Tuesday, May 26, 2015

Tools of Then and Now: Kenyan Born and Bred Malchkeon and Those Stone Tools

The importance of the Enlightenment has not been its triumph, but its creation of a culture of criticism – a culture now endangered by apathy...As Vaclav Havel  observed the more we know the less and less we care »


Here's my list of three reasons why we fear new technologies: Fear of Dissonance, Fear of Losing Your Job, Fear of Perception. 3 Reasons Why We Fear Technology
 
Tools of Yesterday:
“Human evolutionary scholars have long supposed that the earliest stone tools were made by the genus Homo and that this technological development was directly linked to climate change and the spread of savannah grasslands. New fieldwork in West Turkana, Kenya, has identified evidence of much earlier hominin technological behaviour. We report the discovery of Lomekwi 3, a 3.3-million-year-old archaeological site where in situ stone artefacts occur in spatiotemporal association with Pliocene hominin fossils in a wooded palaeoenvironment. The Lomekwi 3 knappers, with a developing understanding of stone’s fracture properties, combined core reduction with battering activities.
  • Supplementary Information – This file contains Supplementary Text, Supplementary Tables 1-3 and Supplementary References.
Bronze Age Danish woman wore garment from outside of Denmark

Asteroid impacts 3.3 billion years ago may have boiled the oceans Ars Technica. Always something new to worry about!



Spotting Image 1

Tools of Now:
News release: “When you see the driver next to you looking at their phone, it’s no longer safe to assume they’re texting. New research from AT&T shows nearly 4-in-10 smartphone users tap into social media while driving. Almost 3-in-10 surf the net. And surprisingly, 1-in-10 video chat. 7-in-10 people engage in smartphone activities while driving. Texting and emailing are still the most prevalent. But other smartphone activity use behind the wheel is now common. Among social platforms, Facebook tops the list, with more than a quarter of those polled using the app while driving. About 1-in-7 said they’re on Twitter behind the wheel. AT&T will expand the It Can Wait® campaign from a focus on texting while driving to include other smartphone driving distractions that have emerged as our relationships with our devices have changed. “When we launched It Can Wait five years ago, we pleaded with people to realize that no text is worth a life,” said Lori Lee, AT&T’s global marketing officer. “The same applies to other smartphone activities that people are doing while driving. For the sake of you and those around you, please keep your eyes on the road, not on your phone…”Smartphone activities people say they do while driving include:
  • Text (61%)
  • Email (33%)
  • Surf the net (28%)
  • Facebook (27%)
  • Snap a selfie/photo (17%)
  • Twitter (14%)
  • Instagram (14%)
  • Shoot a video (12%)
  • Snapchat (11%)
  • Video chat (10%)”