Thursday, December 19, 2024
Tuesday, December 17, 2024
Saturday, December 14, 2024
Testing Grok
Tuesday, December 10, 2024
Museum Visit
I brought Don Wardwell, captain of Meliptus, Wanderer co-conspirator, to the Lanahan spread near Eugene yesterday. The parking areas were packed with pickups and other construction crew vehicles: both the patio makeover and the main house reroofing were under way.
Steffan and Barbara had extended their stay so we could overlap. Steffan and I had both been directly involved with Sam in promoting C6XTY and the Lattice Gallery in different ways. We had subsequently discussed his dream for a video recording studio (all before covid) and then lost touch. Fast forward and I discovered his dreams all came true.Tuesday, December 03, 2024
Saturday, November 30, 2024
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
Monday, November 25, 2024
Mini Summit
I'm back to the idea of a mini-summit featuring game engineers, physics engine designers, and First Person Physics, the latter being a joint project of myself and Dr. Bob.
The idea is of course didactic simulations, featuring forces, such as attractive and repulsive, in some game situation. The point of view may be first person, one it always pays to think about, and one could say is always first person, but in the context of the genre, you'll go third person just as much. We sometimes call it "god mode".
The one I always come back to is the "hexa pent" shell, what Glenn called a Global Matrix (meaning coordinate system and mapping grid), say a buckminsterfullerene broken up into hexagonal and pentagonal pieces. The fit together to form a hollow sphere, plus they attract one another. The force is akin to gravity in not having a repulsive element, as we have in the magnetosphere.
But then these are precisely the hyperparameters our players might vary, in their explorations in systems dynamics. Turn up the gravity, now add repulsion as they come into docking position, now lock them into one mass etc. These are admittedly idealizations, suggestive of how things might be in reality, but our language is that of models and modeling (simulations being of that rubric).
However, my global matrix "test pattern" simulation is only meant to be suggestive. What we're facing is the prospect of mixed-use high rises filling with game pods and students needing simulations mixed with reading programs of various types. Not every discipline communicates through game pods alone, and in fact few do, but the pods help and double as workstations.
Some of these workstations will be piloting physical devices remotely. The level of bandwidth matters, but then some robots have a lot of onboard capability and don't need to be micromanaged. Likewise drones. The pod design has the advantage of offering simulated acceleration along with other haptic feedback, which keeps pilots sensitized to their remote environments.
Wednesday, November 20, 2024
Schools of Tomorrow
The schools I imagine are visited by away teams, but also source away teams. It works that way in sports already, but think of a Pycon. My school sends tend peeps to a Pycon in Brazil. Another time, we're visited by Brazilians. As we were here in Portland, for that Pycon. I hosted a guest.
When an away team returns, a debriefing happens, meaning the team reports on its adventures. There's real time monitoring too though. No need to wait until the trip is over to start filing reports. The bizmo teams have their road trip reports. The travelogue as a genre is the ballpark we're aiming for.
What might an away team study? Public health policies, transportation plans, ways of providing people access to necessary infrastructure, a skill sorely lacking in many American cities. The Portland school system has dispatched several teams to Finland, thinking PPS has much to learn from how Finnish do school.
Away teams visiting a school might be studying lifestyles that work in conditions of extreme remoteness. The technology begets workflows. Lessons learned.
Sunday, November 17, 2024
Free Spirits
What some of us discover about our fellow humans, which is not that surprising in retrospect, is that indoor-living, so-called, is an anathema to a percentage thereof.
Whereas I am able to get excited by the prospect of a penthouse or simply an apartment, and have lived in several, I met fellow travelers at Occupy Portland and other places that just couldn't abide being cooped up between the four walls of anything, which doesn't mean they'd eschew all manner of shelter. They just wanted to be free of certain types of restraint.
We don't have to look far to find long-running themes behind this longing for an open sky lifestyle. The crush of cities, especially during the advent of the industrial era, was especially noxious and toxic, and the Romantics rebelled, seeking a back to nature aesthetics that resonates with us today. Although classified a Transcendentalist, a post-Romantic movement, Thoreau's lifestyle at Walden Pond set a template for "off the grid" living.
However beyond not wanting to be cooped up in a high rise or even a suburban ranch style domicile, is not wanting the encumbrances of another system's bureaucracy, where "the other" in this case comprises all those "normies" who want to play-act being members of various nation-states. Some humans take a look at that whole game and would rather opt out. "No citizenship for me thank you" is their polite enough refusal to go along. Is it that the "right of citizenship" is actually something more mandatory than a right? A duty even? Is a person free to surrender citizenship without adopting another?
Certainly many people would love citizenship in a "real country" that gave them rights to visit other countries besides the real one. If you don't have enough documentation to cross any border whatsoever, then the game of borders will likely seem awfully onerous. You're denied citizenship and therefore even the human right to go somewhere else, where you won't be a citizen either. Once a person reaches adulthood without citizenship in any country, it's no piece of cake to finally find one.
What the United Nations might have done is come up with a catch-all default nation that anyone could choose if falling through the cracks otherwise. Plain Vanilla Nation (PVN) would at least provide enough documentation, e.g a passport and ID card, to merit taking out loans, buying property, booking passage. But no, that would have been too easy.
However, even with a PVN in place and/or much easier rules, a percentage of my fellow humans will prefer not to become citizens of any country. I'm thinking as a matter of human rights, their preferences should be respected.
However, the flip side is an individual does make waves and thereby builds up karma and it's unreasonable to grant a cloak of invisibility to someone who is going to be impacting planetary history, even if only in a small way (who's to judge?). That's why we give each other names, titles, roles, credentials: to keep records and let others predict what they're getting into, if they let so and so join their ranks.
So whereas I empathize with those wishing to escape citizenship in any nation, I'm not seeing "incognito mode" as a basic human right on the same level. Just because we don't record your nationality doesn't mean we can't open a file and register events along your timeline. You'll want a timeline too, for your own protection in some scenarios. You may work harder than most to not show up in files or on radars and I understand that's your preference.
Prompt: Gypsies sit around campfire, enjoying guitar. Some children are wearing VR goggles. HDTV screens glow through the windows of gypsy caravans. Moonlight. Horses.