Sunday, March 15, 2009
Cannot recommend the Sylvania G-Meso Netbook
I’ve checked the statistics and it doesn’t look like I’ve lead anyone astray, thank goodness. Over the last month I’ve slowly come to the conclusion that it was wrong to recommend the Sylvania G-Meso Netbook. This unit has some serious problems in some key features. You can find better value elsewhere. More...
Thursday, March 12, 2009
Car Repair: arrgggh, Chevy Malibu: Yuuumm!
Image via Wikipedia
My Land Rover LR3 is in the shop for repair for a computer crashing problem (yes, oh the irony of that). Basically after driving awhile and perhaps tapping on the brakes all the idiot lights come on at once - transmission fault, brake fault and suspension fault. The suspension fault is actually the most worrisome. The LR3 suspension is a modern miracle. But when the computer is crashed the ride in the LR3 goes from “Modern Luxury Vehicle” down to “62 Rambler with no shock absorbers”. More...Wednesday, February 25, 2009
FOWA Miami 2009
Well, the pain and suffering I went through to get myself down to the FOWA show in Miami was definitely worth it. I drove down to Miami after dinner on Monday night and stayed at the AWESOME DoubleTree Grand hotel that evening. (Thanks for the carboliscious cookie that was so not on my diet!) More...
Tuesday, February 10, 2009
Microsoft and Bill Gates in the '80s
Friday, February 6, 2009
Personality Test
Saturday, January 31, 2009
To go where no man has gone before
CodePlex and the wandering API
Sunday, January 25, 2009
From Albuquerque to Denver
Tuesday, January 20, 2009
Zune car kit - impressive, no really!
Sunday, January 11, 2009
Organic: buy the same thing for twice the price
Thursday, January 8, 2009
Buddy Don has a book!
One of my favorite blog authors has now published a book. If you are quick you can get an autographed copy.
Miss Vero's Beach House: WHERE THERE'S SMOKE...
Miss Vero's Beach House: WHERE THERE'S SMOKE...
Friday, January 2, 2009
Accelerando
I came across an article the other day about a mathematician who had attempted to calculate the probability that we are all living in a matrix; a simulation and not the ultimate reality. Now that is peculiar enough of an idea that I became immediately interested - especially since it turns out that the odds are pretty fair that we are living in a simulation! :-) I found an exhaustive treatment of the subject on a web site authored by Nick Bostrom of Oxford. Now consideration of this idea takes you quickly down into the other rabbit holes of exponentially accelerating change, transhumanism and the Singularity.
The Singularity refers to a flash-over point, a basic state change, where the rate of change has accelerated to the point where human beings cannot possibly keep up -- unless they are wielding some phenomenally capable computing technologies. The Singularity is brought about by advances in software technologies such that we succeed in making software capable of improving itself. This kicks technological progress into high gear giving birth to artificial intelligence (AI). Ultimately this hyperbolic rate of change will result in a hyper-technonological world where unaugmented human beings will have a very hard time keeping up. Enter transhumanism - the augmentation of the human being into a entity who can remain relevant in the wake of the Singularity.
So, winding this back onto the idea of a simulation, you can readily see the motivation for building one. In light of a scenario like the Singularity, a motivation for building a simulation might be an attempt to create a refuge in a universe that's suddenly become incomprehensible. Another motivation might be a grasp at immortality - a new, non-biological platform on which to run your consciousness. Of course, if we were living in a simulator and then we created a simulation into which we downloaded ourselves, one might begin to wonder how many levels of simulation we are separated from the ultimate reality.
One of my favorite science fiction novels that dances around this theme is Accelerando by Charles Stross. Stross is always an engrossing read but Accelerando seems an especially well expressed story. I can't imagine the difficulty of trying to create a plausible story around something that is, by definition, so unimaginable. Charles Stross must be augmented somehow. Yeah, that's it! Hey, where is MY augmentation??? I could especially use a memory enhancement just about now.
So one other idea that I keep thinking about is that if we are living in a simulation, isn't it nice how just about everything in religious theology kind of finds its place and has a straight forward explanation in this version of "reality". Hmmmm..... Or, coming at it from the inside-out perspective, could it be that the whole purpose of our simulation is to birth an AI?
Do you want the red pill or the blue pill?