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Browsing Reality With Sensor Networks

Roland Piquepaille writes "Welcome to the world of 'Reality Mining'! The billions of networked sensors that exist today are generating humongous streams of data. What about 'data mining' this big flow of data and discover our environment in a way that never existed before? Suddenly, sensors would look like pixels and we would start to browse reality as easily as we browse web pages today. Fascinating concept! Some fellows at Accenture Technology Labs are thinking about this and they already have designed some demos of reality mining software. Their demos include web agents, data modeling, GIS systems and much more. They also show how you could detect fires or how you would do virtual shopping. Please read their long article or this shorter summary for a couple of examples."

10 of 104 comments (clear)

  1. sounds to me like... by Kjuib · · Score: 0, Insightful

    just a new way to sell more porn...

    --
    - Your stupidity got you into this mess, why can't it get you out? -Will Rogers
  2. Total Information Awareness by Hatta · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The US gov't wants to do this kind of thing, not with sensors but with data from credit cards, libraries, schools, airlines, etc. I haven't been too worried about this so far, considering that we don't have the technology to pull useful data out of all that noise, but if we can do it with sensor networks, who knows. How long until all of those cameras at intersections are hooked up into one all-seeing electronic mind that will always know where you're going and what you do when you get there?

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  3. Re:Welcome to the World of Marketing by metlin · · Score: 2, Insightful

    What they probably fail to mention is that this would work only for those places that they have "mined" beforehand.

    So, if you are going to a new place, do not expect to have this information - if it's a well known or big place that people frequent and the like, you would have information. Else nothing.

    Good idea, but if it's a well known place you would not really need this thing, anyway.

  4. Re:Boycott Slashdot! by JUSTONEMORELATTE · · Score: 4, Insightful
    I say boycott slashdot until one of the following are met:

    1) We get a Roland Piquepaille section.
    2) Slashdot stops taking kickbacls
    3) Slashdot distributes kickbacks to readers.
    I'd settle for the ability to:
    1: Make Roland Piquepaille a foe
    2: Block my foe's submissions from my view of the front page

    Failing that, howsabout you just ignore his submissions and move on to the next story?
    /me forgot to check the submitter on this one. 'Doh!

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  5. Yeah, it's Roland the Plogger again by Animats · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This is getting really annoying. Either put the bozo in his own section or stop posting his stupid ads. Or at least edit them to reference the original story, not the Plogged version. This is like being subscribed to PR Newswire.

  6. "Becoming" connected by eseiat · · Score: 2, Insightful

    From the article:
    As cameras become a standard cell phone feature, we're becoming the most connected and instrumented people in history.
    How are we merely becoming the most connected people? I don't remember seeing Caesar cruising through Rome, telling all his "boys" to "holla back at a brotha on my 2-Way, cause I'm a roll out to Cairo for a weekend dip in the Nile". Perhaps that is information that my public school budgets couldn't afford to dig up.

  7. Re:Welcome to the World of Marketing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Not sure I agree. After all, traveler's guides are popular right now. There are few places in the modern world that people haven't already been too - and those places are by definition not high-traffic or densely urban. Where this is going to be useful is for mirroring the real world in a virtual world, which has lots of tasty implications. The more people live in a place, the denser your amount of information... makes perfect sense for a place that's just a mass hallucination anyway.

  8. It's Never Going to Happen Because of You People by The-Bus · · Score: 2, Insightful
    I've been thinking about this for a while. What if you could, for lack of a better term, Google the earth? That's a bit broad, and excuse the ca. 1994 AT&T "You Will" commercial-speak...
    • You listen to a song on the radio, and then search for a match from what your brain just heard (and was stored on a portable audio device) with a world database of songs.
    • You see a person you recognize and are able to get their name, last time you talked to them, etc.
    • You can take a look at all this data and have software come up with weird trends or coincidences ("Heinz! Your ketchup sells better a week after a victory by the local football team!").


    The problem is of course that people are against this. I, for one, do not have a problem as long as it's easily accessible public information. Think back to 20 years ago. What would you say if your next-door neighbor had our present time internet, with access to public records, opinions, sports cores, etc. etc. etc. We take it for granted now because everyone can do it.

    I think this is probably what will cause the singularity.
    --

    Small potatoes make the steak look bigger.

  9. Re:Another one for the trash by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    the submitter couldnt give a shit about the content, its all about getting you (& 50,000 /.ers) to visit the article and create impressions for advertising, thats the whole purpose of the site, the guy just copy and pastes whole articles vertabim and then doesnt have to pay the writer like other sites
    weblogs.com are turning a blind eye as they just havent had a lawyer pissed off at them yet to shut them down
    of course time will tell, in the meantime its payday! thank you for playing, keep clicking dumbass !

  10. Accenture leads in creative thinking by hughk · · Score: 2, Insightful

    on how to pick the pockets of their clients. I have just rolled off a(nother) major project that they screwed up. The offshored it to their own delivery centre in Manila and I guess the project plan was a result of mining the imagination and the offshore delivery centre was full of virtual resources.

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