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Author: Josh

Daily Journal – Monday, 1/29/24

The Super Bowl is set after two good if error-filled performances from teams I thought had better chances. I really feel for Detroit’s fans, but I strongly suspect they’re still early in their window. Baltimore, on the other hand, feels like an evolution is coming, either in running game personnel or in the wide receiver room. Lamar far too often looks as if he has to do it all himself. Which he’s capable of in many circumstances, but not enough to carry him to a title. Just putting it here now to point at later, but I can see them charming King Henry into taking a veteran minimum deal to head up that backfield.

Inputs

1: First up, something elided over in the movies and TV shows, but clear if you’ve ever A) used VR or B) been on a treadmill before: Movement in VR via omni-directional treadmill won’t work without some severe advancement in biochemical manipulation.

I walk 30 minutes on the treadmill (nearly) every day. The first few times I was on it, I had the strangest sensation after hopping back off, where actually walking around felt odd because I’d spent half an hour moving my legs without my proprioception or vision changing. So, after moving on normal ground again, my vestibular system and the change in my location lent a weird spacial sense of wrongness to everything as I actually moved after having fake moved for so long. Over time this sense dulls and the transition isn’t jarring any longer, but at first, it’s a bit staggering.

Additionally, something happens to people when first using VR and the visual changes don’t match up with their physical sensations. This is why so many VR games and experiences use a sort of redraw hopping from place to place rather than simulating forward movement. Feeling as if your eyes are seeing you move when your body doesn’t feel movement is the same sort of thing that happens, evolutionarily, when you’ve ingested poison. Your body knows what to do when it thinks it’s been poisoned.

Those two differences combined mean that while you can simulate visual movement, and you can allow for a physical sensation of moving your feet along an infinite surface, you cannot trick your nervous system into believing you’re actually changing your physical location quite so easily. Player One is not quite Ready yet.

2: I’m a sucker for a process. I love watching videos of people making things, especially in wood (as an intrigued and often awe-struck fellow woodworker nowhere near that level of talent). So this series of paintings of the making and transportation of porcelain goods in 18th century China is fascinating, for the details of the processes and the thought behind capturing such things being as universal and lasting as it has been.

The juxtaposition of the beauty of the landscapes and venues and the various duties and lives of the people working through a collective process, creating mass-produced art, is enthralling to look through and imagine in motion and action. Also intriguing: these paintings themselves were made for export as consumer art. Created trade goods about the creation and trade of goods.

3: I’m a sucker for a map. I own two versions of these maps charting subsea communication cables across the world, mounted in my office1Which is how I learned that framing things is expensive as hell, even though they look very nice.. This post, about the lack of complexity inherent to fantasy maps and worldbuilding, highlights an interesting problem of fiction regarding verisimilitude, in that it can never get anywhere near the fractal layers of history and experience inherent to reality, and that trying to get there only further shines a light on the dark places.

Notes:

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    Which is how I learned that framing things is expensive as hell, even though they look very nice.

Daily Journal – Friday, 1/26/24

It’s the end of an interesting week. Paperwork’s still processing, so I don’t want to say anything definitive in print, but, well, good things afoot. Hoping I’ll feel confident enough to say more soon here. In the meantime, read on for three weird bits to close out the week!

Inputs

1: I honestly don’t understand what the governor of Texas thinks he’s up to, except asking to get brought up on federal charges and leaning on the opinion of his Attorney General who has already been impeached and nearly convicted once. An entire state government fucking around, asking to find out.

2: As an English major, I have a license1Per Justin Freiberg at least to make up words.2I am nowhere near as verbose at doing so as Shakespeare was. Many of the fun ones are his, like critic, negotiate, and savagery. However, it’s the words we steal from other languages into English, the bastard of tongues, that are some of the most interesting. Hurricane, cigar, barbeque, and more.

3: I’m not one for psychedelics, but listening to the experiences of Neil Brennan…I’m still not one for psychedelics. However, this discussion between he and Pablo Torre does make the whole experience seem something worth pursuing. Y’know, for other people.

Notes:

Daily Journal – Thursday, 1/25/24

Today’s edition seems to focus a lot on skepticism and the harsh nature of reality scratching up the smooth surface of idealism and desire. The world is complex and dirty and difficult, and any time someone wants to sell you on it being simple, pay close attention to what they’re eliding over. The trick is in the misdirection, in encouraging you not to notice the action in the other hand, the string hidden behind the back, the difficult, dangerous machinery that lurks in the eaves, cloaked in shadows by the glittering lights.

Inputs

1: Spent some time reading about the current state of quantum computing and the general (reasonable) skepticism about breakthroughs or tangible real-world usage being just over the horizon. A telling tidbit:

Troyer and his colleagues compared a single Nvidia A100 GPU against a fictional future fault-tolerant quantum computer with 10,000 “logical qubits” and gates times much faster than today’s devices. Troyer says they found that a quantum algorithm with a quadratic speed up would have to run for centuries, or even millennia, before it could outperform a classical one on problems big enough to be useful.

https://spectrum.ieee.org/quantum-computing-skeptics

The technology is amazing, the pictures of it elegant and beautiful, but the applications are still a ways off. The chief concern here is that this sort of intensive R&D work has been trimmed from corporate budgets at every turn, and the thought that we could lose out on a future because of the pressure to stare at the end of the fiscal quarter is disheartening.

2: You may or may not have heard about the “AI-generated” George Carlin special that was released recently. I’m not telling you to go watch that (fuck everything about the thought of that), but I am interested in this theory, that it wasn’t actually written by AI and instead some AWESOM-O-esque farce written by a human or humans trying to pose as AI through voice generation software.

3: Hey, train robberies are back! Dutch and the gang have saddled up again and are apparently after your Amazon orders. Also, the issue is large enough that the LAPD has put together a “Train Burglary Task Force,” which, given the nature of police institutions, must have some sort of patch or logo for it, but damned if I can find it. If you do, lemme know!