Saturday, June 5, 2021

8a) Oh, the Humanity

 
8a1a) Super Mario Bros: The Human Limit

8a1b) A fascinating look into community problem solving. 

A player community spread across the internet has a puzzle to solve. At first only the best compete. But it ignites imagination among others. As a result, more efficient and quicker solutions are teased out. By both designing and using digital tracking tools, they find where they need to improve physical coordination to solve the human limit. In the end, the player community reduces nearly every movement to maximum efficiency, approaching the once impossible human limit. Given the evolution from definition to efficient action, we can assume there will be more to tell. 
       
This is more than just a speed-run solution. It is humans doing what they’ve always done best. Using technological apparatuses to work together to solve problems. While this particular story is focused on speed-running Super Mario Bros, this player community shows us at our best–the best of the human community in the miniature and specific.

2a) Daily Zen

 2a1) These are the tape recordings of Richard Feynman's 1961-64 Caltech Introductory Physics lectures, which form the basis of the book The Feynman Lectures on Physics. The original recordings were made on 1/4" reel-to-reel tapes, now preserved in Caltech's Archive. In 2010 the entire collection was digitized by media preservationist George Blood, at a sampling rate of 96 kHz with 24-bit samples, PCM-encoded in tiff files about 2 GB each in size. For this online publication we are serving more compact versions, downsampled to 48 kHz with 16-bit samples, reencoded as AAC-HE (mp4) and Opus (ogg) at a data rate of 48 kbps.

Friday, June 4, 2021

8c) Force for Change

8c1) AMC said on Thursday that it did not know "how long these dynamics will last.
        "Under the circumstances, we caution you against investing in our Class A common stock, unless you are prepared to incur the risk of losing all or a substantial portion of your investment," it said.
        Analysts have also warned that the stock may be overvalued due to the rise of streaming and competition from other entertainment companies.
        David Trainer, chief executive of investment research firm New Constructs, said: "AMC's business was trending in the wrong direction even prior to the Covid-19 pandemic... We think AMC's stock is worth $0 per share, given its weak earnings, dilution from recent stock offerings and mountain of debt."
Despite that, AMC has been among the biggest winners from a spike of interest in meme stocks, fuelled in part by a new generation of social media-centric small traders.
        On Wednesday, #AMCstock was trending on Twitter in the US as investors discussed their holdings and the share price nearly doubled.
        The Securities and Exchange Commission chairman Gary Gensler said at a hearing last month that it will report on issues around volatile "meme" stocks this summer.
He said that although online forums such as Reddit can serve as a "real community", he is concerned about "the risks that nefarious actors may try to send signals to manipulate the market".


8c2a) Follow Matt Levine at Bloomberg for humorous and informative analysis on financial markets, but specifically the recent spate of meme stocks and the cult of Elon Musk.

8c2b) but I do feel like a healthy dose of nonsense is what is needed here. The way to understand AMC is to abandon your conscious mind for a while and just float on a sea of vague associations. How boring to apply traditional notions of corporate finance or supply and demand to AMC. AMC is a new thing.



8c3) Even when cultural change happens swiftly, it's hard to be aware of what is actually changing and how it will affect the future. In some ways, the future ends up becoming subtly weirder than could be imagined in the present. 
        Um...but the idea that were living in some sort of science fiction scenario is becoming more salient
        Yes. It's a bit of a cliche to claim the future is happening in our time. Not much different than wearing a sandwich board declaring the end is near. But it seems as if the COVID pandemic produced forces that superheated the rate of change. 
        The internet has been a latent agent for change since its widely adopted use. In actuality, it hasn't done much more than prove Marshall McLuhan's point that the medium is the message. In the sense that there wasn't much more there than what appeared on the surface–a grand web of mutual communication, full of humans being human. 
        Yes. It has changed our cultural reality in some subtle and also not so subtle ways. But now it's getting truly weird. 
        The Occupy Wall Street movement did not accomplish much more than giving some bored kids a vacation from reality. Granted, I am being reductionist. But take meme stocks as an example. Even if concentrated in a few isolated firms, they are driving financial markets. 
        Value is a concept of socially constructed belief. It's utility is based on what we believe that utility might be. The best tool for the job also requires an awareness of how to use the tool with efficiency and skill. Otherwise, it's just an inert artifact. 
        For benefit or detriment, the people have discovered the power of the internet. File sharing, black hat hacking, 4Chan, QAnon, all these were arguably pranks. Children playing in the shallows. But from potentially terrifying ransomware hacks to the populist uprising of r/WallStreetBets, the pandemic seemingly produced enough time and boredom to turn the internet into a true force for change. 
        Force for change. How often that phrase, or something like it, is used as a beacon of hope. An indicator that this place we are in won't last forever. that the future is brighter. I tend to think so. But we should also be careful what we wish for. The ripples of the pandemic have only begun to show. 

8b) Thing or Device?

8b1) Twitter announced on Thursday the launch of Twitter Blue, the company’s first subscription service designed for power users willing to pay a monthly fee for exclusive features.
        Twitter Blue users will get an Undo Tweet feature that allows them to set a customizable timer of up to 30 seconds to take back a tweet if it needs to be fixed. The feature is not quite an edit button, a feature often requested by users, but it will allow subscribers to preview what their tweets look like and adjust them before they’re published. 


8b2) For Borgmann, a device is a thing that is used as a means to an end. Therefore, a device is seen as "the compound of commodity and machinery" while "the distinctive pattern of division and connection of its components is the device paradigm. This term is meant to signify or distinguish between technological devices and "focal things and practices," which matter to people in their everyday affairs.
        A focal thing is something of ultimate concern and significance, which may be masked by the device paradigm, and must be preserved by its intimate connection with practice. Borgmann used the case of wine to explain this. He cited that the focal thing in winemaking involves the implements used to produce wine. Wine becomes a device when it employs technology and machinery not merely to produce wine but obtain specific qualities such as grapey, smooth, light, and fruity flavors or clean and clear appearance.
        As technological devices increase the availability of a commodity or service, they also push these devices into the background where people do not pay attention to their destructive tendencies. For example, the technology of central heating means that warmth is readily available and family members can retreat into the solitude of their rooms instead of working to chop wood or stoke the fires. Social interaction is reduced and the family struggles to find activities that enable such nurturing and care for each other. The ubiquitous nature of information technology also makes it an important example of device paradigm.



8a) What the Bene Gesserit knew–memes rule.

8a1) In a new study, University of Maine researchers found that culture helps humans adapt to their environment and overcome challenges better and faster than genetics.
        After conducting an extensive review of the literature and evidence of long-term human evolution, scientists Tim Waring and Zach Wood concluded that humans are experiencing a "special evolutionary transition" in which the importance of culture, such as learned knowledge, practices and skills, is surpassing the value of genes as the primary driver of human evolution.
        Culture is an under-appreciated factor in human evolution, Waring says. Like genes, culture helps people adjust to their environment and meet the challenges of survival and reproduction. Culture, however, does so more effectively than genes because the transfer of knowledge is faster and more flexible than the inheritance of genes, according to Waring and Wood.
        Culture is a stronger mechanism of adaptation for a couple of reasons, Waring says. It's faster: gene transfer occurs only once a generation, while cultural practices can be rapidly learned and frequently updated. Culture is also more flexible than genes: gene transfer is rigid and limited to the genetic information of two parents, while cultural transmission is based on flexible human learning and effectively unlimited with the ability to make use of information from peers and experts far beyond parents. As a result, cultural evolution is a stronger type of adaptation than old genetics. 


8a2) A major concept guides the Missionaria Protectiva: Purposeful instruction of the masses. This is firmly seated in our belief that the aim of argument should be to change the nature of truth. In such matters, we prefer the use of power rather than force.
The Coda
Frank Herbert – Chapterhouse Dune


4a) Daily Zen

 
4a1) Cowboy Bebop OST Mix

4a2) Much more on Yoko Kanno, the mastermind behind Cowboy Bebop's varied and multicolored sound

In Watanabe, Kanno had finally found a director who was arguably as interested in the way anime sounded as she was. For Watanabe Bebop was a world filled with Jazz and Blues and though this was a world with which Kanno herself was initially unfamiliar, her willingness to see music as an open language, rather than as something to be viewed through the perspectives of genre, meant it was a world she was happy to embrace. 
 


4a3) See you space cowboy...

Thursday, June 3, 2021

7a) Aha!

 
7a1a) Costanza - George (vaporwave mixtape)

7a1b) "What's the deal with vaporwave, it's like you bring music from another generation and then slow it down, add some kicks. Boom you got vapor-wave!" -Seinfeld (maybe?)
jSplat16 form the comments



7a2a) It's a big salad chock full of bouncing beats. A quirky bald man of a mix even Marisa Tomei could love. It's not manure–it's mah-newer. 

"When you consider the choices, manure is actually pretty refreshing."

7a2b) Thanks to friend Crispin for the heads up. 

2b)060321_2a2 Counterpoint

 2b1) The progress of technology, says Borgmann, is driving us further into what he calls “the device paradigm”. The point of a device lies solely in its output — what he calls its commodity. The commodity of central heating is warmth. The commodity of a car is transportation. And unlike a thing, a device gives its users that commodity disconnected from the process of its creation. Frozen food lets you have a meal without cooking it for yourself. Central heating lets you have warmth without fussing around with a wood stove. A device is a kind of shortcut to its commodity. And if we think that all we really want is that commodity — then we want the device to hide from us all the mechanisms by which it creates those commodities. We want the process shoved out of sight, excised from our lives. So we make better devices, that give us faster access to what we think we want. They are better, from our perspective, because they further disentangle the commodity from all these other burdensome elements.
        Of course, the key is that we only think these other elements are burdensome. But these burdensome elements also drive us into the complex world, says Borgmann. They drive us into social relationships, into activity, into a rich and sensuous experience of the detailed world. Devices divest us of that. They give us only the thing that we thought we had wanted. But that’s good only if we know exactly what’s good for us.


2b2) Even though on some level Nguyen takes a more pessimistic view of the technological apparatus that is a hallmark of human life than Deutsch does below, they largely agree on the ability of humans to think beyond their tools. 
        The great joke of 2001: A Space Odyssey is that the zero-gravity toilet has a complicated list of instructions. Humanity has escaped their terrestrial cradle, only to be trapped by the most basic biological function. 
        But this is also Deutsch's point. 
        Utopia is monotony. Life without change is monotony. Creativity is flattened and the horizon of change stretches beyond the human lifetime. But life itself, the memetic and biological concept carries and integrates change. Creating layers of complexity forming and reforming its environment to its purpose. Change quickens and is controlled. Unintended consequences abound, but are eventually bound.  Creating more unintended consequences and contributing to the cycle of change. Making each new (r)evolutionary act yet another opportunity to stave off monotony.
        Zoom is a but a blip in technological history. Certainly not in Nguyen's life. But Nguyen is also offered a chance to use that most human skill, reflection. And pass it on to us. In the end, he has changed the consideration of the device allowing him to continue to use the device without allowing the device to use him. 
        Deutsch says that "Humans are not playthings of cosmic forces. We are users of cosmic forces." As Deutsch appears "in person" by remote at TED, as Nguyen teaches "in person" on Zoom, our reality changes. Explanatory information is passed on, offering us all an opportunity to control cosmic forces. 
 
Things spread their tendrils through our lives, they reshape our interactions and procedures in a thousand countless ways.

And isn't that the wonder of being human. 

.

2a) Daily Zen

2a1) David Deutsch - Why is the Quantum so Strange?


2a2) After billions of years of monotony, the universe is waking up | David Deutsch


Wednesday, June 2, 2021

2a) Through a Glass Darkly

2a1) In the spirit of Nietzsche–the textual experience being user defined–here are three recent artifacts that share common threads. Honestly, I sense the golden thread more than I can articulate at the time of this post. Conclusions belong to the future, waiting to coalesce. But with the intent of marking the path in spacetime, here are some white stones to follow.


2a2) Among the forms of “moralistic mendaciousness” that Nietzsche attacked, none repulsed him more than the “ascetic ideal,” the pursuit of “poverty, humility, chastity.” Asceticism was “the harmful ideal par excellence,” for it justified suffering, turning it into a ritualized practice. In Nietzsche’s writing, the aristocratic priests with their “quack-cures” preached asceticism to channel the ressentiment of the dispossessed away from revolt. Asceticism enters “Heaven” through Kojima. We learn that the cheap clothes and humble appearance that mark her for suffering—“my signs,” she calls them—are, unlike the narrator’s eye, entirely self-willed. She has a rich stepfather, whom she despises; her poverty is affected, in solidarity with her biological father, who is virtually destitute and incapable of doing anything about it. Desperate to internalize his “beautiful weakness” as her own, she becomes obsessed with purity and self-abnegation. The narrator watches as she adds new “signs”: she stops eating and bathes less and less, turning into an uncanny, priestly figure, half saint, half monster. She is distraught when the narrator considers corrective surgery for his eye, arguing that he must learn to submit to his bullying:
We’re not just obeying, not anymore. We’re letting it happen. We know exactly what’s going on. We see it, and we let it happen. I don’t think that’s weakness at all. It’s more like strength.
Kojima’s preaching is parried by the bully Momose, the raging spirit of Nietzschean nihilism, ready to dismiss everything Kojima says as “total bullshit.” Good and bad, he tells the narrator, are values determined by the powerful. There is “no beautiful world where everyone thinks the same way,” no God or higher authority to redeem suffering as meaningful:
It’s just that some people can do things, and others can’t. There are things that they want to do and things that they don’t. Everyone has their own likes and dislikes. It couldn’t be any simpler. People do what they can get away with.
Blunt statements like these may come off as juvenile, but a certain immaturity is latent in Kawakami’s source material. “Altered is Zarathustra; a child has Zarathustra become,” Nietzsche writes approvingly, of the prophet’s manner of thought and speech. Like a child, he can think about ideas with divine frankness and unguarded simplicity. Untutored in self-deception, undisciplined by lifelong coercion and punishment in what Nietzsche calls “the morality of custom,” the child remains open to many different meanings of being good. Like the narrator’s eye, the figure of the child is a brilliant device, allowing Kawakami to get away with dissolving elemental ideas into the confusion of adolescent relationships.


2a3) To the extent that the powerless—however defined—are treated as deserving of greater advantage than the powerful, it seems natural that many will claim and aspire to be powerless. We should expect a commensurate increase in mental health cases amongst the young (who come of age under the principle of “equity”). Since mental health is, in part, a function of what we believe, it is inaccurate to say that an uptick in those claiming to suffer from mental health issues is an expression of fraud or self-deception. Rather, it is accurate to say that a society that grants glory to the inhibited will produce members who compete, paradoxically, for the glory of being incapable of achieving glory.
Zohar Atkins – What is Power? 


2a4) The power of mind is much greater than the power of body. Much, much greater. Our inner realm is a much vaster set of possibilities...and the realm of other human minds is a vaster set of possibilities than even other human bodies. 


2a5a) The effect of Taraza’s words startled Odrade. She correctly interpreted the threat but fear left her, spilling out as though it were water poured from a jug. For the first time in her life, Odrade recognized the precise moment of crossing a dividing line. This was a line whose existence she thought few of her Sisters suspected. As she crossed it, she realized that she had always known it was there: a place where she could enter the void and float free. She no longer was vulnerable. She could be killed but she could not be defeated.
Frank Herbert – Heretics of Dune

2a5b) This is obviously out of context if you're not familiar with Herbert's work. Suffice it to say this is one of my favorite passages in the Dune series. Saturated, as I am with Nietzsche as melange, I have a hard time distinguishing what was intentionally Nietzschean in Herbert's work, and what was merely just him tuning into the same wavelength. Which I suppose is the very point of this post. The glass of experience is foggy, filtered, opaque. What matters if we agree on specifics of tone if the harmonic resonance puts us in chorus? All that matters is that like Darwi Odrade above, we seek until we are released into that void where we suffer death, but never defeat. 



4a) Been There, Done That

4a1a) Norman Connors "Once I've Been There"

4a1b) [Norman Connors is] an American Jazz Drummer, composer, arranger, and producer who has led some influential jazz and R&B groups. He also achieved several big R&B hits of the day, especially with love ballads. He is possibly best known for the 1976 hit, "You Are My Starship" on which lead vocals were sung by Michael Henderson.

4a1c) This is hands down one of my favorite disco singles. It rivals anything the Salsoul Orchestra did for pure swinging disco action. It could score any cop show credits from the 70's. And has the roots of the Beastie Boys "Sabotage" within its disco DNA. 
        The listener is carried along by the funky buoyancy of the melody. The arrangement is tight, but with a loose funky bounce. Phillip Mitchell gives Sylvester a run for the money as he soars above the burbling bass, brassy punctuation, and exquisitely stabbing strings. The perfect foil for Skip Drinkwater's excellent production. 
        Along with Donald Byrd, Roy Ayers, and many others that jumped ship from serious jazz into more lucrative forms of music making, Connors proves that he can get the booty shaking. Some might consider it a loss for jazz, but it's all swinging to me. Being a snob about it just means losing out on great singles like this. 
        In the end, I rarely ever listen to this track just once. Putting it on repeat produces a Dionysian melting into the dance trance of the Universe. I can only imagine what it would have been like to hear it at the Paradise Garage with the floor shaking to the many bodies lost in the bliss of absolute surrender to the beat.


 
4a2a) Norman Connors "You Are My Starship"

4a2b) Obviously, "Once I've Been There" is no idle brag. "You Are My Starship" offers proof of how he got there in the first place. 
        Presumably, attempting to "go where no man has gone before," "Starship" offers more intimacy than "Once I've Been There." Michael Henderson coos seducingly, and echoes the sublime desire of contemporaries Marvin Gaye and Teddy Pendergrass. The arrangement borders on being too syrupy, but hangs back just enough to counter Henderson's husky appeal

5a) Daily Zen

No Excuses: Existentialism and the Meaning of Life 
5a1a) Robert Solomon on Existentialism, Waking Life (2001) – Director: Richard Linklater



 

Tuesday, June 1, 2021

7a) Daily Zen

 
7a1) Seinfeld S09E03 "The Serenity Now" 

7a2) Just another day in Kramerica.

Monday, May 31, 2021

5a) Sorcerer (1977)

5a1) Sorcerer (1977) Trailer, Directed by William Friedkin

5a2) 


5a4) Considered by many cinema buffs to be director William Friedkin's underappreciated third straight masterpiece following the one-two punch of The French Connection and The Exorcist, 1977's long-lost Sorcerer starring Roy Scheider has finally gotten a widescreen Blu-ray release this month. Inspired by the Georges Arnaud novel The Wages of Fear, the film focuses on four men — a Mexican hitman, an Arab terrorist, an American hood, and a disgraced French businessman — who are hiding out in an impoverished South American oil town. The quarrelling gang gets contracted as truck drivers to deliver unstable explosives to the site of a raging oil well fire. The story is just as socially relevant today as when it came out. 
[...]
ESQ: You were the first film director to give Tangerine Dream a film score. How did you discover them?
WF: I was over there [in Germany] doing promotion for The Exorcist and some young guy told me about this incredible group with this extraordinary sound. They played an abandoned 18th-century church in the Black Forest at midnight with no lights on them, just the light of their electronic instruments, and it was hypnotic and trancelike. I met the leader, a guy named Edgar Froese, and told him I didn't know what film I was going to do next but I was going to come to him to do the score. About a year and a half later I sent him the script, told him the story of the film over the phone, and said, "Just write your impressions of what I've told you and what you read." He mailed me a score about seven or eight months later never having seen the film. On April 3, 2014, I was in Copenhagen where the new Tangerine Dream, which is still led by Edgar Froese, gave a live concert of the score. They played two hours of the music from Sorcerer expanded by stuff I didn't use. They got the old instruments back and played to an absolutely packed house that was mesmerized. They're releasing that as a live album.


5b1) Tangerine Dream Sorcerer Score

5a) Happy Birthday, Broadway Joe! 🎂

 

5a1) In this Nov. 14, 1971, file photo, New York Jets quarterback Joe Namath, wearing his white fur coat, watches from the sidelines as the Baltimore Colts defeat the Jets, 14-13, at New York’s Shea Stadium. Namath is the NFL's greatest character. Guaranteed. The Pro Football Hall of Fame quarterback who guaranteed his three-touchdown underdog New York Jets would beat the mighty Baltimore Colts in the third Super Bowl was a solid choice in balloting conducted by The Associated Press in conjunction with the league's celebration of its 100th season. (AP Photo/File) 
Tuscaloosanews.com


5a2) The Brady Bunch - Meeting Joe Namath
 

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