Tuesday 16 April 2019

Interesting Reads – 2019-04-15



Interesting Reads – 2019-04-15


Contents

Articles

  • No sleep, no sex, no life: tech workers in China’s Silicon Valley face burnout before they reach 30
  • Why your smartphone is causing you ‘text neck’ syndrome
  • What Can You Do With a Liberal Arts Degree? Answers to All Your Questions
  • The European Union has published new guidelines on developing ethical AI
  • 32 Statistical Concepts Explained in Simple English (a series in 11parts)
  • Facial Recognition: 16 Industries The Tech Could Transform
  • Ghost World
  • Meet Katie Bouman, One Woman Who Helped Make the World's First Image of a Black Hole
  • Why there’s so little left of the early internet
  • Algorithms have already taken over human decision making
  • Web 3.0: the decentralised web promises to make the internet free again
  • The Rivers in Our Skies
  • 11 Challenges Facing Tech Execs In 2019 And Their Plans To Overcome Them
  • CBSE releases a list of compendium courses for students to pursue after 12th
  • Bonus:  The complexity of memory (videos)

Events / Announcements

  • SPINCON-2019: Conf. on “Agility, Automation & Cloudification” on 20th Apr 2019 at Chennai
  • National Small Industries Corp (NSIC) offers job assisted training pgms
  • MIDS-2019: International Workshop on Machine Intelligence and Data Science at Kochi 31st May 2019 & 1st Jun 2019
  • Call For Papers: IEEE TENCON 2019 at Kochi during 17-19 Oct 2019
  • IEEE INDICON-2019 at Marwadi University, Rajkot, Gujarat during 13-15 Dec 2019



Feedback

We will be pleased to have your feedback on the “Interesting Reads” posts being sent once in five days. 

Pl. share the links of any interesting things you come across so that we can include them in these email posts. 

Also, pl. share the email ids of your colleagues, friends, peers and contacts, if you want them to be included in the google group to get regular posts.  

Pl. send all your communications to hrmohan.ieee@gmail.com 

With regards
HR Mohan

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Articles

No sleep, no sex, no life: tech workers in China’s Silicon Valley face burnout before they reach 30

He is so focused on keeping his start-up alive that he can't sleep at night. She was asked in an interview if she would be willing to break up with her boyfriend for the job. A young couple want their own family but have no energy for sex after work.

These are some of the struggles faced by the hundreds of thousands of young workers in China’s tech industry like Yu Haoran, a 26-year-old computer science major, who in 2014 founded Jisuanke, a start-up in Beijing’s hi-tech Zhongguancun district to teach kids coding.

Yu has worked nights and weekends to grow his business from a 10-coder team to one with a 200 million yuan (US$29.8 million) valuation thanks to venture capital backing. But the personal price he pays is chronic insomnia, sometimes getting just two hours of sleep every night.


Why your smartphone is causing you ‘text neck’ syndrome

Most of us hunch over our smartphone for at least two hours a day. This can effectively increase the weight of your head by up to 27kg, damage your posture, and if you text while walking, expose you to all kinds of accidents.

Typically people crane their neck forward 45 degrees when sending text messages. This places a weight of almost 22kg on the spine, cervical ligaments and other muscles – five times the pressure considered normal, according to a Surgical Technology International study. Over the course of a year, this amounts to an additional 1,000 to 1,400 hours of pressure on the average smartphone user’s spine.


What Can You Do With a Liberal Arts Degree? Answers to All Your Questions

A liberal arts education integrates multiple disciplines, critical thinking strategies and effective communication skills to prepare students for success in any professional path they choose. This humanities-based approach gives undergraduates the opportunity to explore their passions and acquire a vast array of skills that can be applied to various fields and job positions.

Whether you're pursuing a liberal arts education or already have, we're going to provide insight on the fields you can enter, opportunities for continued education and skills you can acquire from obtaining this degree.


The European Union has published new guidelines on developing ethical AI

The European Union today published a set of guidelines on how companies and governments should develop ethical applications of artificial intelligence.

These rules aren’t like Isaac Asimov’s “Three Laws of Robotics.” They don’t offer a snappy, moral framework that will help us control murderous robots. Instead, they address the murky and diffuse problems that will affect society as we integrate AI into sectors like health care, education, and consumer technology.
Related Story: Congress wants to protect you from biased algorithms, deepfakes, and other bad AI

32 Statistical Concepts Explained in Simple English (a series in 11parts)

This resource is part of a series on specific topics related to data science: regression, clustering, neural networks, deep learning, decision trees, ensembles, correlation, Python, R, Tensorflow, SVM, data reduction, feature selection, experimental design, cross-validation, model fitting, and many more

Links to the rest 10 parts are at the end of the post

Facial Recognition: 16 Industries The Tech Could Transform

From screening patients for clinical trials to assessing the emotional state of drivers, we dive in to how facial recognition technology is shaping the future.

The biometric software behind facial recognition applications can identify facial structures, contours, and expressions, making it a no-brainer for security and identification purposes.

But it can also lead to creative applications that serve a different purpose. Listerine, for example, created an app that uses facial recognition to notify people who are blind that they were being smiled at.

While the technology is still developing, many companies (including Amazon) are banking on it as a disruptive force in a myriad of markets. At the same time, the tech is highly controversial — with privacy as a point of concern.

From creating checkout-free retail stores to eliminating concert tickets, here are 16 industries that are starting to transform with facial recognition technology.


Ghost World

In mid-2017, a Uyghur man in his twenties, whom I will call Alim, went to meet a friend for lunch at a mall in his home city, in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region in northwest China. At a security checkpoint at the entrance, Alim scanned the photo on his government-issued identification card, and presented himself before a security camera equipped with facial recognition software. An alarm sounded. The security guards let him pass, but within a few minutes he was approached by officers from the local “convenience police station,” one of the thousands of rapid-response police stations that have been built every 200 or 300 meters in the Turkic Muslim areas of the region. The officers took him into custody.

Over the past five years, the People’s War on Terror has allowed Chinese tech startups such as Leon, Meiya Pico, Hikvision, Face++, Sensetime, and Dahua to achieve unprecedented levels of growth. In just the last two years, the state has invested an estimated $7.2 billion on techno-security in Xinjiang. 

Freedom of movement through airports, railways, and bus stations throughout Zimbabwe will now be managed through a facial database integrated with other kinds of biometric data. In effect, the Uyghur homeland has become an incubator for China’s “terror capitalism.”

“Uyghurs are alive, but their entire lives are behind walls,” Dawut said softly. “It is like they are ghosts living in another world.”


Meet Katie Bouman, One Woman Who Helped Make the World's First Image of a Black Hole

The space was tiny and hot. On a fateful day last summer, Katie Bouman and three fellow researchers filed into a small room at Harvard University, safe from prying eyes, in order to see an image that had been years in the making.

Researchers from all over the world had combined forces to gather masses of astronomical data — enough to fill a half ton of hard drives — that they hoped to turn into the world’s first image of a black hole. In order to do that, the team needed algorithms that could distill all that noisy, messy information into one comprehensible picture. And Bouman, whose expertise is not in astrophysics but computer science, was one of a small group of people who spent years developing and testing those methods.

Related Story: Meet Katie Bouman, the scientist behind the first-ever picture of a black hole

Why there’s so little left of the early internet

It took nearly five years into the internet’s life before anyone made a concerted effort to archive it. Much of our earliest online activity has disappeared.


Algorithms have already taken over human decision making
 
I can still recall my surprise when a book by evolutionary biologist Peter Lawrence entitled “The making of a fly” came to be priced on Amazon at $23,698,655.93 (plus $3.99 shipping). While my colleagues around the world must have become rather depressed that an academic book could achieve such a feat, the steep price was actually the result of algorithms feeding off each other and spiralling out of control. It turns out, it wasn’t just sales staff being creative: algorithms were calling the shots.

This eye-catching example was spotted and corrected. But what if such algorithmic interference happens all the time, including in ways we don’t even notice? If our reality is becoming increasingly constructed by algorithms, where does this leave us humans?

Our exploration led us to the conclusion that, over time, the roles of information technology and humans have been reversed. In the past, we humans used technology as a tool. Now, technology has advanced to the point where it is using and even controlling us.

Full Post               
Related Paper: When Humans Using the IT Artifact Becomes IT Using the Human Artifact
Web 3.0: the decentralised web promises to make the internet free again

Have you recently considered deleting your Facebook account, boycotting Amazon or trying to find an alternative to Google? You wouldn’t be alone. The tech giants are invading our privacy, misusing our data, strangling economic growth and helping governments spy on us. Yet because these few companies own so many of the internet’s key services, it seems there is little people can do to avoid having to interact with them if they want to stay online.

However, 30 years after the world wide web was created, a third generation of web technology might offer a way to change things. The DWeb, a new decentralised version of cyberspace, promises to enable better user control, more competition between internet firms and less dominance by the large corporations. But there are still serious questions over whether it’s possible – or even desirable.

Related Story: Decentralisation: the next big step for the world wide web
Related Story: The internet is now an arena for conflict, and we’re all caught up in it

The Rivers in Our Skies

In December 2016, meteorologist F. Martin Ralph was sitting in a restaurant in San Francisco. On the TV screen, the weather report was talking about a particular kind of weather formation called an atmospheric river, which was headed right for California.

Atmospheric rivers are exactly what they sound like—rivers of water vapor, flowing through the atmosphere. They move from the tropics toward the continents and poles, stretching to as much as 375 miles wide and carrying more water than multiple Mississippi Rivers.

When an atmospheric river meets mountainous terrain like the Sierra Nevada, the water vapor condenses and becomes rain or snow. Strong atmospheric rivers can bring about floods and landslides, but the water and snowpack they leave behind provide California with 25 to 50 percent of its yearly precipitation in just a few days.


11 Challenges Facing Tech Execs In 2019 And Their Plans To Overcome Them

Often the start of the new year brings new challenges for most companies, ranging from growing revenue and scaling to expanding the client base, attracting and retaining top talent, and more.

So, what are the challenges facing tech industry leaders this year, and how are they planning to overcome them? We asked 11 experts from Forbes Technology Council exactly that.


CBSE releases a list of compendium courses for students to pursue after 12th

Central Board of Secondary Education has prepared a list of compendium courses in order to help students get information about various course choices after +2. This is an earnest effort of the board to help students while scouting for the right choice of course for pursuing higher education. The Board has included a total of 113 courses and their main motive is to generate enough curiosity in the child to want to explore further on the scope, possibilities, avenues, etc. for each of these courses. Students can also look for other options that go beyond these courses.


Bonus:  The complexity of memory (videos)

The mind is a diligent recorder, taking note of all that happens and storing data on it for retrieval later, right? Well actually, no. Enjoy these 7 illuminating talks on the science—and oddities—of our memory.


Events / Announcements

SPINCON-2019: Conf. on “Agility, Automation & Cloudification” on 20th Apr 2019 at Chennai

Bosses love it when you bring them solutions. And that’s exactly what you get at SPIN Chennai's Agility, Automation & Cloudification conference; essential insight, hindsight and out-of-sight on the rapidly changing cloud landscape, valuable insights from industry experts on Automation  and smart ideas from your peers. So ask your fearless leader to send you this year.

Reduced registration fee applicable to members of supporting organisations such as CSI, IEEE, ACM, ISACA etc., 


National Small Industries Corp (NSIC) offers job assisted training pgms

NSIC offers job assisted training pgms on Mobile App Development & IOT for Healthcare from 22nd Apr 2019. For details pl. see https://www.linkedin.com/feed/update/urn:li:activity:6523176279703937024
Or contact: Dr Rajesh Kumar 9944067397

MIDS-2019: International Workshop on Machine Intelligence and Data Science at Kochi 31st May 2019 & 1st Jun 2019

This two-day workshop is designed for research scholars / graduate students/ faculty and researchers from the academia and industry who wish to learn about the latest methodologies in Artificial Intelligence and Data Science. The International workshop on Machine Intelligence and Data Science (MIDS) brings together established speakers in the field of Machine Intelligence and Data Science. Day 1 will cover various aspects of machine intelligence and its current applications in data science. Day 2 will cover research methodologies, sharing experiences in writing papers for impact journals and grant applications followed by a short symposium for PhD scholars. MIDS is co-organized by Machine Intelligence Research Academy (MIRA), India and Machine Intelligence Research Labs (MIR Labs), USA and will be held in Kochi, India as follows:

May 31, 2019: Plenary talks / workshop sessions
June 01, 2019: Research writing skills / How to Innovate Research? / PhD symposium

For details pl. visit http://www.mirlabs.net/mids19

Call For Papers: IEEE TENCON 2019 at Kochi during 17-19 Oct 2019

TENCON is the flagship premier international technical conference of IEEE Region 10. The Theme for TENCON 2019 is "Technology, Knowledge, and Society", and it will be held during 17th to 20th October, 2019 at Hotel Grand Hyatt, Bolgatty, Kochi, Kerala.

Paper submission deadline: 29th Apr 2019


IEEE INDICON-2019 at Marwadi University, Rajkot, Gujarat during 13-15 Dec 2019

IEEE INDICON 2019 – the flagship conference of the IEEE India Council – will be held at Marwadi University, Rajkot, Gujarat from December 13 to 15, 2019 with the theme “Applying Artificial Intelligence in Engineering for prosperity and betterment of humanity”.

The Call for Papers is now available on the IEEE INDICON 2019 website; http://indicon2019.in/.

Archives of Interesting Reads 

To access the past posts of Interesting Reads, pl. visit

Feedback

We will be pleased to have your feedback on the “Interesting Reads” posts being sent once in five days. 

Pl. share the links of any interesting things you come across so that we can include them in these email posts. 

Also, pl. share the email ids of your colleagues, friends, peers and contacts, if you want them to be included in the google group to get regular posts.  

Pl. send all your communications to hrmohan.ieee@gmail.com  

With regards
HR Mohan