What Jared Sewell has done in 2008

Recent stories by and about Jared Sewell

A story about Jaron Lanier

The following is taken from Jaron’s webpage at http://www.jaronlanier.com/

Jaron Lanier is a computer scientist, composer, visual artist, and author. His current appointments include Interdisciplinary Scholar-in-Residence, CET, UC Berkeley

Lanier’s interests include biomimetic information architectures, user interfaces, heterogeneous scientific simulations, advanced information systems for medicine, and computational approaches to the fundamentals of physics. He collaborates with a wide range of scientists in fields related to these interests.

Lanier’s name is also often associated with Virtual Reality research. Indeed, he did coin the term ‘Virtual Reality’ and in the early 1980s founded VPL Research, the first company to sell VR products. In the late 1980s he lead the team that developed the first implementations of multi-person virtual worlds using head mounted displays, for both local and wide area networks, as well as the first “avatars”, or representations of users within such systems. While at VPL, he and his colleagues developed the first implementations of virtual reality applications in surgical simulation, vehicle interior prototyping, virtual sets for television production, and assorted other areas. He led the team that developed the first widely used software platform architecture for immersive virtual reality applications. Sun Microsystems acquired VPL’s seminal portfolio of patents related to Virtual Reality and networked 3D graphics in 1999.

From 1997 to 2001, Lanier was the Chief Scientist of Advanced Network and Services, which contained the Engineering Office of Internet2, and served as the Lead Scientist of the National Tele-immersion Initiative, a coalition of research universities studying advanced applications for Internet2. The Initiative demonstrated the first prototypes of tele-immersion in 2000 after a three-year development period. From 2001 to 2004 he was Visiting Scientist at Silicon Graphics Inc., where he developed solutions to core problems in telepresence and tele-immersion.

Lanier received an honorary doctorate from New Jersey Institute of Technology in 2006, was the recipient of CMU’s Watson award in 2001, and was a finalist for the first Edge of Computation Award in 2005.

Primary Academic/Professional Appointments:

2006- Interdisciplinary Scholar-in-Residence, CET, UC Berkeley
2004- Fellow, International Computer Science Institute, Berkeley
2003-2005 Visiting Scientist, Silicon Graphics
2002-2004 Jones Center Fellow, Wharton School, UPenn
2002- Visiting Faculty, Dartmouth College (Surgical Simulation And Tele-Medicine)
1999-2002 Chief Scientist, Eyematic Interfaces (IP and most of team now at Google)
1997-2001 Chief Scientist, Advanced Network And Services (Parent organization at the time of the Engineering Office Of Internet2)
1997-2000 Lead Scientist, National Tele-Immersion Initiative (1st Tele-I Implementation)
1997-2001 Visiting Scholar, Columbia University
1996-2001 Visiting Artist, Interactive Telecommunications Program, NYU
1984-1990 CEO, VPL Research (1st Multiperson VR And First Commercial VR Products)
1983-1984 Researcher, Atari Labs
1980-1983 Independent Video Game Developer
1979-1980 Student Researcher On NSF-Funded Project On Digital Graphical Simulations For Learning At New Mexico State University
1974-1978 Independent goat milk and cheese provider (paid for my undergraduate education this way!)

Additional Current Appointments

Member Of Science Board, Pittsburgh Supercomputer Center
Member, Board Of Advisors, Lindenlabs (Social Simulations; “Second Life”)
Member, Board Of Advisors, Data Physics (Signal processing to improve volumetric medical imaging.)
Member, Board Of Advisors, Numedeon (Social Simulations To Encourage Female Teens In Math And Quantitative Sciences.)

Some Past Appointments (Incomplete list)

Research Fellow, Center For Business Innovation, Ernst And Young
Fellow, World Economic Forum,
Fellow, Macarthur Foundation Roundtables
Member, Board Of Advisors, Nevenvision (Spin-Off Company Associated With ISI (USC) Machine Vision Research- now part of Google.)
Member, Board Of Advisors, Meaningful Machines (Machine Text Translation)
Visiting Professor, San Francisco State University

Silicon Valley Lineages:

• Paracomp, a spin-off from VPL Research, Inc. (which was founded by Jaron) merged with MacroMind to become MacroMedia, which then merged with Adobe.
• Medical Media Systems, another VPL spin-off, became Medical Metrix Systems, and then M2S Inc., a major player in medical imaging software controlled by AIG and Pfizer.
• The PowerGlove was a major toy licensed to Mattel Toys from VPL.
VPL was acquired by Sun Microsystems.
• Eyematic Interfaces, where Lanier was Chief Scientist, became Nevengineering, which was wholly acquired by Google.

Punditry:

Lanier is a well-known author and speaker. “Jaron’s World” is his monthly column in Discover Magazine, and is devoted to his own wide ranging ideas and research. He writes and speaks on numerous topics, including high-technology business, the social impact of technological practices, the philosophy of consciousness and information, Internet politics, and the future of humanism. His lecture client list includes most of the well-known high technology firms as well as many others in the energy, automotive, and financial services industries. His book, “Technology and the Future of the Human Soul” will be finished someday, but is delayed by epic procrastination. His writing has appeared in The New York Times, Discover, The Wall Street Journal, Forbes, Harpers Magazine, The Sciences, Wired Magazine (where he was a founding contributing editor), and Scientific American. He has edited special “future” issues of SPIN and Civilization magazines. He is one of the 100 “remarkable people” of the Global Business Network.

Music:

As a musician, Lanier has been active in the world of new “classical” music since the late seventies. He is a pianist and a specialist in unusual musical instruments, especially the wind and string instruments of Asia. He maintains one of the largest and most varied collections of actively played rare instruments in the world. Lanier has performed with artists as diverse as Philip Glass, Ornette Coleman, George Clinton, Vernon Reid, Terry Riley, Duncan Sheik, Pauline Oliveros, and Stanley Jordan. Current recording projects include his “acoustic techno” duet with Sean Lennon and an album of duets with flautist Robert Dick.

He also writes chamber and orchestral music. Current commissions include an opera that will premier in Busan, South Korea. Recent commissions include: “Earthquake!”, a ballet which premiered at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in San Francisco in April, 2006; “Little Shimmers” for the TroMetrik ensemble, which premiered at ODC in San Francisco in April, 2006; “Daredevil” for the ArrayMusic chamber ensemble, which was premiered in Toronto in 2006; A concert length sequence of works for orchestra and virtual worlds (including “Canons for Wroclaw”, “Khaenoncerto”, “The Egg”, and others) celebrating the 1000th birthday of the city of Wroclaw, Poland, premiered in 2000; A triple concerto, “The Navigator Tree”, commissioned by the National Endowment for the Arts and the American Composers Forum, premiered in 2000; and “Mirror/Storm”, a symphony commissioned by the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra, and premiered in 1998. “Continental Harmony”, a PBS special that documented the development and premiere of “The Navigator Tree” won a CINE Golden Eagle Award. His CD “Instruments of Change” was released on Point/Polygram in 1994.

Lanier’s work with Asian instruments can be heard extensively on the soundtrack to “Three Seasons” (1999), which was the first film ever to win both the Audience and Grand Jury awards at the Sundance Film Festival. He and Mario Grigorov are currently scoring a new film, “The Third Wave,” which will premier at Sundance in 2007. He is at work with Terry Riley on a collaborative opera to be titled “Bastard, the First.”

Lanier has also pioneered the use of Virtual Reality in musical stage performance with his band Chromatophoria, which has toured around the world as a headline act in venues such as the Montreux Jazz Festival. He plays virtual instruments and uses real instruments to guide events in virtual worlds.

Visual Art:

Lanier’s paintings and drawings have been exhibited in museums and galleries in the United States and Europe. In 2002 he co-created (with Philippe Parreno) an exhibit illustrating how aliens might perceive humans for the Museum of Modern Art of the City of Paris. In 1994 he directed the film “Muzork” under a commission from ARTE Television. His 1983 “Moondust” (which he programmed in 6502 assembly) is generally regarded as the first art video game, and the first interactive music publication. He has presented installations in New York City, including the “Video Feedback Waterbed” and the “Time-accelerated Painting”, which was situated in the Brooklyn Bridge Anchorage. His first one man show took place in 1997 at the Danish Museum for Modern Art in Roskilde. He helped make up the gadgets and scenarios for the 2002 science fiction movie Minority Report by Steven Spielberg.

Celebrity fluff:

In 2005 Lanier was selected as one of the top one hundred public intellectuals in the world by Prospect and Foreign Policy magazines. The Encyclopaedia Britannica includes him in its list of history’s 300 or so greatest inventors. The nation of Palau has issued a postage stamp in his honor. Various television documentaries have been produced about him, such as “Dreadlocks and Digital Dreamworlds” by Tech TV in 2002. The 1992 movie Lawnmower Man was in part based on him and his early laboratory- he was played by Piers Brosnan. He has appeared on national television many times, on shows such as “The News Hour,” “Nightline,” and “Charlie Rose,” and has been profiled multiple times on the front pages of the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times.

A story about Freeman Dyson

The following is taken from professor Dyson’s website which can be found at, http://www.sns.ias.edu/~dyson/

Freeman Dyson is now retired, having been for most of his life a professor of physics at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton. He was born in England and worked as a civilian scientist for the Royal Air Force in World War 2. He graduated from Cambridge University in 1945 with a BA degree in mathematics. He went on to Cornell University as a graduate student in 1947 and worked with Hans Bethe and Richard Feynman. His most useful contribution to science was the unification of the three versions of quantum electrodynamics invented by Feynman, Schwinger and Tomonaga. Cornell University made him a professor without bothering about his lack of Ph.D. He subsequently worked on nuclear reactors, solid state physics, ferromagnetism, astrophysics and biology, looking for problems where elegant mathematics could be usefully applied. He has written a number of books about science for the general public. “Disturbing the universe” (1974) is a portrait-gallery of people he has known during his career as a scientist. “Weapons of Hope” (1984) is a study of ethical problems of war and peace. “Infinite in all directions” (1988) is a philosophical meditation based on Dyson’s Gifford Lectures on Natural Theology given at the University of Aberdeen in Scotland. “Origins of Life” (1986, second edition 1999) is a study of one of the major unsolved problems of science. “The sun, the Genome and the Internet” (1999) discusses the question of whether modern technology could be used to narrow the gap between rich and poor rather than widen it. Dyson is a fellow of the American Physical Society, a member of the US National Academy of Sciences, and a fellow of the Royal Society of London. In 2000 he was awarded the Templeton Prize for progress in Religion.

Why I admire Pervez Musharraf

It is amazing how history seems to force the right people into power from time to time. Pervez Musharraf is just such a leader, born to rule and incorruptible. These attributes also make him the target of truly extensive and potent evils throughout the region and the world. I would be honored to meet this man and tell him how wonderful it is to have people like himself in the world, even if his own countrymen cannot yet adequately appreciate what he has done for them and how much he has put himself on the line for his ideals and the future of Pakistan. I worry for the man though as he may not be long for the world. Many of the greatest leaders that come along are so hounded by their adversaries and so reluctant to destroy their greatest foes, that they eventually fall victim to them.

Why I admire George W Bush

I admire President Bush and would be so honored to meet him for the simple fact that he is yet another great leader that just happened to come to us at the moment when we needed him most. Between the press core and the political machine of the liberal democrat’s, his image and ratings have been lower than he has ever deserved and yet this is what helps to show the greatness of his leadership. With so much pressure from so many directions, a lesser man or a mere politician, would have been drifting in the winds, unsure of his greater purpose in domestic and foreign policy direction and ultimately the legacy he would leave for future generations of Americans to admire and follow.

President Bush has been so consistent in his message and his policies because he is generally undaunted by what people think of him, but rather is consistently focused upon goals that most of America is either unwilling to accept as critical to all of our futures or are too politically shortsighted, ignorant or naive to understand. I want to meet President Bush because he is the kind of leader that it is so rare to have at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, a leader that is truly less concerned about the fickle focus of the loudest and more obnoxious American opinions being voiced these days and more concerned about the safety and security of all Americans into the foreseeable future.

President Bush has made some of the hardest decisions and faced some of the greatest crises as any President since Harry Truman had to drop the A-bomb to end WWII. Most Americans will unfortunately not know the true depth and measure of this President for many decades to come due to the secretive nature of many of his greatest challenges and successes. Yet I am confident that history will remember that our 43rd President was in fact one of the great ones!!!


The world wants to meet…

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