Sunday, December 8, 2013
Redacted or Retracted Who Cares ?
For a brief time I had two posts online that described being poor in America. It so shocked some of my readers, and so lowered me in their self esteem, that I have withdrawn the posts. I have enough problems without having people who are, dare I say, empathy challenged, being shocked by reality.
Its too bad because it was some of my best writing.
Maybe when I am wealthy I can publish them again so that my privileged and self-entitled friends can learn what life is like.
Wednesday, December 4, 2013
The Apostolic Exhortation of Pope Francis
Update 12/5/2013. The Catholics in Alliance for the Common Good have created a petition to protest the attacks on Pope Francis by Rush Limbaugh. Although not a Catholic, which I made clear in the comments section, I signed this petition and I encourage you to consider doing so as well. Rush's attack was delightfully stupid, and we should take advantage of this opportunity which he has so unintentionally provided. http://www.catholicsinalliance.org/limbaugh
One of the interesting things about the
second decade of the 21st century is the complete silence among the
political classes of America regarding poverty and its impact on its
citizens. Complete indifference, absolute unwillingness to discuss
either the causes, the effects and potential cures. Some of them
fall back on bankrupt misunderstandings of discredited economic
theory. Some deny the problem exists. Some acknowledge some of the
problems but propose no policies to address the issues. Some propose
policies or changes that at their best might address a few percent of
the problem.
None of our civic leaders seem willing
to discuss the issues honestly and address some real plans about what
needs to be done. There is no Roosevelt or New Dealer or Tolstoy (1)
among them.
But of all the leaders in this country
and the world there is one who is willing to speak out on these
issues: the issues of poverty and its effect on people's lives and of
reliance on an economic theory that has no evidence to support it.
And that is "our" new Pope, Pope Francis.
And that is "our" new Pope, Pope Francis.
A very photogenic Pope, it seems to me.
In his "Apostolic Exhortation
Evangelii Gaudium of the Holy Father Francis to the Bishops, Clergy,
Consecrated Persons and the Lay Faithful on the Proclamation of the
Gospel in Today's World", we have a very amusing jeremiad, so to
speak, against injustice and greed in the world. Among other
things we have the use of entertaining terminology such as kerygma
and mystagogical. (2)
The complete statement can be found
here.
Here are some excerpts
53. Just as the commandment “Thou shalt not kill” sets a clear limit in order to safeguard the value of human life, today we also have to say “thou shalt not” to an economy of exclusion and inequality. Such an economy kills. How can it be that it is not a news item when an elderly homeless person dies of exposure, but it is news when the stock market loses two points? This is a case of exclusion. Can we continue to stand by when food is thrown away while people are starving? This is a case of inequality. Today everything comes under the laws of competition and the survival of the fittest, where the powerful feed upon the powerless. As a consequence, masses of people find themselves excluded and marginalized: without work, without possibilities, without any means of escape.
Human beings are themselves considered consumer goods to be used and then discarded. We have created a “throw away” culture which is now spreading. It is no longer simply about exploitation and oppression, but something new. Exclusion ultimately has to do with what it means to be a part of the society in which we live; those excluded are no longer society’s underside or its fringes or its disenfranchised – they are no longer even a part of it. The excluded are not the “exploited” but the outcast, the “leftovers”.
Or ....
192. Yet we desire even more than this; our dream soars higher. We are not simply talking about ensuring nourishment or a “dignified sustenance” for all people, but also their “general temporal welfare and prosperity”. This means education, access to health care, and above all employment, for it is through free, creative, participatory and mutually supportive labour that human beings express and enhance the dignity of their lives. A just wage enables them to have adequate access to all the other goods which are destined for our common use.
But this is my favorite ...
54. In this context, some people continue to defend trickle-down theories which assume that economic growth, encouraged by a free market, will inevitably succeed in bringing about greater justice and inclusiveness in the world. This opinion, which has never been confirmed by the facts, expresses a crude and naïve trust in the goodness of those wielding economic power and in the sacralized workings of the prevailing economic system. Meanwhile, the excluded are still waiting. To sustain a lifestyle which excludes others, or to sustain enthusiasm for that selfish ideal, a globalization of indifference has developed. Almost without being aware of it, we end up being incapable of feeling compassion at the outcry of the poor, weeping for other people’s pain, and feeling a need to help them, as though all this were someone else’s responsibility and not our own. The culture of prosperity deadens us; we are thrilled if the market offers us something new to purchase. In the meantime all those lives stunted for lack of opportunity seem a mere spectacle; they fail to move us.
When was the last time we heard a
presidential candidate speak clearly about economic disadvantage, dismiss the obviously failed principles of the rich helping the poor and advocate such unselfish goals? Any politician that did so would be
crucified, so to speak, by the right-wing and the moneyed interests.
In a world of compromise and the
failure of ethics, what a relief it is to read by a member of the
power elite such an unambiguous call for improving the world. The
obvious question is, should we call for Pope Francis to run for
President?
[See this link for our discussion of what Atlantean Crystal Wisdom predicted about Pope Francis.
http://globalwahrman.blogspot.com/2013/03/using-esoteric-knowledge-to-see-future.html]
[See this link for our discussion of what Atlantean Crystal Wisdom predicted about Pope Francis.
http://globalwahrman.blogspot.com/2013/03/using-esoteric-knowledge-to-see-future.html]
__________________________________________________
1. Tolstoy famously wrote an essay
about the starving poor of Moscow whose title was "What then is
to be done?". Later, when Lenin called for the Bolshevik
revolution, his essay title was the same in homage to Tolstoy.
2. Kerygma is used in the New Testament
to refer to preaching and its later use seems to refer to the larger
body of what it is that Jesus was called upon to preach, what was his
"program" so to speak. A mystagogue is one who initiates
others into the mysteries of a religion.
Dr. Willis Ware 1920 - 2013
I was devastated yesterday to hear of
the passing of one of the most interesting people I have ever met or
worked with, Dr. Willis Ware formerly of the RAND Corporation.
Dr. Ware passed away at the far too
young age of 93 years old.
Most people at RAND had no idea what he
did, just that he was very senior.
I met Dr. Ware at the RAND Corporation
when I was just 21 or so years old, and Willis was already some sort
of Scientist Emeritus at RAND and while no one seemed to know exactly
what he did he, suspiciously, had a three window office and a
full-time secretary/assistant. With this information we knew he was
powerful beyond measure. They said that he testified before
Congress on the issues of privacy, and that of course was important
but seemed to only add to the mystery.
Several clues revealed themselves as
time went by.
Clue #1 He knew my interest in graphics
and he wanted to show me a film he had with a user interface that he
thought was interesting. It turned out to be none other than one of
the famous films of Ivan Sutherland's Sketchpad thesis work at MITRE
when he was a graduate student at MIT. To this day I consider that
user interface to be one of the top five or so I have ever seen.
Clue #2 We were chatting about nothing
in particular and he told me the story of how he had worked to bring
Dr. von Neumann to RAND after the war and when he was bored at the
Institute at Princeton. von Neumann, whose computer architecture
you are using while you read my blog, most likely, was going to come
to RAND and UCLA and split his time between them. But unfortunately
he died suddenly of brain cancer.
Clue #3 Somehow it came to my attention
that Willis had received his PhD in Electrical Engineering from
Princeton in 1939. Look up 1939 in history, recall that the new
Intelligence agencies (really the proto-agencies, the ones we know
were formed after WWII from these proto-agencies) recruited heavily
from the Ivy League and imagine what someone with a PhD in EE might
do in the upcoming conflict.
Clue #4 Although Willis did not seem to
work on any run of the mill projects at RAND, he did travel every six
months and spent a week somewhere in Maryland. Fort Meade, Maryland,
as it turned out. In fact, I saw above his secretaries desk an
agenda and it said he attended the "SAB" at Ft. Meade,
Maryland. Now, what is at Ft. Meade? Well, the National Security
Agency is. And what might the SAB be ? Well, it is something
called the "Scientific Advisory Board" which meets every
six months.
The Scientific Advisory Board of the
NSA is the body responsible at a very high level for advising the NSA
on technologies of interest and issues that they should be
addressing. In short, Willis had some sort of very serious position
advising the NSA. A senior spook, at least in part.
Clue #5 Willis and I were discussing
WWII and Enigma one day and I told him that I was guessing that there
were still secrets from WWII that had not been revealed. And he said
to me that he knew for a fact that there were secrets and events from
WWII that had not been released and that, in his opinion, they should
be.
Clue #6 At random intervals, maybe once
or twice a year, Willis would travel on a short trip to Washington,
DC. No one knew what he did there, but it was suggested to me, by
someone who knew Willis well, that he was used by various elements of
the Intelligence Community when it was necessary to liason with
another part. In other words, he was some sort of prestigious
messenger when some sort of issue or discussion needed to take place.
Now, I may have that wrong, or incomplete, and of course it is
vague, but I think it still has valid information.
Clue #7 In 1967, DARPA commissioned a report on "Security Controls in Computer Systems". The report was reissued in 1979. Written by Dr. Ware, you may find this report on the Cryptome site at http://cryptome.org/sccs.htm
Clue #7 In 1967, DARPA commissioned a report on "Security Controls in Computer Systems". The report was reissued in 1979. Written by Dr. Ware, you may find this report on the Cryptome site at http://cryptome.org/sccs.htm
And so, who was Dr. Willis Ware ?
I think he was a pioneer of computing
and information technology, and a recognized authority on the impact
on policy, particularly the policy of privacy, at very high levels of
government. I think he was in some sense a spook during WW II and
that he maintained his relationship with the primary user of
computers in intelligence, the NSA, and was on their advisory board.
He maintained an office at RAND and did his own work because it was
a useful platform that kept him in touch with Washington, yet outside
the beltway madness that so many succumb to. RAND gave him a
certain long term cachet, and RAND management of course loved him
because their very raison d'etre is to influence policy in
Washington, and clearly Willis did just that.
I also suspect that there is more
public history here than I know and will no doubt discover over the
next few weeks. Willis was probably involved in the Mathematics
Division of the RAND Corporation back when RAND had two mathematics-related departments: abstract and applied. Computer science, such as it became, came from the applied math department. When I was with
RAND, we had a small computer science department that was in some way
derived from these much larger efforts of the past. Today, RAND has
no computer science department although there are individual computer scientists and programmers lurking in the hallways. (1)
Finally, Willis is one of the reasons
that I am so screwed up today. You see, back then, at RAND, I was
treated as a real human being, with intelligence and something to
contribute. Today I am treated like garbage by nearly everyone but
especially in my own field and it was those expectations that got set
at RAND that led inevitably to my downfall.
I will really miss you Willis, wherever
you are.
[The NY Times has an obituary of Willis at
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/12/02/technology/willis-ware-who-helped-build-blueprint-for-computer-design-dies-at-93.html?_r=0]
[The NY Times has an obituary of Willis at
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/12/02/technology/willis-ware-who-helped-build-blueprint-for-computer-design-dies-at-93.html?_r=0]
__________________________________________________
1. Part of the reason that RAND had a
computer science department(s), was because RAND believed it
was of strategic importance to the US Government. As time went by,
computer science spread to the more traditional venues of University
and Industry and so RAND no longer needed to do that. There were
other things that were more important and more in line with their
specific missions in the context of Congressional limitations on the maximum size of the annual budgets of places like RAND.
Sunday, December 1, 2013
Feminist Shaving Theory and Internet Porn
Warning: the following post is
rated R and discusses sex on the Internet
Our research confirms that the sex drive is strong in mammals. Even Steven J. Gould said so and he should know. In its small way, the Internet has helped reveal this enduring truth by providing easy access to a vast amount of pornography of all types, as well as commentary on this porn deluge by outraged or not so outraged consumers.
Porn is one of the boom industries of our civilization. It is international, multicultural, omnipresent and profitable beyond the wildest dreams of the most exploitative or idealistic of the pornographers. Very few industries can compete with it in scope and economic importance.
We recently came across a commentary on the phenomena of Internet pornography by two feminist authors on the New Statesman web site. What particularly caught our attention was the free expression of commentary on the editorial by readers who felt the need to share their reaction and personal experiences with us.
The authors, Rhiannon Cosslett
and Holly Baxter of Vagenda Magazine, bring up a number of topics in their essay "The Big Question that the Generation Raised on Porn Must Answer", It begins with the provocative statement:
Porn often shows a submissive woman, stripped of all of her body hair, undergoing ritual
humiliation in the name of sexuality, and twenty somethings must ask whether that has
wider implications about how our peers view us socially, politically and professionally.
Apparently the whole issue of who shaves and who does not is an important feminist issue. But we do wonder if the authors have looked at the broad range of porn that is out there, or perhaps have focused on one particular aspect of it. But nevermind, the helpful Internet, with its social networking and online commentary, comes to their rescue.
One
man wrote in response something along the lines of: he personally
watches a lot of pornography on the internet and it generally involves
big hunky men doing nasty things to other big hunky men and he
absolutely guarantees that there are no women involved, shaved or otherwise.
Then
a woman commented that she likes watching pornography of shaved women
being used by big hunky men and so do a lot of her friends and
is this editorial saying that they should stop watching it because
that isn't bloody likely.
A
second man wrote in to share with us that he felt that this editorial
was absolutely correct and that men were being awful here and that if
she wanted to step all over him with her boots in punishment or maybe
spit on him, that would be ok with him because he certainly deserved
it. All men deserved to be beaten by women, he seemed to be saying.
But
here is the coup de grace: many people felt that this last
comment (on being abused by women) was "creepy"
and made them uneasy. In other words, their sexual preference was
ok, but his... well, not so much.
At Global Wahrman we want to go on record to say that we are happy to hear that people are enjoying themselves and want to encourage this type of behavior as long as everyone involved is a consenting adult and takes a shower afterwards.
For another more amusing slant on the issue of sex from what may be a feminist point of view, consider In Defense of Bad Sex by Laurie Penney
Thursday, November 21, 2013
Impressions of NYC, November 2013 (revised)
[revised 11/26/2013]
This was my first trip back to NYC
since about 2004 or so. For my benefit more than anything else,
these are my notes about what has and has not changed in the city
from my lowly point of view.
1. It was shocking to me how quickly my
knowledge about how to get around had deteriorated. You forget
which streets are one way, you forget which is the uptown/downtown
entrance to the subways. You stop at crosswalks instead of blasting
right through with an eye on the incoming traffic. I reached for
my little fold out map maybe 200 times in 8 days. When I lived
there, I never needed a map. You spend a LOT more money on taxi's
because at some point you just say, "fuck it, get me there",
where a local would just walk or take the subway. I got lost
maybe a dozen times and I never used to get lost in Manhattan.
There is obviously some backstory here
2. There continues to be a disturbing
trend towards branded nationwide chains in Manhattan.
3. The taxis have done away with the
celebrity greetings, which were there to try and make tourists feel
better about using taxicabs. I miss hearing Rodney Dangerfield
remind me to take my bags as I left. There is in its place a nice
GPS map of Manhattan showing you where you are if you knew how to get
at it on the touch panel display. Oh Brave New World !
4. Pizza has gone from being $1.50 for
a slice of plain to $2.50.
My barber in Little Italy
6. The perceived expense of visiting NY
is real. NY is much less expensive to live in than to visit
assuming you have a reasonable place to live. The money is spent on
hotels (or whereever it is you stay), transportation and to some
extent on food depending on whether you eat out all the time. Is
this worse than other cities? Not really, I think. Maybe hotel
rooms are more expensive overall. But taxis are less expensive in NY
than in LA, although of course you tend to use them more in NY.
7. Taking a taxi from LAX to Culver
City is nearly $40.00 today.
8. More of NY is going upscale, and
some of the older neighborhoods are changing. Broome street, where I
was staying, is midway in the process of becoming a trendy, soho-like
place.
Tom Brigham in front of House of Vegetarian
9. The new "world trade center"
is just ok. Its a nice enough building except for the stupid tower
on top to try and make it seem taller than it is. It is not the WTC
in either scale or impressiveness, but I don't think anyone will
really care in a few years. Lets see how they do with the monument.
I am not holding my breathe.
10. Little Italy is much reduced.
Apparently this happened long ago, when I was still living there, as
a way of reducing the influence of certain Sicilian families, they
tell me.
11. Chinatown is still there and as
weird as ever.
12. But most of all what impressed me
is that NYC is drop dead beautiful. The architecture, the lighting,
the weather and the people all makes for a dramatic and fascinating
place to live.
13. As always when in NY one should buy a Metrocard, which is a little card which keeps subway and other transit fares, like a phone card. You can put any amount of money on the card, but when one buys a certain amount you get a decent discount so you should do that. What the Metrocard does for you is to make any of the mass transit systems in NY easier to use. No fumbling for money, no exact change, no waiting in line for a ticket. You just swipe your card through the turnstile and it lets you through and tells you your balance.
On this trip I was staying in a part of town I rarely spent much time in (Broome street near Christie, near Chinatown) and I did not know how it really fit into the subways. I needed to go to B&H Photo at 34th street and as I was pondering whether I felt like walking 30+ blocks, a 3rd Avenue bus went by. So I took out my Metrocard and I was on the uptown bus, which stops at 34th street. Ok, admittedly, I got a little lucky here. But the idea behind a well-designed and run transit system is that tourists and residents should get lucky now and then.
14. I always have conversations with my cab drivers. I dont know why, maybe it puts me at ease, but they are almost always interesting people to talk to, usually recent immigrants (where recent can be as much as 10 years or so). Usually pretty fluent in English.
15. I found that after a while, I enjoyed staying at Arlene's Home for Wayward Children, where I had a couch and shared the bathroom with six other people. Everyone was well behaved and easy to get along with, even Arlene when you calmed her down. I could live there for a while and be perfectly happy. If only I could afford it. Not a giant fan of that part of town (Broome and Christie) but there are people who swear by it. I am more of an upper west side kind of guy, I suppose.
16. Its nice to see a technology community thriving in NYC. I hope it persists and continues to thrive, it gives me some hope that I would be able to find suitable employment there one day.
13. As always when in NY one should buy a Metrocard, which is a little card which keeps subway and other transit fares, like a phone card. You can put any amount of money on the card, but when one buys a certain amount you get a decent discount so you should do that. What the Metrocard does for you is to make any of the mass transit systems in NY easier to use. No fumbling for money, no exact change, no waiting in line for a ticket. You just swipe your card through the turnstile and it lets you through and tells you your balance.
On this trip I was staying in a part of town I rarely spent much time in (Broome street near Christie, near Chinatown) and I did not know how it really fit into the subways. I needed to go to B&H Photo at 34th street and as I was pondering whether I felt like walking 30+ blocks, a 3rd Avenue bus went by. So I took out my Metrocard and I was on the uptown bus, which stops at 34th street. Ok, admittedly, I got a little lucky here. But the idea behind a well-designed and run transit system is that tourists and residents should get lucky now and then.
14. I always have conversations with my cab drivers. I dont know why, maybe it puts me at ease, but they are almost always interesting people to talk to, usually recent immigrants (where recent can be as much as 10 years or so). Usually pretty fluent in English.
15. I found that after a while, I enjoyed staying at Arlene's Home for Wayward Children, where I had a couch and shared the bathroom with six other people. Everyone was well behaved and easy to get along with, even Arlene when you calmed her down. I could live there for a while and be perfectly happy. If only I could afford it. Not a giant fan of that part of town (Broome and Christie) but there are people who swear by it. I am more of an upper west side kind of guy, I suppose.
16. Its nice to see a technology community thriving in NYC. I hope it persists and continues to thrive, it gives me some hope that I would be able to find suitable employment there one day.
Saturday, November 16, 2013
Rodents of Unusual Size Found in Ancient Italy
When life imitates art, one must ask
how the artists knew what they knew and when they knew it. Did they
just make a lucky but inspired guess, or were they diligent enough to research the topic and talk to a specialist and then make a
considered and informed extrapolation of what is known into the
unknown? (1) Movies about the future and the distant past know in
advance that they must make predictions where certain knowledge is
missing, but even in these cases the filmmakers shrug off an
obligation to make solidly grounded predictions and lapse into the
cheap or predictable.
I would say that cheap and predictable
is Hollywood's metier.
However it occurred, in the case we
have here the filmmakers have unexpectedly triumphed when they
probably just thought they were creating an inexpensive but exciting
moment in a film that has a certain reputation for being unusually
entertaining. I am referring here to the "rodents of unusual
size" in the esteemed movie The Princess Bride (1987).
To refresh your memory, the kidnapped
princess and the Dread Pirate Roberts, revealed to be her former
servant and lover, Wesley, try to escape their pursuers in the Fire
Swamp, known to be inhabited by horrible ROUS, which are "rodents
of unusual size". Of course they are attacked by ROUSes
(ROUSi?) in the swamp and a terrible battle ensues before they are
able to defeat the ROUSes and escape the swamp. The ROUSes are not
a shining moment in the history of visual effects, being somewhat
cheesy and, well, ratty in appearance.
Although filmgoers of today demand the
highest quality in visual effects, the best that technology can
imagine for their quota of zombies, giant robots, and superheroines,
it wasn't always so. Back in the day, long ago, movies were often
about telling a story and made economic use of the resources
available. The effects only had to be good enough to move the story
forward. In some cases, one could even accuse the filmmakers of
being tongue-in-cheek cheesy. The gopher in Caddyshack (1980)
comes to mind.
So we might dismiss the ROUSes as being
merely enlarged and fictional examples of an imaginary
rodentia, until
science made the following amazing discovery. Apparently, in ancient
italy, rodents of unusual size, giant hedgehogs, roamed the countryside, eating and
otherwise annoying the other flora and fauna of its time. Although
this is probably just a lucky guess on the part of the filmmakers, I
think you will agree that it is an amazing resemblance.
It may be a hedgehog but it certainly looks like a rodent to me
Since one of the theme's here at Global
Wahrman is to analyze the process by which one can successfully predict the future, we plan to use this example in our case studies of
successful, if inadvertent, predictions.
Read more about the Ancient Rodent
________________________________
1. In this case, I think we can rule
out the use of Atlantean Crystal Wisdom. There is no evidence to
suggest that any of the filmmakers were aware of and using the
Esoteric Knowledge.
Wednesday, November 13, 2013
NY Tech Meetup and the Delusion of Optimism
When I was in New York, I had the
opportunity to attend the November meeting of the oddly named "New
York Tech Meetup" at NYU's Skirball Center. The November
meeting is reserved for academic presentations, e.g. presentations of
new technology (or old technology) by universities and schools,
professors and students. We had 20 presentations and each lasting
about 3 minutes long.
High School students frisbee throwing robot that failed to throw frisbees
We had one set of
students who had used image understanding software to cheat at
completing jigsaw puzzles. Another group of students (high
schoolers) had built a robot that threw frisbees. We had a Harvard
based group of people who showed their website that allowed programs
to be written with a visible programming language from MIT that
allowed you to snap pieces of programs together. And we had our own
NYU Media Research Lab show the current status of a very inexpensive
immersive reality system that used about $500 in parts.
Backstage at Skirball with Ken Perlin and Students getting the immersive reality demo to work
But the audience was the most impressive part. Maybe 500 to 600 people, all enthusiastic, all well dressed, all maybe 25-45 years old. All of them ready to do that big tech startup and get rich!
When it was all over, we had a
reception hosted by, I think, Google. On the 10th floor, a view of Manhattan, and filled with enthusiastic people "networking".
So you know me, Mr Reality here. Mr Sourpuss here. I go and find the organizers and complement them, but mention one little issue I had: "It
was all so upbeat" I said. "It was all so optimistic"
"Well, whats the matter with that?" they asked.
"Well, whats the matter with that?" they asked.
You do realize that there is 25%
unemployment in this country, right? That there are more people on
food stamps today than have ever been, and it is not because of some
stupid right wing craziness about lazy people. That 9 out of 10
startups fail, right? You know that, right?
They just looked at me in horror and
turned away.
Sorry to spoil their party, I guess.
http://nytm.org/
________________________________________
This PS may be unnecessary, it may actually be in a comment. So read the comments! -- MW
P.S. Ok, the point has been made by one of our NY correspondents that this is a bit too negative. In fact, even if 9 of 10 fail, the 1 surviving may end up hiring all the others. Also, we should not fail to encourage those who might improve themselves by their own initiative. OK, sure, I agree with this, but let us not on the other hand have unbounded optimism either. Many will fail, and failure can be painful and destructive.
Also, I feel rather strongly that if you want to succeed in America, it is helpful to have a lot of money. It is possible to succeed without a lot of money, but it is a lot harder.
________________________________________
This PS may be unnecessary, it may actually be in a comment. So read the comments! -- MW
P.S. Ok, the point has been made by one of our NY correspondents that this is a bit too negative. In fact, even if 9 of 10 fail, the 1 surviving may end up hiring all the others. Also, we should not fail to encourage those who might improve themselves by their own initiative. OK, sure, I agree with this, but let us not on the other hand have unbounded optimism either. Many will fail, and failure can be painful and destructive.
Also, I feel rather strongly that if you want to succeed in America, it is helpful to have a lot of money. It is possible to succeed without a lot of money, but it is a lot harder.
Tuesday, November 12, 2013
NYC Trip Report November 2013
(draft, photos to follow)
There are about 100 things that
occurred during this trip, and it is not clear to me what, if any of
them will be of interest to you.
This post gets all the little things
out of the way. The more interesting things will be separate posts
of their own over the next week.
1. By being absent from NY for several
years, my expertise in getting around decays. I estimate a 2X
penalty in time and money for the amateur (e.g. tourist) getting
around NY.
2. The World Trade Center replacement
is adequate. It looks nice at night. It is in no way a replacement
for the mass of the original building(s), nor is it interesting
enough on its own merit to be a replacement. However, I think this
is all irrelevant, in a few years, no one will care.
3. There is an amusing statue
commemorating the special forces who went into Afghanistan
immediately after 911. The siginficance of the American mounted on
a horse will not be lost on those who know the history of the cavalry
in this country.
4. The cost of a slice of plain pizza
has gone up to $2.50.
5. The State of NY is pulling out the
stops to encourage technology startups. More on this in later
posts.
6. I found the documentation at the
Metropolitan on their exhibits to be irritating. More on this in a
later post.
7. The former ease with which I dealt
with my ADHD medication in NYC is no longer. Yes, the DEA has struck
even here.
8. B&H is much larger, much more
computer oriented, and a great resource. I actually had people who
knew somewhat about cameras help me with my temporary digital camera
choice. It was a great experience.
9. United has really pissed me off with
its reticketing policy. I have switched to American Airlines. Alert
the media.
10. The weather in NY was amazingly
warm.
Monday, November 4, 2013
Arrival in NY, NYU, Brigham, Speer and the Virgin Mary
Revised 11/11/2013
Dearest Marie
I have arrived safely in New York City, a city I have heard so much about but not really visited since earlier in the century. These notes will record some of my impressions and now that I have given into Satan and bought a digital camera, some pictures as well eventually.
Your idea of buying a cheap notebook worked great, mostly. Windows 8 can be tamed it turns out, Microsoft is its own worst enemy. The keyboard can be used but the mousepad is so big on the palm rest that if you indeed use it as a rest you mess with the touchpad and your mouse goes to hell and gone.
I checked into NYU and Perlin arranged for me to have a badge! I did not have the heart to tell him that I still had my old one from 2000. They want me to return it when done, fat chance. The 12th floor looks very very similar to the way I remembered it. I feel bad bothering people when I need something. Ken has an interesting vision and we will see where it all goes. I know from experience that in academia, things are complicated and may not be what they seem. Danger everywhere!
I did notice that Chris Bregler when he did motion capture did not use the basic ballerina / stripper approach of so many of his peers, but went straight for an Olympic diving champion. I applaud his taste in exploiting women and plan to complement him on this the next time I see him
I found Tom Brigham, and he is doing better than I expected. His subterranean basement appears at first to be a junk room, but when you go further in you see there is order in the madness. He thinks this is camoflage, but I think its just bad marketing. He has to convince people he is not a flake, and presenting his office/workshop as a pile of junk to the casual observer is the wrong approach.
Speer took me around on Saturday and we got in Chelsea, the MET and some music. The man is a dynamo of energy, the prototypical uber-new-yorker. If I had stayed with him on Sunday instead of doing who knows what I would have seen the apparaitions of the virgin mary as photographed by the fabulous Veronica Leueken. The Church does not believe these are true visions of the Virgin, then what are they?
These are her predictions as recorded in her ecstatic visions. See link below. Note that in 1977 under Revolutions she predicts the 3 W as a sign of the end times. 3W could mean 3 wars, or could it mean she predicted the WWW (world wide web) as a sign of the coming collapse of civilization?
http://www.roses.org/prophecy/seqevnt.htm
But now I must get out of Arlene's shelter for the poor here on Broome street and face the cold hard world and go to NYU and play with all the great stuff that Perlin has collected.
PS The MET was wonderful but the Rome exhibit was very underwhelming.
I miss you greatly and look forward to returning to our little Rancho in Siberia.
Your devoted Dimitri.
Dearest Marie
I have arrived safely in New York City, a city I have heard so much about but not really visited since earlier in the century. These notes will record some of my impressions and now that I have given into Satan and bought a digital camera, some pictures as well eventually.
Your idea of buying a cheap notebook worked great, mostly. Windows 8 can be tamed it turns out, Microsoft is its own worst enemy. The keyboard can be used but the mousepad is so big on the palm rest that if you indeed use it as a rest you mess with the touchpad and your mouse goes to hell and gone.
I checked into NYU and Perlin arranged for me to have a badge! I did not have the heart to tell him that I still had my old one from 2000. They want me to return it when done, fat chance. The 12th floor looks very very similar to the way I remembered it. I feel bad bothering people when I need something. Ken has an interesting vision and we will see where it all goes. I know from experience that in academia, things are complicated and may not be what they seem. Danger everywhere!
I did notice that Chris Bregler when he did motion capture did not use the basic ballerina / stripper approach of so many of his peers, but went straight for an Olympic diving champion. I applaud his taste in exploiting women and plan to complement him on this the next time I see him
I found Tom Brigham, and he is doing better than I expected. His subterranean basement appears at first to be a junk room, but when you go further in you see there is order in the madness. He thinks this is camoflage, but I think its just bad marketing. He has to convince people he is not a flake, and presenting his office/workshop as a pile of junk to the casual observer is the wrong approach.
Speer took me around on Saturday and we got in Chelsea, the MET and some music. The man is a dynamo of energy, the prototypical uber-new-yorker. If I had stayed with him on Sunday instead of doing who knows what I would have seen the apparaitions of the virgin mary as photographed by the fabulous Veronica Leueken. The Church does not believe these are true visions of the Virgin, then what are they?
These are her predictions as recorded in her ecstatic visions. See link below. Note that in 1977 under Revolutions she predicts the 3 W as a sign of the end times. 3W could mean 3 wars, or could it mean she predicted the WWW (world wide web) as a sign of the coming collapse of civilization?
http://www.roses.org/prophecy/seqevnt.htm
But now I must get out of Arlene's shelter for the poor here on Broome street and face the cold hard world and go to NYU and play with all the great stuff that Perlin has collected.
PS The MET was wonderful but the Rome exhibit was very underwhelming.
I miss you greatly and look forward to returning to our little Rancho in Siberia.
Your devoted Dimitri.
Wednesday, October 30, 2013
Late Breaking News: BOIDS tests from 1986 Found
Just as I walk out the door to NYC, I read some old email, and find that Tom McMahon has resurrected the long missing Boids tests from Stanley and Stella.
Boids are what we called the early behavioral animation tests by Craig Reynolds. It was to showcase that technology that we did the film Stanley and Stella. This is all shot off the screen of a very low res Symbolics window.
I thought these were lost forever.
When I get back from NY, I will add some more pictures.
The test video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=96LIKfKcoxk#t=170
Boids are what we called the early behavioral animation tests by Craig Reynolds. It was to showcase that technology that we did the film Stanley and Stella. This is all shot off the screen of a very low res Symbolics window.
I thought these were lost forever.
When I get back from NY, I will add some more pictures.
The test video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=96LIKfKcoxk#t=170
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