2001 as the "World's Most Complex Artificial Brain." I lived and worked at the institute, taking up research collaborations with the principal scientists of our NASA and USAF-sponsored time travel division—profiled in a prominent Discovery Channel Special—in work that was widely published, featured in a Discover Magazine cover story, and continues to this day: we just completed a chapter contribution to a Springer academic volume on Spacetime from Quantum Topology. When our laboratory came up short on research grants, I personally went to the President himself to request $1M in additional budget from funds allocated through Clinton's 2001 National Nanotechnology Initiative. For my contributions to the program, I was selected by the US Government as one of three graduate students most likely to impact the future of the field, sponsored to attend conferences and administrator briefings at national agency headquarters outside Washington, DC, attended the World Technology Summit in London, was an invited delegate to the French Sénat to provide testimony on the future of technology and how it will transform our lives over coming decade—and more. That was my first job out of college. In the aftermath of the September 11 attacks, I volunteered and was subsequently elected to serve as Chairman for a UN Disarmament and International Security Committee, leading more than 500 upcoming diplomats to address and combat the threats of international terrorism, global and regional nuclear security, and information warfare. My Chair Report to the General Assembly on the promise and perils posed by the rapid acceleration of unpredictable advances in converging technologies was read by the UN Secretary General, at the Executive Office of the President, by National Security Advisors, at Presidential and Prime Minister's offices around the world—was instrumental in building political momentum and influencing Congressional policy to establish the foundations for US Cyber Command—and was subsequently recognized with the 2004 Award for Outstanding Achievement in Government Policy. That's when things started to get exciting .... |
撮影日 | 2004-09-29 08:31:21 |
撮影者 | cohærence * , Kavli Institute of Nanoscience, The Netherlands |
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