Saturday, June 28, 2014

The hall of music. An atypical religious metaphor.

All of existence is a series of interconnected patterns. This metaphor uses the idea that our existence, daily life and social structure is made up of music played by people in a great hall.


Thousands of people exist in this hall, each playing instruments of varying types and with varying play styles. Typically people play whatever they want and tend to harmonize either deliberately or accidentally with nearby players. There are no conductors that can be seen.

Nevertheless some people insist that there is a conductor and that the conductor wants everyone to read from the same sheet music which they write and then distribute. This may be an attempt to form a greater harmony among the room but such never occurs.

The main problem is that there are numerous competing groups insisting that their conductor exists and that their sheet music is correct.
When different areas play this music they often play it in a different fashion to the original.
Over time the sheet music is altered or reinterpreted to be played in different tones or by different instruments.
Often the sheet music will be played by an individual surrounded by a group of people who read from different sheet music.
Although these groups tends to have greater harmony together, they compete fiercely and often attempt to drown out the music of other nearby groups. This causes great disharmony, such tensions often escalate. This is irritating to people just trying to jam together or play with others nearby and enjoy resulting the experience.
Personally I hate hearing about young people getting their instruments broken because they wanted to play free-form rather than follow music written two thousand years ago.
Seriously. Chill out people.

Tl;dr

Religion disapproves of a metaphorical EPIC TRIANGLE SOLOOOOOOO!

Thursday, May 8, 2014

Social systems: data decay, contrast based defragmentation, debugging CBT

Social systems: data decay, contrast based defragmentation, debugging CBT

I read many books, but some are more mind opening than others. Re-reading Snow Crash(by Neal Stephenson) at the moment, the base setting seems to be a future society where overall social consciousness has been removed but localised/franchised ideals crystallise. This book seems ideal for english high school study as it provides both entertainment and numerous introspective themes for analysis that those teachers seem to love. From what I remember it might be a little high reading level for most students though.

Anyway, it got me thinking, which is sometimes good:

Flotsam and jetsam of the social consciousness. Degraded and fragmented data systems

Unfinished ideas, side tracked beliefs, social and political reforms based on fallacies and agendas. When positive associations with these meme sets grow too few for the social conscious to relate to... they are relegated to the background, devalued... but sometimes they remain potent within individuals or fringe groups of society. There remains the potential for these meme sets to become malignant or even actively malevolent.

In snow crash Neal Stephenson likens memes as the operating system of society.


(Side tracked a bit, reading about discordianism, it's like a bunch of benevolent, genius stoners created a religion just to mess with people)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Discordianism
http://discordia.wikia.com/wiki/Discordipedia

I see discordian activity as something which can fidget with the edges of the social system without opposing it or actively destroying it. These types of activities allow an improved contrast based analysis of the system(society) and allowing for clearer social defragmentation. Clearing the system of junk that builds up over time benevolently allows individuals and society to repurpose themselves/reconsider their established values. This is seen as threatening to people who rely on such systems for physical/social/economic survival. However, change does not have to be malicious. Change can be quirky and mischievous, eye-opening and inspirational, analytical and calming.

So if old ideals are re-evaluated and defragged, who is writing and developing the new programs filling up the social system. Popular culture, advertising, movies, tv shows, books, games, forums and bulletin boards all act as recursive programs, not only spreading and writing data to the system but also influencing the next generation with deep seated legacy code and fixed data structures.

Saw my psych today(if you read this and are curious: attention/anxiety/confidence/depression problems etc some markedly improved but some ongoing) and he referred me again to CBT, cognitive behavioural therapy. Which in this frame of reference I can liken to a social debugging/reprogramming tool that allows faulty recursive subroutines to alter their input/analysis/output structures without stripping and rewriting entire blocks. (Changing a persons consciousness/expectations/reactions without drugs, medication or blunt force trauma to the brain.) (NLP is to CBT what hacking code is to programming? kinda? maybe?)
How difficult would it be to make a metaphorical app or patch to effectively apply CBT to an individual and have significant short term outcome.

(Hey, how freaky would it be to create a literal app or patch to apply CBT etc? Excellent beneficial potential combined with extraordinarily scary potential if used to inject malware. Maybe that's what advertising is; social patching... or transmission vectors for viruses and trojans)

Back to the book, there are a lot of references to memes as a kind of social virus. Some more malevolent/benevolent than others but almost always from a self interested individual source.
In reverse it makes me wonder why there is so much malware but I had never heard of ben(evolent)ware until 5 minutes ago. How many programs go around entering peoples computers before fixing their security holes and optimising their graphics cards?

Interesting link on malware/benware with a bit of logic and discreet maths being used to define certain terms:
A General Definition of Malware by Simon Kramer
http://www1.spms.ntu.edu.sg/~ccrg/documents/NTU_4on1.pdf


Wow, looking at the logic used and applying it to social systems... everything is social malware unless it is non-damaging or only damages social malware.
Discordian ideals have the potential to damage social malware.
Similar to the australian tv show, the checkout which scrutinises advertiser/consumer practices with an entertaining slant.
http://www.abc.net.au/tv/thecheckout/

I've got no idea where I'm going with this. At least it kept me entertained for a few hours. Posted for the hell of it.

Friday, April 25, 2014

Freemium Metaphor: The Free Feast

I play a lot of online games.
I have made several myself which I have made no money off at all. I put them up free for other people to play and enjoy(or not) as they like.
Reading comments on my games and more recently the comments others make about "Freemium" games(Games free to play but with options to purchase extras)... has started to annoy me. So I wrote a quick metaphor to try and communicate my frustration directed towards people complaining about... free stuff.


The Free Feast
A Restaurant makes a feast and allows anyone who can get there to partake for free. There are several courses and diners have quite a few options for a delicious meal.
The chefs and cooks like good food and like making good food and serving it to others for free... but even so the feast is expensive to make. So there are ways for the restaurant to make money.




Revenue
Advertisements:
Advertisers place small adds above the menus, for every thousand customers at the feast advertisers will pay 1 dollar. This can add up(eventually) but is not enough to pay for much.
Sponsorship:
Advertisers can pay 500 to 1500 dollars to put their logo at the entrance. Decent money for a coffee shop but not for a very large restaurant serving good quality free meals to thousands of people a day.
Extras:
this is where the money is made that allows the restaurant to serve free feasts.
  • Sauces for 50 cents
  • Soft drink for 3 dollars (a glass of water is free)
  • reserve the table for an extra half hour for 5 dollars
  • a seat at the window for 10 dollars
  • an extra course for 20 dollars
  • and for those with extra cash they can purchase a seat at the head of the table for 50 dollars
  • and a bit of extravagance: for 5000 dollars a diner can buy a spectacular handcrafted dessert
The combined income from a lot of small spenders and a couple of big spenders allows the restaurant to stay open and serve more feasts.

Manners

Please do:
  • feel free to inform the staff about any actual problems/defects with their food, they like to know if there is a problem. 
  • suggest improvements to the menu, the staff enjoy their work and are always looking for ways to improve the experience for everyone.

Please don't:
  • complain about not being able to reserve a table for six hours or eat the expensive dessert without paying money.
  • complain about how "unfair" it is that people with money get to sit at the head of the table, that person is paying for your food.
Alternatives to the Free Feast
If you don't like your experience there are several things you can do:
1. pay for some extras to improve your experience
2. go to a normal restaurant, where you will be expected to pay a fixed amount for the meal and any extras




JRT - 25th April 2014

Thursday, January 30, 2014

What is Art?

What is art?
I once asked this to a class of people studying art, not one of them had an answer. None of them had really thought of it to the point where they were confident of their answer. In various essays and lectures I have seen a variety of people attempt to answer this in different ways but they all seemed to miss things, being too specific etc. I eventually came up with my own definition.

Art is an attempt at perfection of expression.

art can be anything. It can be seen in cooking, in making and serving tea, fighting, painting, speaking convincingly, playing - art can be anything... IF the artist has something they wish to express(even to themselves) and they wish to do so in a way that improves perfection of that expression(even if their definition of perfection leans away from beauty or harmony or even if their definition of perfection happens to be quantity or simplicity etc). Also, the art does not actually have to be successful and perfect, it just has to be an attempt at approaching perfection even the slightest bit.

However art appreciation is far from universal and that what one considers art is quite often scorned by those who consider themselves true artists. (personally I think this is as much a personal failing of pride as a lack of understanding) I don't appreciate a great quantity of the gallery art sold for thousands, tens of thousands, hundreds of etc. I do appreciate a great deal of concept art, spun out in moments, for yearly wages that are relatively similar(or less) to the price of an expensive painting.
I worked at a game company where artists shaped points in space, clothed them in light, animated them in brilliant fashion to form wonderful people and creatures with shapes colors and actions out of the realm of real world possibility that interacted in ways that dragged forth reactions from the viewers that cant be replicated in a typical gallery. Beautiful and wonderful as they were, my art lecturers were far more respectful of the guy who painted a canvas completely blue, the guy who put a toilet in the middle of an art gallery and who painted a pipe, wrote that it was not a pipe etc.
http://twentytwowords.com/2013/05/16/canvas-painted-blue-with-a-white-line-sells-for-nearly-44-million-4-pictures/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marcel_Duchamp
If you want something a bit more humorous, interesting and about as artistic as the original fountain sculpture, here two guys try to pee in it... why it is in the art gallery and behind a glass case:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ojbegua2yKw

Moving on...

I had an art lecturer who couldn't appreciate that comics might have artistic value. Then when I simply referred to them as "sequential art", like a triptych etc, he suddenly made the slight allowance that they might have some value.
Just different perspectives.

Do you know that Chinese calligraphy is a well respected form of art such that well known pieces have sold for millions. Ever see the movie hero where a group of artists continue to paint calligraphy as arrows rain down killing people? The idea is that what they were trying to express was worth their lives.
So, today, a bit out of the blue I realized something else, art APPRECIATION requires the belief that the art is something worth perfecting. The viewer has to believe that there is an inherent aura, value or nobility about the art.

(after rereading this the following paragraph is a bit... pompous?... oh well, ill leave it in. If anyone has another view on this stuff feel free to comment)
If only people could understand that given the right perspective, anything can have such nobility of character, any action undertaken by a human being can be art. Sadly I think that this idea is being lost in modern society.

---

Bit of an idea that might work for a story, probably be an interesting twist to a fantasy world - what if there was a class based system dedicated to the perfection and standard raising of skills. any skills. someone could practice and reach for the greatest heights of perfection as an exemplary potter, woodcutter, fisherman, messenger etc and be called and treated like a lord for their skills and dedication. it would basically allow anyone anywhere to be recognized and rewarded for perfection in any region of their life. People could value effort and skill over speed and cost efficiency.
(I just remembered there was a fantasy world where legendary people gained some kind of magical power when the achieved high skill at something. Blademasters had to draw magical circles to stop the power from escaping when they dueled, can't remember the book though. Still might work as an idea less overtly magic based.)

Tuesday, January 14, 2014

Aquapunk Bubble Logic: Underwater Computing

Ok, so a while back I had an idea for a story set far future where everyone lives underwater. Humanity has deliberately modified their own genes to be able to survive... as merfolk, sea elves and some crustacean variant of orcs. I wanted a fair bit of modern day science to still be available even though modern day resources were not. i.e.:
Underwater means no combustion so no motors.
Projectiles would be lucky to more than a meter or two.
Electrical circuits are probably not going to work.
The ability of these people to breathe requires oxygenated water with low pollutants so any industrial activity resulting in pollutants/particulates(such as mining) would kill people off.

Anyway, two of the main characters in this story were responsible for researching/designing/maintaining computational systems that would work underwater. I figured this would be possible and was inspired by stories such as 'Souls in the great machine' by Sean McMullen and 'The difference engine' by William Gibson and Bruce Sterling.

For other examples of mechanical logic see:
http://mechalogic.wordpress.com/ 
http://xiaoji-chen.com/blog/2010/the-linkage-computer/

Also inspired by: people who build working computers in minecraft.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Sl2pMeTYQo0   -Screen, keyboard input, calculator, music
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aQqWorbrAaY  -Screen, keyboard input, commands
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KzrFzkb3A4o#t=299 -Ohm's 16 bit computer
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gdnO1QZJ--M  -Minecraft in minecraft


Yesterday I came up with a few ideas for bubble based logic gates, today I drafted them up:

They aren't quite up there with minecraft computers and they are probably as buggy as hell but it was interesting.
Simple piston raised by bubbles. The piston shaft has holes which allows the reservoir to output bubbles if the piston is in the correct position.
Considering possible issues with using bubbles as a... bit signal? or something, I added in the 'timing plate'(not really a plate) which I see as something similar to a rotating belt with holes that allow output bubbles to be sent before inputs get released into the reservoir as well as limiting the bubbles that can be output within a single computation cycle.
The use of gravity as power source requires a layered design but it should be easy to design a way to signal lower levels by having the piston shaft and output hang beneath the piston instead of above.
This system would have the advantage of being able to use simple analogue counters by collecting bubbles etc.

A quick spot of googling reveals someone has tried a slightly more professional job of designing bubble logic..
http://web.media.mit.edu/~manup/research/bubble-logic/
Also wikipedia has a page on fluidic logic with an interesting fluidic amplifier.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fluidic_logic

So that's it.
The latest task on my maybe-later-but-probably-never TO DO list is building a functional calculator with bubble logic. Maybe have it set up within a glass tank as a lounge table. Brilliant conversation starter.