ThinkCycle: Solving World Problems With A Cluster of Brains 161
eaglemoon writes: "ThinkCycle is an MIT Media Lab project to apply SETI@Home principles to design problems for underserved communities. Only, intead of donating spare cpu cycles, you donate spare 'think cycles.' Their aim is to build a community of designers, inventors and innovators that want to collaborate on developing novel solutions to some what intractable problems like clean water access , cholera treatment and appropriate shelters. Their aim is to encourage an "open source" ethos for tough design and technology challenges."
enough problems (Score:3, Funny)
This sounds familiar (Score:1, Interesting)
Communism?
No.
Communitarianism? Maybe.
Oh yeah...That was an episode of Star Trek Hoe could I forget?
Re:This sounds familiar (Score:1)
Communism? Fascism? Socialism? Theocracy? Totalitarianism?
What is that called where people are free to voluntarily do things without some tangible benefit for themselves?
Capitalism
Seriously, to get back on topic, the "think cycle" idea sounds really neat, and I hope it contributes to some creative solutions to some very real problems.
Re:This sounds familiar (Score:2)
Frankly I call it "nice" maybe even "fun". And since when is not getting paid not getting benefit? "Something to do" is often a benefit in and of itself. Never mind actually solving these problems will make life better for others... which doe shave an overall effect on the community at large.
I mean really... when a friend asks you to help them move, do you respond with an hourly rate, or do you just show up ready to haul boxes? I know what I do.
-Steve
Re:This sounds familiar (Score:2)
Re:This sounds familiar (Score:2)
Academia.
You've heard of universities and tenured professors, right? This is exactly what they do, day in and day out.
so let me get this straight (Score:4, Funny)
cool
Re:so let me get this straight (Score:1)
That would make a GREAT movie!
mirror site (Score:3, Interesting)
thank you google cache (Score:1)
Also, a news article [mit.edu]
Great! (Score:1)
This is such a great idea, but why not also donate the use of spare CPU cycles also! Why not use this "open source ethos" for CPU power as well?
Re:Great! (Score:2, Funny)
* puts on his tin hat and hides under the desk *
Re:Great! (Score:1)
What a great idea (Score:1)
No seriously enough I think this is a wonderful idea, when I was in elementary school and junior high school our gifted class was a part of a program entitled "Future Problem Solvers of America" We would work on problems very much like the examples listed in this article. And I must say that for a bunch of 3rd-9th graders we did damn good and came up with a bunch of absolutely brilliant ideas. Now apply this over a group of people 10,000 times the size and of a wider age group and I'm sure that some of the ideas will be absolutely revolutionary and of a most cutting edge nature, and yes I'm sure there will be some crazies, but it's never the bad ideas that are remembered or discussed, it's always the brilliant ones, I think the guys over at MIT are on a very productive track with this idea, and I hope enough people get involved to really make a go of it.
Re:What a great idea (Score:2)
Re:What a great idea (Score:1)
No, but only because having said alittle I'd have to say belittle, and what would be the sense in that?
Because all you need to solve the world's... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Because all you need to solve the world's... (Score:2)
brainforge.net (Score:1)
Microsoft strongly opposes this! (Score:3, Offtopic)
Ok..hmm. (Score:4, Insightful)
I somehow do not see this working. Of course I'd be happy to be proved wrong, but how do they plan
on breaking these big, complex, problems up into manageble pieces?
How can they make all these peoples ideas work together without it all turning into a watered-
down compromise-type idea without any edge?
I, for one will be interested in seeing the
results of this experiment..
Re:Ok..hmm. (Score:2)
Re:Ok..hmm. (Score:1)
For starters (Score:1)
Re:Ok..hmm. (Score:2)
My reasons are that even though Im a college dropout, Im still a decent programmer and can help on a variety of Open Source software projects without problems. Despite what the geek in the black t-shirt in the dark corner in the back of your office wants you to think, programming is NOT brain surgery or rocket-science. (Well, I guess some of it is, if you're working in a Hospital or for NASA, but for the vast majority of us, it's not.)
However, the sort of problems they seem to want to solve require HARD science with real scientists, medics and mathemeticians. These guys are going to be a lot farther and fewer between than us hacks. The numbers just don't seem to be there for these type of project...
But I could be, and hope I am, wrong.
-Russ
Re:Ok..hmm. (Score:3, Insightful)
The way it would work is that you figure out what all resources a project needs, then you break it down into appropriate parts. If you read the article you'll see what I mean. One example is a simple water pump - and they broke up the workload (some of it donated on other people's off time) by dividing it into materials, engineering, and distribution. Each member handled their own part until it was done.
For this proposed project, you'll probably sign up by listing your areas of expertise (like a resume), and then when a project is proposed, you search through the skill sets until you find what you need, and then you assign that particular person to "Think" on that part of the problem and then report in when they're done. Its not really that different than working in a team. Now your team may truly be distributed among the world.
At least, that's how I think it could be done.
Clean Water (Score:1)
http://www.startribune.com/stories/535/2832884.ht
There are a lot of people working on such problems. ThinkCycle or something like that might help them coordinate more.
Of course, the classic popular reading for this field is the "The Ugly American".
Robert Cringley is sorta doing the same thing... (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Robert Cringley is sorta doing the same thing.. (Score:1)
Why should he mention that?
The whole point of the post was to illustrate that others are already attempting the pooling of human thought, not the showcase of SIDS. SIDS was only the example.
I don't have any to spare (Score:4, Funny)
Re:I don't have any to spare (Score:1)
Re:I don't have any to spare (Score:2)
Sounds like... (Score:3, Insightful)
The primary problem with anything like this is going to be the fact that just like in Usenet, people - valuable, vital people - will move on due to lost interest, changes in their lives, and the fact that anything like this started over the net tends to die off pretty quickly.
There are exceptions notably some software projects (What I can't imagine
Perhaps a very good idea! (Score:3, Informative)
Looking at it this way, this system is simply a clearinghouse for problems people find interesting. If people work to break these big problems into manageable and concrete pieces, then these little pieces may be perfect for undergraduate or even graduate students to work on. I know that such a clearinghouse would be very valuable in mathematics. I've always imagined that such a thing would exist before too long for the mathematical community, and this would be a good thing.
The main reason that I think this would be a good thing is that for a young researcher starting out, one has to spend a lot of time understanding the big picture of a certian field, and generating good open problem on one's own. Such a system could bring the problems to the researchers more quickly. This could speed the process up by quite a bit. Such a thing sort of exists already, in the form of preprint servers [lanl.gov], and I'm sure there's more to come! What doesn't really exist now is such a "big picture" fremework in a public domain, IMHO.
Re:Perhaps a very good idea! (Score:1)
Re:Perhaps a very good idea! (Score:2)
These lists, although quite influential, are not quite like a "distributed computing" idea. These are just big open questions sitting out there. They're really hard to solve. Now, one could imagine that someone posts on usch a server saying, i think we can parse this certain problem into the following 15 pieces, and then people can solve this. This is exactly what one does with their advisor when working on a PhD thesis, for example. Such a system would bring the problems closer to the forefront, so to speak.
Links to related initiatives (Score:1, Interesting)
cool, now you need a bunch of geeks (Score:1)
Now if they just make the next project "novel ways to remove people who don't help us from the gene pool"
Re:cool, now you need a bunch of geeks (Score:2)
Don't worry, im all over that one. You see i figured that considering the current state of the USPTO that i would apply for "a method of using deoxyribonucleic acids to create unique and distinct characteristics among individuals"
after my patent on DNA is approved i shall charge a 1 dollar licensing fee among all humans.
Of course should you choose to not pay my fee, or i refuse to license to you i shall be forced to remove all of your unlicensed DNA... so you see, i shall have exactly the answer to the problem you would like answered
??? what's the difference (Score:2)
This proposal is just how Baconian scientific research has always existed. So what if this group, among many others, starts working on clean water and other standard-of-living improvements. There's nothing innovative about the proposal at all.
The Matrix (Score:1)
--
"Instead of getting married again, I'm going to find a woman I don't like and just give her a
house." -Steven Seagal
Re:The Matrix (Score:2)
That scenario never occured to me before reading your post, but it is a pretty cool one... they could have tied it in well with the whole "you're only using 3% of your brain... ever wonder why?"
Uh oh, I hope whoever's farming that other 97% doesn't figure out that I'm on to them... they might try to elimi... urrrgh!!!
Re:The Matrix (Score:2)
Yeah, go ahead and mod me down for "Offtopic", punk.
open source ethos (Score:4, Funny)
Redesign the wheel and tell the underserved community members to RTFM if they have a problem using the redesigned wheel?
Excellent idea. (Score:5, Insightful)
I think opening the design process up to the widest possible collaboration and really encouraging people to follow through could make a difference: kinda like the Simputer [simputer.org] project may: a diversity of minds, of approaches, may be the best way to help the poor and the starving.
We can't wait for government to feed the people, you know? Too big, too slow. It's up to us. And it always has been - this is just one more way to help.
Re:Excellent idea. (Score:2)
Re:Excellent idea. (Score:2)
Re:Excellent idea. (Score:2)
Actually MOST are cash-limited. Dare I say all...?
Re:Excellent idea. (Score:2)
What we need to figure out is how to get them to turn their local natural resources into sustainable profit-generating assets, so they can become a viable market for the big corps.
Minds are similar, but different than computers (Score:2, Insightful)
Computers are also good at multitasking, whereas humans [aside from life-functions] have for the most part, a single tasking thought processes. It also takes people a non-trivial amount of time to context switch [see various
Human filter. Again, unlike the SETI idea, a human needs to filter all the resultant data, as by definition, new ways of solving problems don't fit into a previously known idea. say you do get several thousand people working on this project, the resultant data will be huge, *and* every human filter will filter the information in their own way, there is no "control".
That being said, new ideas come from all around us. Who knows what this experiment can yield.
.
I like this idea (Score:2, Interesting)
As an example of this, I was in Haiti on vacation in December (I hate relaxing vacations...I can relax at work) and it is quite amazing how much human time and energy is spent just keeping clean, getting drinkable water, cooking, in a place where the population doesn't have access to plumbing or electricity. I figured it would be about 3 to 4 extra hours of work each day...time that cannot be spent at another job, learning to read or just having time enough to consider your own existance.
Selling fresh produce for extra cash is difficult becuase of poverty of your potential customers and lack of refrigeration limits the time that it can be sold, cooking it requires getting charcoal from a vendor (this is why Haiti is deforested), raw sewage on the streets makes whatever food that is cooked still risky (in this suburb of Cap Hatien the tallest structure in town was a two story pile of dried sewage in the middle of the street.)
Clearly something needs to be done, and all the other plans have always had contracts, agreements and treaties tied in that equalled that only a few people would profit from a "project" but the situation of the general population would remain unchanged. I hope engineers, earth scientist and botanists get involved in this.
The trick is ... (Score:3, Insightful)
Given that the devil in most large systems is in the number of inter-dependencies, not the complexity of any one given component, not having everyone involved relatively close in meatspace is going to make re-constituting a total solution based on the individual component solutions quite difficult indeed.
<mandatory-lcs-grad-rip-on-the-media-lab>
But atleast this project is has more societal value than some of the other a virtual dog that you can pet.
</mandatory-lcs-grad-rip-on-the-media-lab >
Site's down already (Score:1)
Where is the sweat! (Score:5, Insightful)
Remember innovation is 99% persperation, and 1% insperation. Looks like they are focusing on the 1%, and assuming that the rest will take care of itself.
I don't have all the answers, but I do know that these third world areas are in desperate need of people to do some work. Someone to come in and create a stable goverment (that will not starve opponents). Teachers to show them how to think. There is a total glut in the food market. (The US could easially supply all the world's nutrirtion needs if people would be willing to live food that doesn't taste good)
AIDS is a large problem in Africa. We don't have a cure, but we know how to prevent the spread. However most goverments in Africa are doing little to prevent the spread. (In fact some are actively doing things to cause more cases - at least in groups they don't like) We could use a cure, but until there is a cure, we don't need more non-biologists thinking about AIDS (where they are unlikely to make progress), but we could use those same people in Africa teaching people how to prevent aids. Of course if you actually go to Africa you will soon discover that other problems need to be solved before the AIDS problem can be solved.
We don't need more thinkers, we need more doers. That is much harder. I can go home tonight and think about a methane digester that can be used in a mud hit. I can't go to a village and build them after work tonight.
Re:Where is the sweat! (Score:1)
That assumes you don't have a way to implement something outside of the physical world. Computer modeling, for some things, can work very well in the idea forming stages of a project. That Edison quote is refuted very well by Tesla who was (reportedly) able to completely visualize an invention before ever putting two components together. Now that we have computers to do that kind of thing for us we can come up with very reasonable models
I'll have to concede on other parts of the post though. A good idea does not translate into a good implementation (substandard parts, etc.) or even a means for creating an implentation. But, if the idea is good enough to be used, I would think that there would be a pretty good chance of someone using it.
Re:Where is the sweat! (Score:2)
Ordinarly I would agree that Tesla disproved Eddison on the insperation/persperation arguement. However this isn't just a matter of getting something to work. this is getting something that will work, and then making it work for 3-5 billion people who do not currently have the standard of living we do.
Even with your good thinking, you design something that comes out perfect the first time, all the thinking effort will be overwhelmed by the effort required to impliemnt it on 3 billion people.
Re:Where is the sweat! (Score:2, Insightful)
sure, this wont solve problems, but if it provides an edge to the volunteers in the Peace Corps then I realy dont see how it can be that bad of a thing...
That's called Brute Force... (Score:1)
Re:Where is the sweat! (Score:1)
"If Mr. Edison had thought smarter he wouldn't sweat as much."
~ Nicola Tesla ~
Sorry, couldn't resist...
Re:Where is the sweat! (Score:2)
(And since it's ontopic here, a recent Ted Rall cartoon [uclick.com], NYTimes, registration etc)
Re:Where is the sweat! (Score:2)
BINGO! here you have people with a bad goverment holding them back (amoung many other problems). They cannnot fix it internally without being killed, even if they could (democracy might be the best solution, but it isn't a mircle cure, it takes years for results, in which time it is easy to fall into corruption). I cannot do it because I'm an outside force.
Re:Where is the sweat! (Score:2)
Even if we assume that applied accurately, you missed that they are trying to get 100 inspirations from different people. That reduces the perspiration to 36.6%.
(.99^100=.366 To anyone who has no idea how I got 36.6%, it's the NewMath. Don't worry about it
-
New Scientist (Score:2)
Don't assume Africa is full of people unable to help themselves given the opportunity. What is missing in many regions is education, and information. The New Scientist has some interesting material in the last 4 issues concerning these matters - with innovative use of basic technologies such as Radio / street plays / print conveying information that can be used locally to improve quality of life greatly.
You don't need a cure to fight AIDS in most regions - you need education. FOr the past 20 years the majority of the developing world has been unaware that AIDS is sexually transmitted. Make this known, and you reduce infection rates. Simple. The questions changes from how do we cure AIDS, to how to we communicate the FACTS about AIDS.
Those are questions currently being dealt with by charity health workers - I reckon a random selection of guys in the pub could come up with better ideas (at least, NEW ideas which would be worth testing).
This IS a great idea. I'd play!
Albert Einstein (Score:2)
I guess it's funny... (Score:1)
MENSA? (Score:2)
Yikes (Score:1)
Although seriously, it's not all that amazing an idea, I think it will amount to actually listening to the ideas of all the people who think about these types of issues. Most people that have an interest in these issues have ideas about how they would fix them, this may just be giving them direction in getting those ideas to people who might use them. (I'm not knocking the concept, it's great, just seems like it should have beeen more obvious)
In other news, a number of American corporations are filing a suit claiming that this new theory of 'amature thining' will almost surely infringe on their intellectual property.
I can see it now. (Score:1)
3 working toward a solution
12 working toward a solution to a completely unrelated problem
4 pissed off that Americans don't share their Eurocentric point of view
9 having goat sex
12 calling each other nazis
and the rest just lurking.
Better watch the KaZaA EULA (Score:2)
Why not just stick with the cpu cycle? (Score:1)
Only thing that sucks is that they don't have a linux distribution available.. yet
Imagine it!!!! (Score:2)
All of society's most complex and vexing problems, convenienty broken down into small, manageable chunks so that millions of individuals would each be able to derive a little personal gain from voluntarily solving some small aspect of the big picture and all of them could come together to build complex and beneficial systems for all mankind!
Why, that would be GREAT!!
I have a name for it, too: we'll call it: Capitalism!
Re:Imagine it!!!! (Score:1)
Could you please tell me.. (Score:2, Funny)
ThinkCycle has existed for centuries (Score:2, Insightful)
Let's say someone has a brilliant idea for waste water treatment. How is ThinkCycle going to test that that idea works? It can't just run a computation or ask a bunch of random people to verify the idea. You need to build a pilot and try it out. Well, the mechanisms for evaluating what ideas work and what ideas don't already exist, and they are already distributed: publications, peer review, libraries, conferences, symposia, citation statistics, recommendations, talks, etc. The mechanisms by which you do cooperative problem solving already exist, and they have existed for hundreds of years. They are the mechanism by which we collaborate in science, technology, engineering, and the economy. And there has been very active research in supporting them with computers, through groupware, electronic communications, and many other means.
As for the site itself, it looks to me like a fairly regular groupware site. It's nice that someone set up a groupware site to discuss these topics. I find it somehwat ironic, though, that a site which writes "Open Source Design" on its banner has so many DOC and PPT files.
Does that make sense? (Score:2)
seti@home works because they know exactly what needs to be done and exactly how to do it. They just need more CPU cycles to actually carry out the well-defined well-understood steps.
That's not true for the kind of problems being discussed here. How do you split the problem of, say, clean water access, into a bunch of little chunks that just require someone to think about in their spare time? It seems to me that to do that, you have to already know how to solve the problem!
Corporations have proven that it doesn't work well (Score:1)
Doubters.... (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Doubters.... (Score:1)
I think that was actually invented over 4 thousand years ago. Yup. They made clay pots and urns and left them unglazed. A small part of the contents would seep throu the porous pot, and evaporate, thus cooling the pot / urn.
When they wanted to store the contents for longer, then they used glazed pots, - the glaze acts as a surface sealant, just as u see on modern pottery work.
The technology of making self-cooling pots was well understood thousands of years ago. Sorry, nothing new under the sun, at least in clay pot technology.
-tomato
IT WILL NEVER WORK (Score:2, Insightful)
You need one visionary with a veritable dictatorship over an idea, and bunch of hard workers that do as they're told. This is how Linux is successful.
If you start assembling all the smartest people to try to agree on one thing, they will come up with so many great ideas and they will all think they are right, and it will just stymie the entire effort.
Instead of sitting around thinking of ideas, go get off your ass and DO SOMETHING. An attempted but failed idea is much more important than a whole bunch of great ideas that never get implemented.
Distributed Translation (Score:1)
Anyway, wasn't there a project to harness the world's brain power in terms of foreign language? What better way than to ask a French native about French sentences?
It was something along the lines of an agent sitting on the desktop, prepared with the languages the user is proficient in... When there's an incoming question (of the appropriate language, of course), a dialog box notifies the user that someone is in need of translation. Like all distributed networks, for error checking and such, the question goes out to more than one person, to prevent faulty translations or provide a more rich meaning.
Hey, how many slashdotters took Latin in school... =)
You sure about that? (Score:2)
Judging from the fact that their site crumpled within the first five minutes of slashdotting, I'm betting they'd rather have CPU cycles for at least another few hours.
Beware of going too far! (Score:2)
Too much cleanliness may be a problem. As some think [salon.com]
There are many philosiphers who long for a simpliler life. Of course many of the latter are not willing to actually give up the benifits of our modern life to get the benifits.
Anyone who works on these tasks should keep in mind that not everything that can be done for worse off people is a good idea. I can't answer the philisophical questions (at least not in a way that will convince anyone). I don't have the medical answers. However I do know to keep them in mind.
How about... (Score:1)
Good idea, but ... (Score:2)
We need more monkeys (Score:1)
Re:We need more monkeys (Score:1)
Re:We need more monkeys (Score:1)
we ARE the MONKIES.......
BTW I am sure the universe we be a better place
with an infinite number of humans, aren't you???
No, YOU'RE a monkey. (Score:1)
Yeah, see how well that works on Slashdot? (Score:1)
Anyway, while the squad makes onsite decisions how to destroy the ship, the entire population, linked via web, also contributes via point casts. Ideas are submitted via monitary involvement (if I remeber right), thus ensuring people aren't just spamming with ideas. Put up or shut up, in otherwords. Eventially some ideas gain popularity as the populations votes and a commander makes the decision on how to proceed. The ideas that made the most difference in the battle were given large cash awards. Sounded kinda like the topic at any rate. Even if "Aliens want to destroy the Earth" isn't your fare, Earthweb deals with some interesting social dynamics.
Another interesting concept was being able to charge people for sending you email. That sure as hell would cut down on spamming if you could charge any amount you desired for people to send you a message. Even
In other news.. (Score:1)
Think BIG!
Let's start smaller. (Score:2)
Re:Let's start smaller. (Score:2)
breasts@home, distributed.breasts...someone get me a beowulf cluster of those!
Actually, it does sound familiar... (Score:3, Interesting)
They forget something... (Score:1)
Then you'd have CPU_Power(N)~Sigma(i, 1, N, CPU_Power(i)) which is ~ N*CPU_Power(1) if all CPUs have the same power.
Unfortunately, it is well known that IQ != CPU_Power, in fact, estimations are:
IQ(N) ~ Min(i, 1, N, IQ(i))/N
which is, the intellectual quotient of a group of n individuals is about the inltelectual quotient of the dumbest member divided by the number of participants.
Reminds me of a despair.com poster "Idiocy" ("never underestimate the power of stupid people in large groups")
Expect Monty Python's solutions to world problems
Great Idea in Principle... (Score:1)
Decision Markets (Score:2)
Reminds me of decision markets. Caught this link from a presentation by Vernor Vinge:
decisionmarkets.pdf [gmu.edu]
Use your Illusion (Score:2)
The proposition in the article is that we waste our time trying to solve things we already pay the governments to solve, without the prizes of freedom (you'll still live under a DMCA/DRM world and won't be able to chop George Bush with an axe no matter how many children you save or how many epidemics your work avoids).
I'm still for the good old-fashioned plain Anarchy.
fnord
Looks just like an ftp directory (Score:2)
Scarcity of good ideas and good intentions is not the problem. What is rare is implementation. It's nice that people want to do good, but many do-gooders have a very limited capacity for managing a project to completion.
Another thing I don't see here is an incentive to cooperate. Most contributors will assume that their own aproach to cholera or low-income housing is The Right Way. If they cooperate with other people, they risk having to work on some other approach, and losing their proper recognition as The Prophet of The Right Way.
Re:Can you imagine.... (Score:1)
Re:The problem with "feel good" charity (Score:1)
You mean like massive starvation and civil war?