However it packs a big technological punch: the tracking system is capable of mapping tens of thousands of
points on the human face, after all.
Not exact matches
Consequently one feels less inclined to reject as unscientific the idea that the critical
point of planetary reflective consciousness which is the result of the forming of humanity into an organized society, far from being a mere spark in the darkness, corresponds
on the contrary to our passage (by a movement of reversal or dematerialization) to another
face of the universe: not an ending of the ultra-
human but its arrival at something trans -
human at the very heart of reality.
Stephen Crites» remark
on the most physical mark of
human individuality, the
face, as formed through encounter is a lovely comment
on this
point.
On a previous post, Sam
pointed out the many
faces of
Human Trafficking today.
Due to climate change, she said, the world
faces «one of the most daunting crossroads in the evolution of
human history, we are at the
point where we must decide: are we going to ignore science or are we going to rise to the call of history and forge a new life
on Earth paradigm... where nature and humanity support each other.»
I also had a training technue using a piece of card board cut about one foot square with one hand you hold the target letting go at the same time you punch a hole in the cardboard, to ad to my focus I would draw a
human face on the target.I progressed to the
point where I could punch a clean hole in an eye
on the target over 97 % of the time this is using cardboard rated at 350 lbs per square inch.The strikes were finger of index and middle finger.Pushups work
And since those lines
on our
faces are pivotal to basic
human communication — not to mention our confidence when someone is staring at us a bit too closely — most of us make it a
point to ensure they're looking fabulous at all times.
The service examines 63
points of interest
on the
human face to determine whether the same person is featured in multiple photos.
After all, she
pointed out, «My dogs and my
human child are also in danger when leaving the house, but I don't deny them the right to have sun
on their
faces and grass under their feet.
Apparently the skeleton mapping that Natal employs is able to capture 48
points of interest
on the
human body, but will it work well when
faced with a typical living / bedroom environment?
Many of those promoting stasis in the
face of a clear need for a global energy quest have used this saga as a kind of «blackwash» that will long linger like a cloud, tainting public appreciation of even the undisputed basics of science
pointing to a rising
human influence
on climate.
The things that came together in my mind at that
point were the
human problems we were
facing and the principals of ecology that guided literally everything
on earth.
Many answers to that question have been offered, ranging from the extreme difficulty of getting all the governments in the world to agree
on anything, to an absence of real technological solutions, to something deep in our
human nature that keeps us from acting in the
face of seemingly remote threats, to — more recently — the claim that we have blown it anyway and there is no
point in even trying to do much more than enjoy the scenery
on the way down.
Simply put, we're entering an especially important moment in world history, approaching the
point of no return
on one of the most consequential problems
humans have ever
faced.
At no
point is this AI predicting gayness: it predicts whether
humans will think a
face looks gay or not based
on data from
humans who tried to predict whether a
human's
face was gay or not.