Immortality Institute Chat: Dr. Geordie Rose of D-Wave Systems

Friday, January 25th, 2008

http://www.imminst.org/forum/index.php?showtopic=20030&hl=

Immortality Institute Chat: Dr. Geordie Rose of D-Wave Systems

Date and Time: Sunday, January 27, 2008 from 4:00pm until 6:00pm MST

Location: Skype Chat - email chat organizer to be added to chat list

Description:

The Immortality Institute will welcome Dr. Geordie Rose of D-Wave Systems this Sunday January 27th. Time has yet to be decided. Dr. Rose is famous for founding D-Wave systems and producing the world's first commercial quantum computer, although many in the physics community are still skeptical. In a press release last year, D-Wave systems said it would have a 1,024 bit quantum computer functioning by the end this year. In this Sunday's exclusive Immortality Institute chat, find out if D-Wave is still on pace to deliver. Also, find out how quantum computing might assist with aging research.

Since guests have had trouble logging into the IRC chat room recently, I would prefer to use Skype text chat for this Sunday night's chat. In order to accomplish this I will need to know everyone's Skype name (who plans on attending) in order to add you to the conference text chat when it begins. You can list you skype name in this thread, or send me a PM. I will add you to my contacts list.

...[T]he time for the Sunday evening chat has been set at 5:00pm CST (23:00 GMT). This will be a Skype chat (for reasons listed above). I have a lot of regular chat attendees in my Skype contact list, however if you would like to be added to the chat, you will need to let me know your Skype name.

2008 WebGuild Web 2.0 Conference & Expo

Thursday, January 24th, 2008

http://www.webguild.org/meetings/web20/2008/

2008 WebGuild Web 2.0 Conference & Expo

Date and Time: Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Location: Marriott Santa Clara, 2700 Mission College Blvd, Santa Clara, CA 95054 | Google Maps

Description:

The Second Annual WebGuild Web 2.0 Conference & Expo is here. Web 2.0 has changed the rules for doing business on the web and created whole new markets. Learn how you can leverage Web 2.0 technologies to gain competitive advantages, find customers, and discover new business opportunities.

This conference will cover popular Web 2.0 technologies as well as those shaping the future direction of the Web. Learn from industry experts and thought leaders, connect with the companies changing the rules of the game, and those redefining the future.

This conference will feature keynotes, panels, expo, awards, networking sessions, reception, music, and food & drinks. See you there!

Cyborgs of the Past, Present and Future

Thursday, January 24th, 2008

http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=21526357840

http://www.freethoughtcanada.ca/

http://toronto.transhumanism.com/

Cyborgs of the Past, Present and Future

Date and Time: Thursday, January 31, 2008 from 6:30pm until 9:30pm EST

Location: Communication, Culture and Technology Building (CCT) Rm. 1080, University of Toronto at Mississauga, 3359 Mississauga Rd N., Mississauga, ON, Canada | Google Maps

Description: Cyborgs of the Past, Present and Future

An overview of cybernetic technologies, the merging of humans with machines and the coming cyborg revolution.

A talk by George Dvorsky. FREE admission

To explore the topic of transhumanism, and to celebrate Charles Darwin's upcoming 199th birthday, the Halton-Peel Humanist Community is joining the Mississauga Freethought Association to present an entertaining and informative talk by George Dvorsky, Canada's leading agenda-driven futurist, activist and award-winning blogger.

FULL PRESS RELEASE FOLLOWS:

The Next Stage in Human Evolution

Across the world, in countries ranging from England to Benin, from France to Australia, from Chile to Hungary; and from India to Canada, people will be gathering on or about February 12 to celebrate Darwin Day.

The purpose of this annual event is to promote public education about science and to encourage the celebration of science and humanity. Science is our most reliable knowledge system. It has been, and continues to be, acquired solely through the application of human curiosity and ingenuity.

For more than 20 years, Darwin collected vast amounts of scientific data which he examined in great depth in search of a mechanism that permitted life to change over time. Eventually, he explained that the primary underlying mechanism was natural selection.

Today, we look at how plants, animals and humans have evolved and continue to evolve, not only through natural processes, but by human intervention.

Nanotechnology, for example, seeks to design machines billionths of a meter in size to be used for human health and advancement. Is a person with an artificial heart, pacemaker, insulin pump or hearing aid a 'new kind of human'? Will technological advances force us to transcend our very humanity? Will there be bionic brains in the
future?

To explore these questions, the Halton-Peel Humanist Community is joining with the Mississauga Freethought Association to present an entertaining and informative talk, by George Dvorsky: "Cyborgs of the Past, Present and Future: an overview of cybernetic technologies, the merging of humans with machines and the coming cyborg revolution"

A cyborg is an organism that is a self- regulating integration of artificial and natural systems. Who better to deal with this topic than George Dvorsky, whose primary concern is the ethical and sociological impacts of emerging technologies, specifically, human enhancement technologies; Dvorsky seeks to promote open discussion for the purposes of education and foresight. He writes and speaks on a wide range of topics, including technoscience, ethics, existential risks, the search for extraterrestrial intelligence , and futures studies, from a democratic transhumanist and technoprogressive perspective.

Canada's leading agenda-driven futurist, activist and award winning blogger, George has written and spoken extensively about the impacts of cutting-edge science and technology. He is the Director of Operations for Commune Media, an advertising and marketing firm that specializes in marketing science.

George has more than 10 years' experience in media, arts and communications. With relationships forged across several continents, he has managed international accounts for leading brands. In addition to his work with Commune, George is the Editor-in-Chief for the online portal, Betterhumans, and currently serves on the Board of Directors for the Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies. He is the co-founder and president
of the Toronto Transhumanist Association and has served on the Board of Directors for the World Transhumanist Association. George has been interviewed by such publications as The Guardian, the BBC, Radio Free
Europe, and Beliefnet. He made an appearance on the CBC's The Hour and has been profiled in NOW and This Magazine.

The event which is free and open to the public takes place in the 500 seat Room 1080 the CCT building at the University of Toronto at Mississauga, 3359 Mississauga Rd, on Thursday, January 31 at 6:30 pm.

We look forward to an exciting and informative evening.

Visit www.freethoughtcanada.ca for more info

h+ Phoenix Meeting – Introductions

Tuesday, January 22nd, 2008

http://hplusclub.com/phoenix/meeting20080126/

http://transhumanism.meetup.com/73/calendar/6904155/

Introductions

Date and Time: Saturday, January 26, 2008 from 3:00pm until 5:00pm MST

Location: Mesa Bookmans, 1056 S. Country Club Dr., Mesa, AZ 85210 | Google Maps

Description: The first h+ Phoenix meeting, and the latest Phoenix Transhumanists meeting, is coming soon! On Saturday, January 26, 2008 from 3 - 5 PM we will take care of introductions and start discussing technological progress and human potential. Cryonics experts and enthusiasts, life extensionists, transhumanists, LysoSENS researchers, and more are planning to be in attendance. Please join us to begin exploring your very near future!

h+ Tucson Meeting – Jim Schwiegerling, Ph.D.

Tuesday, January 22nd, 2008

http://hplusclub.com/tucson/presentation20080125

Jim Schwiegerling, Ph.D., Associate Professor Ophthalmology and Vision Science, and Optical Sciences
Optics

Date and Time: Friday, January 25, 2008 from 4:00pm until 6:00pm MST

Location: Presidio Room, 4th Floor, Student Union Memorial Center, 1303 E. University Blvd., Tucson, AZ, USA 85721-0017 | Google Maps

Description: Dr. Schwiegerling will talk about some of the latest advances in improving visual acuity and restoring faulty retinas.

University of Arizona 2008 First Annual Spring Club and Organization Fair

Tuesday, January 22nd, 2008

http://hplusclub.com/tucson/event20080124

H+ Tucson as the University of Arizona 2008 First Annual Spring Club and Organization Fair

Date and Time: Thursday, January 24, 2008 from 9:30pm until 2:00pm MST

Location: University of Arizona Mall, in front of the Student Union Memorial Center, 1303 E. University Blvd., Tucson, AZ, USA 85721-0017 | Google Maps

Description: H+ Tucson will hand out flyers and talk about our club at the latest University of Arizona club fair. Dirty looks, curious looks, frowns, smiles: we see them all at these events, while getting to talk to tons of interesting people who stop by our table.

Dr. Aubrey de Grey – “Prospects for extending healthy life – a lot”

Tuesday, January 22nd, 2008

http://www.srcf.ucam.org/cuths/events/

Cambridge University Transhumanist Society Talk hosted jointly with Trinity College Science Society. Dr. Aubrey de Grey Presents "Prospects for extending healthy life - a lot"

Date and Time: Thursday, January 24, 2008 at 8:00pm GMT

Location: Winstanley Lecture Theatre, Trinity College, Cambridge, England

Description: Abstract:

It may seem premature to be discussing approaches to the effective elimination of human aging as a cause of death at a time when essentially no progress has yet been made in even postponing it. However, two aspects of human aging combine to undermine this assessment. The first is that aging is happening to us throughout our lives but only results in appreciable functional decline after four or more decades of life: this shows that we can postpone the functional decline caused by aging arbitrarily well without knowing how to prevent aging completely, but instead by increasingly thorough molecular and cellular repair. The second is that the typical rate of refinement of dramatic technological breakthroughs is rather reliable (so long as public enthusiasm for them is abundant) and is fast enough to change such technologies (be they in medicine, transport, or computing) almost beyond recognition within a natural human lifespan. In this talk I will explain, first, why (presuming adequate funding for the initial preclinical work) therapies that can add 30 healthy years to the remaining lifespan of healthy 55-year-olds may arrive within the next few decades, and, second, why those who benefit from those therapies will very probably continue to benefit from progressively improved therapies indefinitely and thus avoid debilitation or death from age-related causes at any age.

Other Listings

2008 Immortality Institute Director Elections

Tuesday, January 8th, 2008
  • 2008 Immortality Institute Director Elections
  • January 09, 11:00AM MST - February 07, 2008, 10:00PM MST
  • Description:

    ImmInst Director nominations have been completed, and the following individuals have accepted:

    Richard Leis
    Nate Allen (Live Forever)
    Justin Rebo (Elrond)
    Sebastian Sethe (caliban)
    Kenneth X. Sills (Lazarus Long)
    Shannon Vyff

    Candidates are now encouraged to create their own candidate topics (click here) to provide feedback for voters. Thus, voters are encouraged to delay their vote until they've had a chance to learn about candidates.

    View Candidate topics here:
    http://www.imminst.org/forum/2008-Director-Elections-f313.html

    Otherwise, all ImmInst Full Members can vote for one or more candidates (reply below) as provided by the Constitution:

    QUOTE
    http://imminst.org/constitution.php#art5_sec5

    # Votes may be cast from January 9th (1pm Eastern US) to February 8th (12am Eastern US). All ImmInst Full Members in good standing can vote. A voter can cast a vote for as few as one candidate or as many as all candidates on the ballot. However, a voter cannot cast more than one vote per each candidate.

    # Accepting candidates with the highest number of votes are elected as Directors until all vacant seats are filled. If the last remaining seat(s) are claimed by candidates with equal votes in their favor, a new referendum shall be called where only these candidates stand to fill only the remaining seat(s). This second special referendum shall be resolved within four (4) days and be repeated as necessary until all positions are filled. Accepting candidates with the highest number of votes are elected as Directors. All Directors remain in office until all elections for the coming term have been resolved at which point the Directors whose term has ended and who were not re-elected shall be replaced by the newly elected Directors.

Immortality Institute Chat: John Schloendorn and Kent Kemmish

Tuesday, January 8th, 2008
  • Immortality Institute Chat: John Schloendorn and Kent Kemmish
  • January 13, 2008 at 5:00 PM Arizona Time (4:00 Pacific, 5:00 Mountain, 6:00 Central, 7:00 Eastern
  • Description:

    Chat guest: Imminst director and LysoSENS researcher John Schloendorn. Find out how LysoSENS research is progressing. Background information here and here. More details to come.

    Chat Room: http://www.imminst.org/chat

    Kent23 (Imminst member), another researcher working on the LysoSENS project will be joining the chat on Sunday evening.

The Edges of Life Lecture Series – Jonathan Lunine

Monday, January 7th, 2008
  • The Edges of Life Lecture Series - Jonathan Lunine, Professor, Planetary Sciences and Physics
  • "Life's Extreme Edge: The Limits of Organic Life on Earth and Other Planets"
  • Centennial Hall, 1020 E University Blvd, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, USA | Google Maps | Campus Map
  • Wednesday, January 30, 2008 at 7:00pm (free to public)
  • Description:

    As science and technology advance, fundamental issues central to the concept of life become harder to answer. Today, perspectives are changing on a wide range of issues including the origins of life, how life differentiates itself from its surroundings, what role self-awareness plays in maintaining life, and the discoveries regarding life that will emerge in the near future. UA's College of Science is proud to present six lectures that will probe these edges of life. Bringing together perspectives that include biology, communications, medicine, technology, and philosophy, these six speakers will help us engage and understand the limits of life, and what might lie beyond.