(Hardcover)
cyborg, n. a person whose physiological functioning is aided by or dependent upon a mechanical or electronic device.
Steve Mann is a cyborg, and the inventor of the wearable computer, called the WearComp. He sees the world as images imprinted onto his retina by rays of laser light. This allows him to transmit his viewpoint live to the Internet, block out billboards and other unwanted visual stimuli, and turn his world into a series of hyperlinks. Constantly connected to the WearComp system, Mann has all the capabilities of a standard office at his disposal, even as he utilizes shrinking technologies to turn himself into a portable movie studio. The first person to live in total constant intimate contact with the computer, Steve Mann exists at once in the real and virtual worlds, living an entirely videographic existence, seeing everything around him, including himself, through a wearable computer.
Over the past twenty years, Steve Mann has been his own human guinea pig, testing his various wearable computer prototypes on himself. In Cyborg, he uses his own unique experiences to assess the state of wearable computers and their potential impact on our lives, articulating a vision for a tomorrow that sees humanity freer, safer, and smarter in ways most of us can only imagine.
Mann is fascinated by the possibilities of the cyborg future, but he does not shrink away from frankly discussing the dangers of a post-human age in which our computers come to control us. In this unique ground-breaking book, Mann charts the development of a wearable computer industry, and warns of dangers to our liberty, privacy, and democracy. He contrasts those dangers with hisown sweeping inclusive vision of a wearable computing age that brings about new ways to teach, learn, make art, communicate, and even think.
Part biography, part breath-taking manifesto, part startling look into the very near future, Cyborg is a powerful book that challenges preconceptions and invites readers to enter the mind of one of the most fascinating thinkers of our time.
Born in Hamilton, Ontario, Steve Mann has been an inventor since his childhood. He is currently on the faculty of the University of Toronto, where he teaches in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering. He received his PhD from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He has mediated his experience online, on the World Wide Web with the WearComp device for the last seven years.
Hal Niedzviecki is an award-winning journalist and cultural communicator. He is the author of the book We Want Some Too: Underground Desire and the Re-invention of Mass Culture. His articles and essays have appeared in magazines, newspapers and journals in the United States, Canada and the UK.
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November 06, 2002: We take our tools for granted. Even those that we carry on our bodies such as eyeglasses or palmtops, we consider as add-ons, foreign objects. I guess contact lenses or pacemakers acquire a degree of intimacy, however, they are still merely perceived as ?add-ons?, not part of our organic flesh or mind. Should we be made aware of the hidden effects of technologies both on body and mind or continue in the blissful ignorance of our own transformation ? Two books by Canadian authors and explore that question in complementary ways. Ollivier Dyens? Metal and Flesh (translated from the French in this publication by MIT press) practices ?depth philosophy? (as in ?depth psychology?) to find out what makes us human with or in spite of technology. Steve Mann does the experimental grunt work. Cyborg is a detailed analysis of the tools themselves and of their present and predictable consequences. Both writers take McLuhan very seriously and quote his lesser known paraphrase of ?The medium is the message?, ?We shape our tools and hence after, our tools shape us?. The objective of Dyens, a professor and author living in Montreal, is stated with a poetic fervor that you will find throughout the book and is worth in itself the price of the book, that is to explore ?both the strange readings of the world offered by new technologies and the transfer of life from the organic to cultural manifestations?. Indeed that is the object of study: the limit that separates the organic from the cultural, the personal from the collective, the material from the virtual, the cognitive from the physical. All these limits are plying and all affect deeply our psychological autonomy as well as our political status. There is some urgency in recognizing that, at least at the level of scientific research and genetic engineering applications, the balance of power has begun to shift from a control by nature to a control over nature by knowledge, that is, culture. With that kind of divine power, we do need to reflect upon our responsibilities. Dyens pays attention to the role of intelligence in developing the technological condition. He suggests that we are now in ?the Intelligent Condition?. This is a condition that puts intelligence and planning at the helm of our destiny instead of blind circumstances. Dyens? book helps greatly in that direction. Likewise Cyborg is about limits and their transgressions. WearComp, as Mann, , a professor of Computer Science at the University of Toronto, calls the complex interfacing between clothing, sensory extensions and connections to the world wide web, is about the limit between the body, the mind and the world. Mann reports on his experience with a camera eye and a wireless Internet connection permanently on. He has been wearing this kind of equipment experimentally on a permanent daily basis since adolescence and made this research what appears to be a life cause. He has made himself a cyborg to understand technology, a mission that he tends to proclaim with the occasional messianic overtone that takes nothing from the value of the commitment. The book makes his motivations and also the world he experiences very clear. That is where its value lies. It is as if Mann had done a huge amount of homework for us by really putting them on?He puts us on too in the sense that we too can take part in that strange and yet soon-to-be real world. ?Soon, comments Mann, our lives will be dramatically changed by the WearComp, but the world will...