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Google Announces Project 10^100 Winners

Kilrah_il writes with news that Google has selected winners for Project 10^100, a contest to find the best ideas to change the world. Among the winners is the Khan Academy, which we've discussed previously. Google is "providing $2 million to support the creation of more courses and to enable the Khan Academy to translate their core library into the world’s most widely spoken languages." The other winning projects are: FIRST, an organization fostering math and science education through team competition; Public.Resource.Org, a government transparency effort focused on online access to public documents; Shweeb, a silly-looking method of human-powered urban transit; and the African Institute for Mathematical Sciences, a center aimed at promoting graduate-level math and science education in Africa.

13 of 133 comments (clear)

  1. Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    KHAAAAN!

    1. Re:Obligatory by Spazntwich · · Score: 4, Funny

      I didn't believe Google had really gone evil until I learned they're funding the imperial agenda of science fiction villains.

  2. Interesting Ideas by BJ_Covert_Action · · Score: 4, Insightful
    I like most of the projects that the summary mentioned. The Shweeb one is a bit...odd...however. From their website:

    We tend not to like travelling because it’s uncomfortable, there’s not much space, not enough leg room, we spend our time stuck in traffic or on a broken down train... and we are completely powerless to do anything about it.

    The design principles of Shweeb aim to put you, the traveller, back in control of your own space, time and power.

    Their design seems to consist of locking oneself in a suspended bubble and peddling your way to your destination. So....to clarify, they talk about the problems of transportation including not having enough leg room or space, and their solution is for you to lock yourself in a bubble....hmmmmm.

    Honestly, after looking at that project, I have to ask, "Why the hell wouldn't I just walk to my destination? Or ride my bike?"

    1. Re:Interesting Ideas by reverseengineer · · Score: 4, Informative

      The Shweeb FAQ addresses this question, and the answer is hilarious:

      But what if someone refuses to pedal or goes really slowly?

      Impact-cushioning buffers at each end of the pods allow faster pods to run into slower pods and form a Shweeb 'peloton'. This increases aerodynamic efficiency and, unlike a bicycle peloton, the power produced by those behind can contribute to the overall power of the group, thereby increasing speed and efficiency and removing the need to overtake. Should the rider in front refuse to pedal, the extra effort required by the rider(s) behind is minimal due to the low rolling resistance and single aero-pressure point of the peloton.

      --
      "FDA staff reviewers expressed concern about the number of patients who were left out of the study because they died."
    2. Re:Interesting Ideas by iammani · · Score: 3, Insightful

      What if a bunch of people refuse to pedal; say 9/10 refuse to pedal, would the system still work?

    3. Re:Interesting Ideas by TheLink · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The bubble might make an okay windshield in the rain, maybe.

      I'm living in an equatorial zone, and it sure looks like a mini greenhouse tube to me. Sure they talk about ventilation holes, but I'm not convinced...

      Anyway, overall it looks like a stupid idea. Not sure why it won a prize.

      --
  3. 10^100 Winners by bblount · · Score: 3, Funny

    With 10^100 winners it brings a whole new meaning to 'everyone's a winner!'

  4. These ideas will save humanity by GPLDAN · · Score: 3, Informative

    I've submitted my ideas in order of excellence:


    1. Cowboy Neal breeds with Britney Spears, embryo placed on next Voyager spacecraft
    2. Duke Nukem Forever gets released on the iPhone
    3. Cached copies of goatse.cx for all mankind
    4. Raze Hope College to get rid of the world riff-raff
    5. Rename the GPL,the GNU Pubic License, just for the Lulz.

  5. Re:FIRST by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    Wrong. I've participated in FIRST since its inception at my high school two years ago, and the only thing that's "forced" on you is the goal to build the best damn robot you can while being polite and helpful to other teams at the meets. The teams are not required to use Labview, as there have been code libraries developed for both Java and C++ in the past. Last year in fact, we had a program in Java developed in part with another team and we were helped by several other teams at the meet who helped us optimize our code (at the time, we had no full-time Java programmers which kinda stunk). And the objective is not to get people hooked on National Instruments; in my limited experience it's been to inspire high schoolers to be both polite and professional, two concepts that are generally not fostered in high schoolers these days. FIRST isn't about some corporate scheme to brainwash high schoolers into thinking National Instruments are the only thing out there to use (which, after even a year of participating you'd realize that some hardware given to you will be the absolute least of your issues at a meet), it's about...well, I'd suggest you read their mission statement:

    "Our mission is to inspire young people to be science and technology leaders, by engaging them in exciting mentor-based programs that build science, engineering and technology skills, that inspire innovation, and that foster well-rounded life capabilities including self-confidence, communication, and leadership."

    I mean, come on. At a bare minimum it's a noble cause, and that's before the years that they've been doing this for. FIRST works, not as a way to get kids hooked on National Instruments, but as a way to expose high schoolers to not only a very high level of electronics, engineering, and teamwork that wouldn't be seen until they actually got full time jobs and worked on projects.

  6. Re:Just curious... by Nerdfest · · Score: 5, Funny

    Because:

    Microsoft wouldn't know a good idea if it bit them on the ass these days.
    Oracle has contests like this and then they try to figure out ways to sue the winners.
    Steve Jobs thinks everyone else's ideas suck.

    I kid ... mostly.

  7. Re:Just curious... by Zarf · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I just keep hearing how "evil" Google is becoming... but they do stuff like this when nobody else seems to. These types of projects are the kinds of things an idealistic socialist government would do... yet here's a capitalist organisation doing them.

    --
    [signature]
  8. Not Enough Hype for the Khan Academy! by CentTW · · Score: 5, Interesting

    As a person who graduated from a major state college with a minor in math about 3 years ago, I really wish I had even one math teacher in my entire schooling experience who was even half as good of a teacher as Salmon Khan. I've gone over his Calculus videos, because I felt my Calculus skills were lacking, as I'd originally been taught by a lady who could just barely speak English. In my opinion, these videos represent a better educational experience than about 95% of the school that I've attended. I've had a few better classes in person, but most "teachers" are barely qualified, in my personal experience.

    Something to understand about Khan's videos, they can be helpful to anyone who can speak English. There are numerous reports of it being a useful tool for students in Africa. Many students have used it to pass the California Algebra I standards test. I suppose there is plenty of anecdotal evidence that it's effective, nobody's done a major study yet.

    About a month ago, Slashdot posted an article about a 578 million dollar high school being built. Now you're demonizing Google for giving 1/289th that amount to an institution that will likely reach 50+ times the audience, who are probably more in need of a better education anyway? I don't think that makes any sense at all.

    In the business world, two million dollars is chump change. Angel investors throw a lot more money than that at an idea without scientific evidence of it working. This seems like an excellent opportunity to throw a little money at an interesting education opportunity, and see how it pays off.

    1. Re:Not Enough Hype for the Khan Academy! by abramovs · · Score: 3, Interesting
      I'll stay away from your Flame-bait (you really think I demonized them?) and show how you made my point for me.

      This seems like an excellent opportunity to throw a little money at an interesting education opportunity, and see how it pays off.

      Where is anyone talking about see how this 'pays off'? How do you tell if it 'pays off'? Anecdotal evidence is just that and not the substitute for a scientific evaluation. How about we spend some of the money to explore that?

      Now you're demonizing Google for giving 1/289th that amount to an institution that will likely reach 50+ times the audience, who are probably more in need of a better education anyway?

      Don't you think that something that has the potential to reach a much wider audience should be carefully tested before released into the wild?