I just don’t see anything in traveling. You go and look at things and then you’re done. What else are you to do? I’ve read logs and accounts of people traveling to random places and across the globe. What do they all have in common? “I saw the ____” and “The people there ____ _____ ____” I’m not interested in picking up on things that people round’ the world get the same effect from. Games are an interactive medium, giving people different experiences based on their interpretations. The people themselves are boring. They’re no different to me than any other person in the world, and there’s a lot to pick from when there’s about 6.7 billion people in the world. Their cultures and lives are of no interest to me either. I’m interested in their minds and problems.
There are two things people have plenty to tell. Their opinion, and their problems. Both of which interest me. First off, opinions can be very valuable or worthless depending on the situation, and knowing what people think of other people or think about things are powerful pieces of knowledge. Being able to predict such crucial information furthers the amount of value in that data.
Knowing people’s problems serve an alternate purpose. Problems require solutions, and someone will attempt to find one regardless of the situation. May it be a matter of something being far too complicated to handle (thus leading to the creation of GUIs for tools normally only accessed via command line) or mental problems like reoccurring nightmares.
Because of this, I often find very little value or point in traveling to other countries to simply view it’s treasures. I would rather create my own treasures, even if they are only valuable to me.
neat blog.how did you get it like that ?
DARPA Scores a Huge Victory in Apple\’s iPhone 4SIt is never easy to predict when a mialrity-funded innovation can satisfy a commercial need. And it’s especially doubtful that the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) could have predicted that the \’Personalized Assistant that Learns\’ (PAL) program would eventually be used by millions of people around the world. Yet that is exactly what is about to happen, when Apple, Inc releases its iPhone 4S with the Siri Personal Assistant. Apple purchased Siri Incorporated in 2010, about two years after Siri was spun out of SRI International. Prior to the spin-out, Siri\’s core technology was developed under multi-million dollar DARPA grant. It\’s clear from this video that DARPA\’s intended customer was not the smart phone user, but instead a mialrity officer issuing orders in a command center. Luckily for DARPA, and iPhone users worldwide, SRI International saw the potential to employ PAL in the embedded environment. As a result, we iPhone users will all soon be benefiting from DARPA’s investment.