Correspo Home

Last Two Issues

About ABQ Comm.

Ancient Silver Birds

 

 

 

 

 

  

Correspo Home

Last Two Issues

About ABQ Comm.

Ancient Silver Birds

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

Correspo Home

Last Two Issues

About ABQ Comm.

Ancient Silver Birds

 

 

 

 

 


Correspo Home

Last Two Issues

About ABQ Comm.

Ancient Silver Birds

 

 

 

 

 

 


Correspo Home

Last Two Issues

About ABQ Comm.

Ancient Silver Birds

 

 

 

 

 

 


Correspo Home

Last Two Issues

About ABQ Comm.

Ancient Silver Birds













Correspo Home

Last Two Issues

About ABQ Comm.

Ancient Silver Birds


"History is just people doing things"

THE ABQ CORRESPONDENT

                 ISSN 1087-2302   Online Edition Number 198......May 2012
Published since 1985 for clients and contacts of 
ABQ Communications Corporation, the focus of 
The ABQ Correspondent is "the impact of new 
technology on society." If you'd like to receive e-mail 
notification when each monthly issue is posted, please 
let us know. Reach us at: correspo at swcp dot com
 
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
GETTING INK BACK OFF THE PAPER

There’s been a flurry of  reports recently about work by a team of scientists at the University of Cambridge on development of a “laser unprinter” that removes dark stuff (ink… assuming it’s not light yellow) from the surface of paper on which it has been printed, without damaging the paper. The energy of the laser is absorbed by the darker ink, which vanishes in a poof, while the lighter paper reflects the light. The notion is warmly embraced by those who worry about carbon footprints and all that, and  might even prove to be useful somehow. The idea isn’t exactly new, of course, and this gives us a chance to do some name-dropping in a longish anecdote.

            Back about 1966 or 1967, Paul Honore and I one day had three errands to run on the Stanford campus in addition to checking our company mailbox at the Stanford Post Office. Somehow, this brought us into separate contact with three Nobel Prize winners.

            One errand was to hunt for a useful book in the medical bookstore. We weren’t in uniform, and the staff didn’t want outsiders rummaging through the books, especially since we were forbidden to tell anybody what we were looking for, so they kept pestering us. Paul finally said “I know how to solve this, we’ll get some lab coats down at Biology Stores in the basement of the hospital.” We became lost in the labyrinth down there, and asked directions of a couple of fellows who were arguing at an intersection. One told us the way, being rather nasty about it. As we left, Paul said, “Do you realize that was Joshua Lederberg who yelled at us?” No, I hadn’t spotted that Nobel Prize winner in biology, but I recognized the other guy as Barney Oliver, a major figure at HP who was then Deputy Secretary of Defense or some such. We didn’t request directions from just anybody.

            Later, we had an appointment with Robert Hofstadter on some matter I can’t recall. Unlike Oscar winners, who tend to display the statues prominently, he didn’t flash at us the Nobel medal he’d received for work in particle physics.

             After that, for reasons that escape me, we called on Arthur Schawlow…who wouldn’t get his Nobel Price for another twenty years or so, but who was eager to demonstrate to visitors the newfangled lasers that eventually won the prize for him. As we talked about whatever business had taken us there, it was hard not to notice a large, gaudy, plastic toy ray gun on his desk. A  thick cable connected it to something under the desk. As we finished our business, he asked if we’d like to see something interesting. Sure. He turned to a big old office typewriter, put a piece of paper in it, and typed:

Laser Eraser

Laser Eraser

Laser Eraser

            Then he picked up the ray gun from the desk, pointed it at the paper, and fired a few laser shots at what he’d typed. With each shot, a letter or two disappeared from the text, leaving the paper un-charred.            

            He talked enthusiastically about how much better this was than typewriter correction fluid, while we cringed nervously for fear of blinding reflections from chrome-plated parts on the typewriter. For good measure, he took a shot at a helium balloon bobbing on the ceiling in a far corner of his office. The clear outer balloon was unaffected, but the blue Mickey Mouse balloon inside it popped. (The San Francisco Zoo used to sell these things. He must have been their best customer, buying  Mickey Mouse balloons  regularly to entertain visitors.)

            And that’s the point, at last, the laser unprinter has been around for some time, probably more entertainingly demonstrated by Dr, Schawlow than by anyone since.

            Oh…we did buy a couple of lab coats, put them on, put ball point pens in the pockets, and go back to the medical bookstore, where none of the staff even gave us a second glance as we searched for what we needed. Those uniforms made us practically invisible. 


NELS MUSES
Item:

Last month’s Correspo commented on the fad of printing all text in capital letters, because that’s all that more-or-less affordable automatic printers could do in the era when personal computers were new. John Peers added these comments; “…On the subject of typewriters, etc., one item missed by many UPPER CASE WRITERS  is that people cannot read all upper case letter words anywhere near as quickly as they can read lower case letter words. ..comprehension …is even worse.  An example: it is one of those ironies that the freeway electronic highway emergency signs, typically positioned directly above the freeway near where accidents/ congestion frequently happen, are all in upper case.  Worse, they are also without the normal letter "envelope".  ("Bigger letters must be better!")  This makes the reading and comprehension even slower.  The result is that at normal highway speeds, the time available to successfully read the words is quite insufficient.  Naturally, since it must be important (otherwise the sign would not be on) drivers slow down to give themselves enough time to read.  This promptly causes the very distraction and/or congestion and/or accidents the sign is supposedly trying to reduce.” 

Item:

A client was featured in the National Geographic. Not surprisingly, this is producing a lot of  hits on the company’s website and a modest flow of queries. One piece of mail was from a company that laminates pages of printed material to handsome plaques with whatever titles and captions are appropriate. Their letter said, basically, “we see you’ve made it to the National Geographic, and we assume you’d like to preserve and display the cover and the article. We can put them on a nice plaque to hang on your wall for a modest price.” We had been wondering what to do with the story, and this solved our problem neatly without further ado. Think of it; these fellows look at the print media to find articles and pix that the people featured in them are excited about, and undoubtedly want to preserve. They drop them an email note. Talk about qualified, interested prospects in a targeted  market! Like shooting fish in a barrel.


ITEM FROM THE PAST

This item from 1996 (really, referring to activities a few

years earlier) is prompted by recent discussion of the

female voice used (in most countries) to respond to

spoken questions in the Siri application for iPhones. 

 

ANOTHER SURPRISE IN ROBOTRY

Conventional wisdom drives producers of synthetic speech systems to hone and refine their products until the speech produced by the hardware sounds really like a human voice. Some manufacturers have even advertised "...experts know that human voice quality is essential..." Well, client Rio Grande Robotics is discovering that it ain't necessarily so. "Our customers seem to prefer a distinctly artificial voice to the good simulations of human voices," says Niki Delgado. It isn't a matter of clarity, which seems to be satisfactory in both cases. Rather, the artificial voice seems less deceitful; people like to know what they're dealing with, and don't like to have the machine pretending to be something it's not. "People always know when the voice is artificial," says Niki, "and they'll tolerate a lot more from an unpretentious mechanical voice than from a slick human simulation." The plain mechanical voice on the Atlanta airport shuttle trains comes to mind here...good fun.

 

A commentary by Brandon Griggs of CNN in October of 2011

quotes experts from here and there to make the case that female

voices are usually preferred in voice-response applications. (well,

not just there; we heard long ago that female voices are used in

emergency warning systems in fighter aircraft, for example.)

Griggs’ piece isn’t exactly a scientific study of the matter, but

an intriguing collection of opinions along with observations that

most GPS navigation systems use female voices. The final opinion

in his list is that the voices are often deliberately given a synthetic

flavor, because “that makes you aware of how high tech your

gadget is.” That contrasts interestingly with Niki’s long-ago

observation on the use of artificial voices. The Correspo has

commented more than once on the “uncanny valley” problem

created by CGI representations of human beings in movies that

are so good that people accept them, but retain a wholesome

uneasiness about them, because something-is-not-quite-right.

The classic example people talk about is The Polar Express, in

which the characters were all marginally creepy. The more

recent TinTin avoids most of that problem, apparently by

maintaining a cartoonish quality in the characters, though

characters walking through a marketplace in the film look so

real that you have to think consciously about their unreality.

The same problems apply in spades to animatronic figures,

many of which are so good they seem like real, but demented,

possibly dangerous people.  The uncanny valley problem clearly

concerns commercial producers of voice-response products, and

it isn’t just a matter of male/female.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Cover ImageAfter some years of working and reworking, this has become a real book, via Lulu Publishing. The blurb on the back (under a picture of the author looking unnaturally cheerful) says:

 “This book is Nels Winkless’s wry look at his half-century-and-more as a “professional outsider” writing, editing, interpreting, presenting new ideas, and serving as a sounding board for interesting people who have influenced some of the major technical developments of the era. While fascinated by the dazzling advance of technology, he’s most intrigued by the savage resistance people have to every sort of change, making technical progress virtually miraculous, and he suggests an explanation for this puzzling conflict.
   His recollections of the work and people are often funny, sometimes painful, and usually surprising.

ISBN: 978-0-557-05785-6                         

Review(s)


Available at Lulu.com


 

Copyright © 2012 ABQ Communications Corporation. All rights reserved.