Day: September 28, 2021

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Truck cap camping is perfect for me

Truck cap camping is perfect for the type of camping I prefer to do on the back roads 🏞 where I like to travel and camp.

I like to camp in quiet isolated areas where I can listen to music,🎢🎚 shoot gunsΒ πŸ”« and fireworksπŸŽ†, have a big fire, burn whatever I want πŸ”₯ without bothering others. Yet such sites are not always accessible with more than a truck.🚚

Maybe when I get older I’ll want something more like an truck camper but I have my doubts as I’m not big into fancy soft things.πŸ›‹ I prefer things that are easier to clean off the mud on and spending my time actually outdoors in the elements.πŸ•

 Big Red

William L. Moore – A forgotten advocate for civil rights and mental health issues – Canadian Military History

William L. Moore – A forgotten advocate for civil rights and mental health issues – Canadian Military History

On 23 April 2010, a memorial plaque was unveiled outside the Greater Binghamton Transportation Center bus terminal in Binghamton, New York, in honour of a mostly forgotten civil rights and mental health advocate who was murdered on that day 47 years prior.

William Lewis Moore, born in Binghamton on 28 April 1927, was a postal worker and member of the Congress of Racial Equality, who achieved a level of notoriety for staging lone protests against racial segregation in an era when few white people supported such causes.

Moore also became an advocate for mental health issues, a result of having been institutionalized for a year and a half after suffering a mental breakdown while a graduate student at John Hopkins University in the early 1950s. He would ultimately be diagnosed as suffering from schizophrenia.

Moore staged lone protests by marching to capital cities on three separate occasions to hand-deliver letters he’d written denouncing the practice of racial segregation. His first march was to Annapolis, the state capital of Maryland, followed by a march to the White House to deliver a letter to President John F. Kennedy, on the same day that Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King was released from the jail in Binghamton following protests in that city.

Will We Respect a Robot’s Authority? | NeuroLogica Blog

Will We Respect a Robot’s Authority? | NeuroLogica Blog

The robots are coming. Of course, they are already here, mostly in the manufacturing sector. Robots designed to function in the much softer and chaotic environment of a home, however, are still in their infancy (mainly toys and vacuum cleaners). Slowly but surely, however, robots are spreading out of the factory and into places where they interact with humans. As part of this process, researchers are studying how people socially react to robots, and how robot behavior can be tweaked to optimize this interaction.

We know from prior research that people react to non-living things as if they are real people (technically, as if they have agency) if they act as if they have a mind of their own. Our brains sort the world into agents and objects, and this categorization seems to entirely depend on how something moves. Further, emotion can be conveyed with minimalistic cues. This is why cartoons work, or ventriloquist dummies.