Nanotech: "Smart Fabrics"
Reidar Gunn writes: "This article is about nano technology... I read it over to make sure I was really reading what I read! Red to Blue cloths, sizes going from bigger to smaller... Wonder if they'll make wireless clothes with a subscription service, Yah never know! Logo changing shirts eh!"
Nahh - it just starts showing advertisements on your shirt, and if you get far enough behind, starts putting "Kick Me" signs on the back, and ranting about what a deadbeat you are.
Think of nano-suits that exert force on the wearer.
The field of tele-dildonics can finally come!
to accept the praise of personal wisdom is an affront to the very ideal i hold dear.
If we have self-cleaning, color changing, size-shifting shirts, what am I going to do with all my trade show accumulated shirts from now-defunct .com's that come in the "one size fits all - or else" XL? I have shirts I haven't even worn yet. From 1996....
tim
Just what I'd want, a Microsoft shirt that reads "Hacked by Chinese"
good point, i agree.
posted via satellite
Know someone you want to see killed? Hire someone to hack into his new turtleneck and set the size to "Petite" and strangle him to death.
Your right, I'm am very sorry. I was reacting from my own conservative political viewpoint. I have not felt the pinch that pushes a nation over the edge.
Quote:Martynov's implied conclusion is that the working class should impose self-restraint on itself so as not to 'frighten' the bourgeoisie; but at the same time he states that it should persistently press the bourgeoisie to lead the revolution: 'The struggle to influence the course and outcome of the bourgeoisie can be expressed simply in the proletariat's exerting revolutionary pressure on the will of the liberal and radical bourgeoisie, the more democratic 'lower' section of society's compelling the 'higher' section to agree to lead the bourgeois revolution to its logical conclusion.' (A Martynov Dve Diktatury, Geneva, 1905, pp 57-8).
Do you think the US falls under this category?:
Dissolving cultures give rise to a powerful urge for a new integration that must be total and dynamic if it is to fill the social and spiritual vacuum, that must combine religious fervour with militant nationalism
Feh. The degree to which we can coopt a technology for ourselves is the degree to which we remove control from the hands of our masters.
There's not much we can do to get our hands on our masters' looms, but once the replication is done by nanomites, we've gotten our hands on the machine - the control has moved outward as it did when mainframes gave way to PCs where Linux and the likes were born - the control has moved outward as it did when huge bandwidth went from just a few sites to everyone who could afford cable and DSL and peer to peer file sharing became/is becoming the norm - and when we can capture and successfully reprogram the little knitting machines that comprise a sweater, we'll find a new wealth there as well.
Don't fear the nanobots. Fear the legislation that will attempt to stop you from using them yourself.
The spokeswoman says the clothing will even be able to do the same things as the uniforms on the Enterprise. So, uhhh, I guess the jackets will ride up and the shirts will get ripped in fistfights :)
ever expanding geeks.... you sign up with service where you give them your calorie consumption habits, and they slowly expand your jeans to keep a perfect fit...
-- "Other than that, how was the play Mrs. Lincoln?"
I just want my Okama GameSphere.
Is this still considered a threat, or has it been debunked?
To me it seems rather like a "worst case scenario" by SF writers. From what I've read on nanotech (Which admittedly is not much but articles.) it seems like building generic little machines is very hard. Sure, you might be able to make a self-replicating machine which can reduce a block of an alloy into a lot of copies of itslef. (No not today.) But unleash it on a lump of dirt and it won't do anything. It can't just magically transform everything into copies of itself. Only the few structures that are suitable for the task.
Do we really want to bring those days back?
A man is nothing without a job, unless man has a reason for existence, be it tilling the soil or repetitively inserting screws on an assembly line, he is nothing, for work maketh a man.
Nanotechnology changes all this - the technology does the work. With this new technology, it looks as though the textiles industry will be the first to suffer once again. Clothes will manufacture themselves, and the honest worker in the clothing industry will become as the ancient hand weavers, non-existent.
This is the stuff revolutions are made off gentlemen. By supporting nanotechnology you are supporting revolution, both technological and, much more dangerously, social.
I for one support nanotechnology for I believe it brings the day of revolt closer, the day when we can throw of thw chains of government, corporation and society comes ever closer with ever little gear wheel an MIT professor makes.
Nanotechnology will change the world, and bring the vision of Trotsky that little bit closer.
KTB:Lover, Poet, Artiste, Aesthete, Programmer.
There is no
Too bad Douglas Adams is gone, he would have incorporated THHGTTG into the towel...
So they'll be able to track you, not only will they know where you go, who you're with, but they'll know when you violate good fashion sense.
Of all the comments I've ever posted, this is definately one of them
Red to Blue cloths, sizes going from bigger to smaller.
:)
How about an IR-remote that changes baggy t-shirts into semi-sheer micro-bikinis ?
-Billco, Fnarg.com
I wonder how long it will take before we will all be wearing one AlwaysClean(tm) Wrinkle-B-Gone(tm) T-shirt for your entire life, having it change color, shape, texture, even brand-name as fads come and go... It's going to be great!
"Your superior intellect is no match for our puny weapons!"
OOH Bayybee!!
Damnit, Jim, I'm an anarchist, not a F@#$!^& doctor!
Oh,man!
If you're going to the pool... make sure you take a towel... wanna get high?
There is much cruelty in the universe, John.
Yeah, we seem to have the tour map.
Then, random friends hacked my server.
Now, they'll hack my pants? I can just imagine walking in a room, and having my pants get 10 sizes bigger and falling off. Or, when I'm out on a date with my girl, porno videos start playing on my shirt. I can imagine the first T-Shirt eMail virus now...
Joe User gets his email
**ATTN!** NEW TSHIRT DESIGN JUST 4 U!!
Joe User downloads new_tshirt.tsht to his shirt
Joe User's T-shirt starts sending out more mail viri and then catches fire
Or, your shirt could be rented out as ad space to any advertiser who could pay...JUST THINK OF THE POSIBILITIES!
No, really, I dont hate tech, I just hate people!
The opinions in this post are ficticious. Any similarity to actual opinions, real or imagined, is purely coincidental.
Could be embarrassing if you're out in public when you forget to renew your subscription and the clothes disappear.
Did anyone see South Park this past week? Trey, ever the visionary had the RS 450 SMART Towel, with synthetic fibers to fluff itself to adjust to the users level of wetness. Embedded chips and everything...
Oh, and the towel likes to get high
sizes going from bigger to smaller...
If only my body worked that way.
Salesman: Work, huh? Let me guess. Computer programmer, computer magazine columnist, something with computers?
Homer: Well, I use a computer.
Salesman: [quietly, to self] Yeah, what's the connection? Must be the non-stop sitting and snacking.
-- [3F05] "King-Size Homer"
Decades ago when things like these were being proposed, there were enormous leaps in technology required thus the ideas being the domain of Science Fiction. As you very well know, science fiction can become well understood technology and when the technology is close enough to make future preductions believable for the population, that is when the popular media will catch on. This is despite the fact that the true state of technology may be far from achieving the goal, it is only the perception of the media thinking that it is getting very close.
Until the porn industry finds a way to exploit this.
hoping your rules and wisdom choke you, since 1976
Oh great, I can see it now; "Little Johnny's stopped breathing, we better get home and check him". heh, and all from a wrong phone number. oops.
There are 10 kinds of people; those who know ternary, those who don't, and those now hunting for a dictionary.
I see a nice suit design I like, program the material to stretch and shrink in the right places, and presto -- my outfit looks just like what I saw. Armani sees this and sends a pack of lawyers after me. I press a few keystrokes, it is now a shark fighting suit.
Fight Spammers!
Baby pajamas could be fashioned with a cellphone, so anxious parents could call home from the theater to listen to their infant's breathing, check his heart rate or even sing a lullaby.
English translation:
Rather than being involved in their childrens' development and well-being, yuppie parents can simply rely even further on technology to be their babysitter. And as if their cell phones ringing during a movie wasn't bad enough, now they can be annoying at a whole new level by singing in the theatre!
That's it. I'm never going outside again.
The shirt said things like "Hell is a city much like Newark". Having spent the better part of a year living in New Jersey, I suspect that Hell can't be much worse. (My apologies to anyone who actually *likes* New Jersey.)
Hmmm... it's certainly been a while since I've seen it. I must have confused that aspect of it with a short story along similar lines.
"Argv! Cursed nanoworm!"
Hey! It's not the size of the worm, it's... oh forget it.
I think the word is "Sarcasm"
Fast machines, powerfull AI, impulsive invention,... All I lack is a good espresso machine!
I bet some of it is from the TLAs. Do they have any involvement in the development of this technolgoy? I can see it now:
TOP SECRET//NOPORN//ULTIMAC
Classified by: X33
Declassify on: X1
Codeword: Astro Media
Subject: Embedded Surveillance in Clothing
Date: August 11, 2001
To date, our research in digital clothing and embedding of complex circuitry has been hampered by the ultra-liberal activities of the MIT Media Lab and those employeed. There is no indication that they suspect our involvement. DSA is investigating but has not uncovered any leaks.
With the recent discussion on the ultra-liberal, communist, open source site, Slashdot (www.slashdot.org), the redirection of our efforts appears to be successful. Our ultimate goals (and our financing of the efforts) have apparently been successful.
The current goals are as follows:
Believe it! Its real. Its here now. The TLAs are behind it. Watch yourselves! Is that new shirt really just a shirt?
Never get caught wearing the wrong gang colors in the wrong hood ... wessyyyyyde!!
sTrAiN
"The clothes that we wear might not look like the uniforms on the bridge of the Starship Enterprise, but they will be able to do the same things," DuPont product manager Stacey Burr says.
Hmm... shirts that come with a toggle switch that flips the integral girdle and chestplate from "buff" to "buxum" depending on your gender?
Imagine how great this will be for a night out: No more worries about dress codes, your clothes will always match to the club you're in!
yeah, up.
So why do we DigiGarments(tm) to do this again?
You don't exist. Go away. --SysVinit Halt
Just imagine, you walk into Radio Shack, and your tshirt turns into a huge X10 ad...
SIGFEH
the thought of pop-under ads in my jeans... whooo hooooo
You'd better hope the clothing doesn't involve too much targeted advertising.
There'd be nothing quite like seeing an ad for Viagra flash across your girlfriend's ass right as you're undressing her to be intimate for the first time. (At least there she might not notice it...)
My Webcomic: Asylum on 5th Street
Now I can wear a t-shirt of whatever team is winning at the moment and say I've had it since before they were big!
grep -ri 'should work'
I keep seeing you guys post "Oh, haha, let's make clothes that you can hack to turn into a micro-bikini or see-through..."
Screw that,what about the big hairy Yeti-rednecks with a gut hanging five inches over the waist of their jeans and a wife beater tanktop. Can you hack these things to cover that UP and keep people from going blind?
I'm not sure, but you might even be able to get federal funds to research doing that as a community service.
My Webcomic: Asylum on 5th Street
Damnit, Jim, I'm an anarchist, not a F@#$!^& doctor!
The view from the top doesn't spread effectively enough from the center, creating a bell curve not unlike the immense quality-of-life gap between First and Third world nations.
Check my Go-related blog for beginners: DGD
have your shirt display some kinda winamp visualation plugin (like geiss, etc) and watch them trip out. "whoa, dude is changin colors... or is it the acid?" too bad it looks like phish isn't coming back tho...
WWJD.... for a Klondike bar?
...companies making micropayments to people who wear t-shirts with their logo on it?
The shirt could track exactly how long the logo was worn, and you get $.01 per minute or something like that. The current marketing slogan would always be on the shirt.
That might be the one thing that would get me to wear a non-plain shirt.
Of course, how long before people hack the shirts and get Nike to drop $1M into their account? LOL
~Philly
This plus sweat-eating bacteria:
s ht ml
http://slashdot.org/science/01/07/06/0356218_F.
means some people may NEVER change their clothes!
Wow - and I just started reading The Diamond Age this week.
*punches kid in face*
My joke got modded as Insightful and my insight got modded as Funny.
My dad works for dupont as a ChemE...
i wonder if he can get my first dibs on some prototypes.[right]
i'll resell them to any slashdotters, for a price.
Just what I needed, banner ads on my underwear. Will there be any way to block porn sites? Maybe disable cookies?
--GrouchoMarx
Card-carrying member of the EFF, FSF, and ACLU. Are you?
If I could only find that paper, I'd be able to further argue my point.
ian.
ian
Now, imagine the price difference if, instead of just one logo, the shirt could display one of ten at any given moment. That sounds like justification for the clothing makers to charge ten times the price to me.
Of course, these clothes could be CHEAPER instead of more expensive (free advertising and all), but the average consumer is just so gullible...
If my washer talked to my clothes, it would promptly shut the door and lock itself in...
The stupidest idea in the history of the world.
If I want portable computing devices, I would rather have them just small, cheap, light, with long battery life. If I want to "wear" them, that's what I have pockets for.
The only things I might want to wear would be a display on my eyeglasses, or something in the form of a wristwatch. Fuck anything else.
a jacket with built in cell phone and mp3 player. where do I put the batteries? what if I want to wear a different jacket?
"Yeah...I know it's 12 degrees out, but I'm expecting a phonecall, that's why I'm just wearing a windbreaker."
I can already see the Marty McFly's of the world, walking around pulling up the sleeves of their one-size-fits-all coats because they don't know to hit the patch that fits the coat to their body.
But I can already see the controversy over people downloading graphics for their nanotech t-shirts on the internet. Today, we're downloading Metallica mp3's. Tomorrow we'll be downloading Metallica t-shirts. Oh well, we'll just hack James's t-shirt to read "I Sold Out" during the press conference to announce he and and [whatever equivelent of the RIAA for nanotech t-shirt designs will be] are filing a lawsuit against Textilester.
--
Intelligence is definitely a recessive trait.
I wonder how long before they'd come up with rules stating you couldn't change the look of your shirt in school, or that you couldn't wear any nanoclothes that can be customized...
You're nothing; like me.
He wasn't working on an equation that just happened to summon the devil, he said something to the effect of "I'd sell my soul for the solution to this", at which point the devil appeared.
You know, here's a few more thoughts:
I wonder if socialism must achieve world domination to succeed lie's in the fact that it's expensive. It cost's money to keep your people healthy, send them to school, and generally do good things for everyone. A lone socialist state is at an economic disadvantage compared to right wing states.
Another thought, the conditions the G8 is imposing on the third world has a strong projection of actually instilling socialist values in them once they develop fully; they will remember the pain and it's lesson. 70 years from now it might be a whole different ball-game.
And pity the Taliban, just wait until some biotechnologist develops a 'sanity plague' that suddenly educates them on the dangers of not proceeding with technology.
...until someone inadvertently uses it on Aunt Martha instead of the cute, petite college girl walking next to her. Just think of the damage to society you could cause with one of those things.
Bow before my sig, for it is good.
The Hype: Nanotech clothes are coming!!!
The Reality: Some innovations are being explored in the textile industry. Some of these are very good ideas (sports socks that absorb bacterial odors). Some of these are very bad ideas (a jacket with built in cell phone and mp3 player. where do I put the batteries? what if I want to wear a different jacket?)
The one thing that intrigues me about the article is not that big companies like DuPont are exploring new "smart" textiles, it is that the popular media has absorbed the idea that molecular nanotechnology is coming and is going to be a Big Thing. The idea of smart clothing is no surprise to anyone who read Drexler's ENGINES OF CREATION back in the late 80's, or for that matter anyone who reads a fair amount of SF, or has the least bit of technical knowledge and imagination. I find it simply fascinating and funny that popular culture is "discovering" these ideas many decades after they were first proposed.
What is even funnier is that the jounalists and speculators are making the same innane impractical speculations they have always made. Baby pajamas with a built in cell phone? Get a life. Remember these are the successors of those visionaries in the 50's and 60's who said we all would be driving nuclear cars, flying personal helicopters, and using too-cheap-to-meter electricity by now. Yeah, right.
There were many good ideas mentioned in the article. I hope that Nano-Tex, et. al. are able to bring out some of these products: Bio-monitoring clothing, color/pattern changing cloth, variable permiability cloth, etc.
Just do us all a favor. Leave the cell phones out of it.
IV
"These laws they're passing won't even compile anymore, let alone execute." - anon
Alternatively by someone with a poor grasp of the subtleties and nuances of written prose, not to mention the day-to-day costs of a professional environment.
Physicists get Hadrons!
Damnit, Jim, I'm an anarchist, not a F@#$!^& doctor!
Korey Stringer was well aware that he was very exhausted. He vomited several times during the practice the day before he died. He was pushing himself to beyond his limits and he knew it. A special shirt wouldn't have helped anything.
Hehe, just imagine it. 9/10ths of the population in clever-clothes and a virus strikes that makes everyones clothes all simultaneously go see-through. Ok, ok don't tell me you'll didn't think of that.
-nemof
"I love deadlines. I like the whooshing sound they make as they fly by."
Having content delivered to your shirt gives new meaning to shrink-wrap licensing.
Seriously though.. This is a step towards the future we all abhor: One where everything is licensed. Sure, it starts out simple, then the shirt gets an IPv6 address, and starts calling home, and before you know it, you're only allowed to wash a shirt 10 times before you have to choose between it calling home or being called home.
The truth about Scientology, Xenu, and you: Operation Clambake
"Uh, sir, XYZ." "Oh, thanks." *zips up zipper* *A kid laughs on the other side of the store* *zips up zipper again* *again* *again* "Argv! Cursed nanoworm!"
Our clothes would come in one respectable size and respectable color and it stayed that way. Nowadays all you kids and your fancy schmancy rayon or neon colors think that your clothes need to glow and look fancy. Now you even want your shirts to change sizes as you grow up.
When I was a kid, I wore all of my older sisters shirts once she outgrew them and I liked it. When I outgrew these shirts I kept wearing them until my younger brother grew into them. This would often take about 2 years and the shirt would develop respectable worn marks and tears. My kid brother would eventually wear these clothes after they were thread bare and see-through and he liked it.
-vax computer, vi, lynx. 'nuf said
Oh man, I'm so high I don't even know what's going on.
Hint: It's not funny if you didn't see last week's South Park - and it's probably not funny even if you did.
liB
Most things get hacked, this wont be any different. The GPS tracker will let everyone know where your child is, and the colour-changing fabric will be changed every time you walk down the street. And companies will fight to gator your label-patch with their logo's. On the plus side, imagine - chicks, transparency setting-crack and bra-cleavage-adjuster-bug. And maybe someone will get around to fixing the bra_unhook interface..
-tfga
This comment does not represent the views or opinions of the user.
anyone remember Back to the Future II? Marty got clothes too large - no problem - and they were the right size. Same thing when he got wet - no problem. Would be cool to have that kinda clothes :)
09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
Blue Face Of Death?
At least now the arrow underneath my "I'm with Stupid" shirt will always be pointing in the right direction...
"Your superior intellect is no match for our puny weapons!"
From the article: A GPS unit could locate a wandering Alzheimer's patient.
Or a wandering spouse...
Inventor of the LOLbalrog meme.
Drying jacket.. VRRRRRRRRRRRRRR Your jacket is now dry!