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#technosphere
anthroposcenarios · 2 years
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"The biosphere figured out how to host life by itself billions of years ago by creating systems for moving around nitrogen and transporting carbon," Frank says. "Now we have to figure out how to have the same kind of self-maintaining characteristics with the technosphere."
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jordirabago · 2 years
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Tecnósfera.
Parte 1.
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exhaled-spirals · 2 months
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« To mention the global loss of biodiversity, that is to say, the disappearance of life on our planet, as one of our problems, along with air pollution or ocean acidification, is absurd—like a doctor listing the death of his patient as one symptom among others.
The ecological catastrophe cannot be reduced to the climate crisis. We must think about the disappearance of life in a global way. About two-thirds of insects, wild mammals and trees disappeared in a few years, a few decades and a few millennia, respectively. This mass extinction is not mainly caused by rising temperatures, but by the devastation of natural habitats.
Suppose we managed to invent clean and unlimited energy. This technological feat would be feted by the vast majority of scientists, synonymous in their eyes with a drastic reduction in CO2 emissions. In my opinion, it would lead to an even worse disaster. I am deeply convinced that, given the current state of our appetites and values, this energy would be used to intensify our gigantic project of systemic destruction of planetary life. Isn't that what we've set out to do—replace forests with supermarket parking lots, turn the planet into a landfill? What if, to cap it all, energy was free?
[...C]limate change has emerged as our most important ecological battle [...] because it is one that can perpetuate the delusional idea that we are faced with an engineering problem, in need of technological solutions. At the heart of current political and economic thought lies the idea that an ideal world would be a world in which we could continue to live in the same way, with fewer negative externalities. This is insane on several levels. Firstly because it is impossible. We can't have infinite growth in a finite world. We won't. But also, and more importantly, it is not desirable. Even if it were sustainable, the reality we construct is hell. [...]
It is often said that our Western world is desacralised. In reality, our civilisation treats the technosphere with almost devout reverence. And that's worse. We perceive the totality of reality through the prism of a hegemonic science, convinced that it “says” the only truth.
The problem is that technology is based on a very strange principle, so deeply ingrained in us that it remains unexpressed: no brakes are acceptable, what can be done must be done. We don't even bother to seriously and collectively debate the advisability of such "advances". We are under a spell. And we are avoiding the essential question: is this world in the making, standardised and computed, overbuilt and predictable, stripped of stars and birds, desirable?
To confine science to the search for "solutions" so we can continue down the same path is to lack both imagination and ambition. Because the “problem” we face doesn't seem to me, at this point, to be understood. No hope is possible if we don't start by questioning our assumptions, our values, our appetites, our symbols... [...] Let's stop pretending that the numerous and diverse human societies that have populated this planet did not exist. Certainly, some of them have taken the wrong route. But ours is the first to forge ahead towards guaranteed failure. »
— Aurélien Barrau, particle physicist and philosopher, in an interview in Télérama about his book L'Hypothèse K
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I wrote about the death of tech competition and its relationship to lax antitrust enforcement and regulatory capture for The American System in The American Conservative
Tech was forever a dynamic industry, where mainframes were bested by minicomputers, which were, in turn, devoured by PCs. Proprietary information services were subsumed into Gopher, Gopher was devoured by the web. If you didn’t like the management of the current technosphere, just wait a minute and there will be something new along presently. When it came to moving your relationships, data, and media over to the new service, the skids were so greased as to be nearly frictionless. What happened? Did a new generation of tech founders figure out how to build an interoperability-proof computer that defied the laws of computer science? Hardly. No one has invented a digital Roach Motel, where users and their data check in but they can't check out. Digital tools remain stubbornly universal, and the attacker’s advantage is still in effect. Any walled garden is liable to having holes blasted in its perimeter by upstarts who want to help an incumbent’s corralled customers evacuate to greener pastures. What changed was the posture of the state towards corporations. First, governments changed how they dealt with monopolies. Then, monopolies changed how governments treated reverse-engineering.
-A Murder Story: Whatever Happened to Interoperability?
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kai-dlugosch · 1 month
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Technosphere (2023), Kai Dlugosch
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fatehbaz · 1 year
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“The freedom to piss on the cement of Empire [...].”
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The dry semi-desert that is South Africa’s Karoo began as an ice cap on the supercontinent Pangea [...]. The Karoo ice cap was kilometers deep and peaked between 359 and 299 million years ago. [...] Another hundred million years after Pangea split [...], the Karoo became home and then graveyard to dinosaurs of the Jurassic Era [...]. [V]olcanic extrusions and kimberlite pipes threw skywards the purest form of carbon: diamonds. [...] 
The discovery of diamond-bearing rock in the northern Karoo in 1869 propelled the [British] Empire into inventing new aspects of the technosphere, in which metal mining structures, wooden beams, steam engines, long guns, and the [...] [bodies] of migrant laborers were employed to reconnect the volcanic residues of the Late Cretaceous with the economic and political landscapes of South Africa and Britain. [...] Profits from the sale of Late Cretaceous diamonds from ninety-one million years ago fed the formation of cities, corporations, and institutions in England and her Cape. [...] [T]he entrepreneur Cecil John Rhodes amassed a personal fortune from the diamond rush, taking control by means fair and foul of claims around the Big Hole of Kimberley, where the largest kimberlite volcanic pipe extrudes. Appointed prime minister of the Cape Colony in 1890, Rhodes set about establishing a legal infrastructure that favored mining and a social infrastructure that established race-based disenfranchisement, creating a class of black laborers who would serve the emerging white-owned mining houses. [...] In the 1900s, the Carboniferous Era from around three hundred million years ago entered South African politics via South African’s coal-fired power stations. In the 1960s, the newly independent Republic of South Africa [...] sought energy autonomy in order to pursue formal policies of race-based segregation, and commissioned geological surveys for coal, oil, and uranium. [...]
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“Colonization=‘thingification’” wrote the postcolonial philosopher Aime Cesaire.
For Cecil John Rhodes, nature was a spectacle that could be kept in a zoo; the university was a project to be “funded from the stomachs of k*firs”; migrant laborers in the diamond mines were required to wait two weeks before leaving, while the contents of their colons were collected and painstakingly searched for ingested gems. Under colonial regimes of extraction of labor and minerals, Africa became a laboratory for the necropolitical: relations of life for relationships of ownership and death. [...] 
His estate set up the University of Cape Town and his statue was erected in 1934: a two-ton bronze effigy of the man set on a concrete plinth in a pose that calls to mind Rodin’s The Thinker. In the view of the statue’s gaze there was Rhodes Highway, Rhodes Drive, Rhodes High School; to the statue's right was Rhodes Memorial, and to its left his zoo; on the far side of the old Cape Colony would be built Rhodes University.
Memorialized thus as the archetypal Reasonable Man, the aura of his realism must have been surreal to those who had suffered under his rule. [...]
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[I]n 2015, academics, students [...] in and alongside the University of Cape Town found themselves confronting a performance of the execrable on March 9, 2015, when [a] student [...] threw excrement -- nightsoil from a shack settlement -- over Rhodes’s statue to call for the university’s decolonization. Rhodes’s statue was removed on a flat-bed truck exactly one month later [...]. His two tons of bronze dangled briefly from a crane, severed from its concrete plinth, then was carted off for safekeeping in an undisclosed location. [...]
Geologies of morals and morals of geology: the Karoo Ice Age, frozen and global, and Rhodes’s Karoo Age, an era of extractive economy that sacrificed life and created sacrifice zones. One lasted a hundred million years, the other a hundred and fifty. Both changed the relations between geology and life. [...]
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Amid the Rhodes statue’s formal removal on April 9, 2015, a construction worker -- a deconstruction worker, really -- took a moment to piss and loudly announce he was doing so on the stairs leading up to Rhodes. It was his own moment in a month-long protest beginning with the shit-throwing. A moment to seize the possibility of vulgarity that breaks the lines of authority, the fountain of piss flagrantly rejoins the flow of water through all bodies and all spheres.
The freedom to piss on the cement of Empire asserts that the body of the construction worker and the body of the shack-dweller inhabit the same earth as the Empire, and that cement, ultimately, is a political subject. As is diamond-bearing kimberlite, and gas-bearing shale. [...]
Colonization made predatory claims on the earth’s geological flows and processes without regard to the reciprocities through which they were formed in the earth’s spheres.
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Text by: Lesley Green. “The Changing of the Gods of Reason: Cecil John Rhodes, Karoo Fracking, and the Decolonizing of the Anthropocene.” e-flux Journal Issue #65. May 2015. [Bold emphasis and some paragraph breaks/contractions added by me.]
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historical-schemata · 2 months
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The Incan Technosphere
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“In the techno-sphere of the Andes people solved basic engineering problems through the manipulation of fibers, not by creating and joining hard wooden or metal objects. To make boats, Andean Cultures wove together reeds rather than cutting trees into planks and nailing them together. Although smaller than big European ships, these vessels were not puddle-mufflers; Europeans first encountered Tawantinsuyu in the form of an Inka ship sailing near the equator… it had a crew of twenty and was easily the size of a Spanish cavaralle. Famously the Inka used foot thick cables to make suspension bridges across the mountain gorges. And although Andean troops carried bows, javelins, maces, and clubs, their most fearsome weapon, the sling, was made of cloth. A sling is a woven pouch attached to two strings. The slinger puts a stone or slug in the pouch, picks up the strings by the free ends, spins them around a few times, and releases one of the strings at the proper moment. Expert users could hurl a stone with such force that it would kill a horse.” - 1491: New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus
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1eos · 8 months
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archaeologists in the distant future will be in awe at the cultural influence nene leakes has had in the technosphere
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Is oxygen the cosmic key to alien technology?
University of Rochester astrophysicist Adam Frank explores the links between atmospheric oxygen and detecting extraterrestrial technology on distant planets.
In the quest to understand the potential for life beyond Earth, researchers are widening their search to encompass not only biological markers, but also technological ones. While astrobiologists have long recognized the importance of oxygen for life as we know it, oxygen could also be a key to unlocking advanced technology on a planetary scale.
In a new study published in Nature Astronomy, Adam Frank, the Helen F. and Fred H. Gowen Professor of Physics and Astronomy at the University of Rochester and the author of The Little Book of Aliens (Harper, 2023), and Amedeo Balbi, an associate professor of astronomy and astrophysics at the University of Roma Tor Vergata, Italy, outline the links between atmospheric oxygen and the potential rise of advanced technology on distant planets.
“We are ready to find signatures of life on alien worlds,” Frank says. “But how do the conditions on a planet tell us about the possibilities for intelligent, technology-producing life?”
“In our paper, we explore whether any atmospheric composition would be compatible with the presence of advanced technology,” Balbi says. “We found that the atmospheric requirements may be quite stringent.”
Igniting cosmic technospheres
Frank and Balbi posit that, beyond its necessity for respiration and metabolism in multicellular organisms, oxygen is crucial to developing fire—and fire is a hallmark of a technological civilization. They delve into the concept of “technospheres,” expansive realms of advanced technology that emit telltale signs—called “technosignatures”—of extraterrestrial intelligence.
On Earth, the development of technology demanded easy access to open-air combustion—the process at the heart of fire, in which something is burned by combining a fuel and an oxidant, usually oxygen. Whether it’s cooking, forging metals for structures, crafting materials for homes, or harnessing energy through burning fuels, combustion has been the driving force behind industrial societies.
Tracing back through Earth’s history, the researchers found that the controlled use of fire and the subsequent metallurgical advancements were only possible when oxygen levels in the atmosphere reached or exceeded 18 percent. This means that only planets with significant oxygen concentrations will be capable of developing advanced technospheres, and, therefore, leaving detectable technosignatures.
The oxygen bottleneck
The levels of oxygen required to biologically sustain complex life and intelligence are not as high as the levels necessary for technology, so while a species might be able to emerge in a world without oxygen, it will not be able to become a technological species, according to the researchers.
“You might be able to get biology—you might even be able to get intelligent creatures—in a world that doesn’t have oxygen,” Frank says, “but without a ready source of fire, you’re never going to develop higher technology because higher technology requires fuel and melting.”
Enter the “oxygen bottleneck,” a term coined by the researchers to describe the critical threshold that separates worlds capable of fostering technological civilizations from those that fall short. That is, oxygen levels are a bottleneck that impedes the emergence of advanced technology.
“The presence of high degrees of oxygen in the atmosphere is like a bottleneck you have to get through in order to have a technological species,” Frank says. “You can have everything else work out, but if you don’t have oxygen in the atmosphere, you’re not going to have a technological species.”
Targeting extraterrestrial hotspots
The research, which addresses a previously unexplored facet in the cosmic pursuit of intelligent life, underscores the need to prioritize planets with high oxygen levels when searching for extraterrestrial technosignatures.
“Targeting planets with high oxygen levels should be prioritized because the presence or absence of high oxygen levels in exoplanet atmospheres could be a major clue in finding potential technosignatures,” Frank says.
“The implications of discovering intelligent, technological life on another planet would be huge,” adds Balbi. “Therefore, we need to be extremely cautious in interpreting possible detections. Our study suggests that we should be skeptical of potential technosignatures from a planet with insufficient atmospheric oxygen.”
This work was funded in part by a grant from NASA.
IMAGE....Coined by astrophysics Adam Frank and Amedeo Balbi, the “oxygen bottleneck” describes the critical threshold that separates worlds capable of fostering technological civilizations from those that fall short. “You might be able to get biology—you might even be able to get intelligent creatures—in a world that doesn’t have oxygen,” Frank says, “but without a ready source of fire, you’re never going to develop higher technology."  Credit University of Rochester illustration / Michael Osadciw
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https://stateofthenation.co/?p=215966
***This is why there are “HUGE Changes Coming To Planet Earth”.***
Posted on March 8, 2024 by State of the Nation
SOTN Editor’s Note: The following video presentation, more than any other on the Internet today, demonstrates why “HUGE Changes Are Coming To Planet Earth”. And the quote below, excerpted from the extended essay which follows, well explains why the present global civilization is being slowly set up for this upcoming “Epochal Planetary Transformation”. “When scientific knowledge and applied technology reach a critical level of advancement, without being informed by spiritual truths and guided by moral authority, this planetary civilization will cease to exist as it is. Once certain thresholds are crossed into forbidden areas of dangerous scientific pursuit and technological development, the destiny of the human race will be abruptly and forever altered.”
~ Cosmic Convergence Research Group WARNING: This video is not for the fainthearted—FOR REAL!
HUGE Changes Coming To Planet Earth Cosmic Convergence Accelerates Epochal Planetary Transformation Cosmic Convergence Research Group CosmicCovergence.org galectic-equator
What happens when an unparalleled Solar Maximum and Solar Minimum occur while Pluto is cruising through Capricorn; seismic activity and vulcanism (both undersea and on land) have already seen a dramatic uptick; technospheric breakdown has greatly accelerated; entire species have vacated the planet as whole ecosystems are irreparably destroyed; global climate change appears as global warming, global cooling, regional drought or regional deluge; and the worldwide economic and financial system is on the verge of collapse as in a total and complete irreversible monetary meltdown? Believe it or not, these actual occurrences and various eventualities are the very least of our problems. Here’s why:
There are certain ‘progressive’ developments and converging circumstances which will dictate the course of our future as a global civilization and human race – the sixth root race[1] to have inhabited planet Earth since it has revolved around the sun. That which will serve to “accelerate epochal planetary transformation” considerably more than any other major precipitating cause can be summed up as follows:
“When scientific knowledge and applied technology reach a critical level of advancement, without being informed by spiritual truths and guided by moral authority, this planetary civilization will cease to exist as it is. Once certain thresholds are crossed into forbidden areas of dangerous scientific pursuit and technological development, the destiny of the human race will be abruptly and forever altered.”
~ Cosmic Convergence Research Group Truly, the greatest determinant of the immediate future of humanity is the extent to which science and technology – unalloyed to ethical and moral considerations – continue to challenge what has historically fallen within the “domain of the gods”. The ancient Greeks had some very poignant mythical legends which clearly spell out the relevant lesson for humankind concerning this most profound and highly consequential prognostication.
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ritunn · 1 year
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If my last post didn't sell you on TTJRPG, Fabula Ultima, there's also 3 books in the works to expand on it. One for high, natural, and techno fantasy each respectively! The high fantasy books is already out in Italian, but if you speak English, no need to wait! The free playtest materials with 11 new classes can be found on their Patreon. In it you'll find those and these optional rules:
Quirks - Starting abilities to massively boost your power and provide interesting story implications.
Custom Weapons - Make those gunblades and so much more!
Camping Downtime Rules - Bunch of different actions to do in addition to building bonds.
Zero Powers - Powerful limit breakers that you charge over combat.
Technospheres - Expand even more on your abilities with custom spheres.
11 new classes from the 3 genres of which include:
Chanter - Create your own songs with specific tempos for the perfect effect needed in any situation.
Commander - Command your allies on the battlefield to reach their full potential and act as a chess player prepping the perfect move.
Dancer - Use a variety of dances to buff the party or debuff the enemy, chaining them together for an entertaining display.
Floralist - Plant a seed and watch it grow every time you complete a specific action and once it blossoms, its passive effect will turn the tide of battle.
Gourmet - Mix and match random ingredients you find and cook up your own dishes from your cookbook to buff your party or give your enemy some food poisoning.
Invoker - Channel the elements Avatar style to assail your foes with the natural world itself.
Merchant - Buy and sell in towns to get trade points, then use them to buy favors, protection, or useful items to outfit the party!
Mutant - Unleash the beast within by changing your physiology based on your current needs.
Pilot - Get yourself a custom personal vehicle from a motorbike, to an exosuit, to a mecha and ride into battle with or without your allies aboard.
Psychic - Stay safe from a distance and use bonds to help or hinder as you connect more deeply to those around you.
Symbolist - Invoke powerful symbols to grant your allies an edge or your enemies a weakness in their defenses.
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As well, pick up the Necromancer class they made for Halloween for free too off their website! It's the perfect fit if you want to play a reaper from FFXIV or want to lay down the debuffs with spells and reap the rewards. Eventually you'll even be able to raise dead enemies to fight for you permanently!
Playtest Materials: https://www.patreon.com/posts/fabula-ultima-46567344
Necromancer (Bottom of the page): https://www.needgames.it/fabula-ultima-en/
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godsopenwound · 1 year
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There is this upcoming art exhibition i’m looking forward to seeing called “Modern Love (or Love in the Age of Cold Intimacies)” and i’ve been reading what will it be about and honestly i’m so obsessed already here are some parts that made me feel insane:
“It explores the state of love, and human bonds in the age of the Internet, social media, and high capitalism, probing how the digital sphere, the impact of technology giants, and neo-liberal practices have transformed love, social relations, and the way we interact with one another.”
“It also explores the human pathologies associated with the commodification of emotion and the effects of digital dependency on relationships, as well as the issues that arise when the boundaries between the public and private, as well the virtual and the real, become more and more fluid.”
“At the same time, we also live in a time that philosopher Byung-Chul Han has labelled “emotional capitalism”, where human emotions have been co-opted by market forces. Thus, apart from offering an open and potentially endless sense of possibility, the dating supermarkets of Tinder and Grindr, “speed dating”, and the ease of Internet exchange have also hollowed out relationships and led to selfish or narcissistic forms of behaviour and the creation and curation of misleading images of the self, making it ever more difficult to establish what is real, meaningful, or true.”
“Frustrated by false expectations and digital “experiences”, crushed by information overload, digital fatigue, social media peer pressure, obsession with appearances, fear of failure or invisibility, standardised benchmarks for beauty and success, lack of time, and the anxiety of uncertainty, this feeling of isolation is unsurprising.”
“How can love be rescued from the claws of capital and the corporate technosphere? How can one resist the instrumentalisation of love and its superficialisation and banalisation by commerce and social media? ”
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auntyproton · 1 year
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Breadcrumbs and Balls of String
How do you find your way through a metaphor?  
In an appropriately science-fictiony version, I have often thought of life as being the Voyager spacecraft.  Long years in the frozen black broken by frantic moments of activity in dangerous environments.  
In what might be an appropriate fantasy-ish version, I have also thought of life as the Black Maze.  Imagine the Backrooms only all walls and floors are absolute light absorbing black.  You cannot see the walls, you cannot see the floor, and you cannot see when the floor falls out beneath you.  You can only feel your way along and for all you know gravity itself is wrong.  You could be walking on a wall or the ceiling and wouldn’t know it until you fell.  
The interstellar probe is my metaphor for loneliness, the Black Maze for depression.  I realize now I was trying to conceptualize being autistic, to run the unconscious knowledge through the Metaphorizer circuits to put it in symbols.  It didn’t help in either condition, but it gave it a thoughtform.  So it was a Thing that could be thought about and manipulated and re-contextualized.  
I may not be able to name these things as their true selves thanks to the alexithymia but I can make them into symbols.  At least then they have a form enough to squish.  
Not the first time I’ve done it.  Remind me to explain someday about my idea that cyborgs are the Green Men of the technosphere.  
The Voyagers are on an eternal journey, and now that they have left our solar system they likely won’t encounter another solid object ever again in their existence.  It is entirely possible -- probable, even -- that they will still be travelling in a straight line when Sol reaches the red giant phase and destroys Earth.  They will outlive the planet that created them.  
The Black Maze... well.  A mind can be divided into smaller and smaller rooms, and the mind trapped inside them unable to find a way out.  There are times I’ve become more and more frantic, trying to find keyholes that were never there.
I call it “hamsterwheeling” -- running at top speed and getting nowhere.  At some point, you’ve got to stop and say to yourself “what’s keeping me here?  Why do I think I can’t stop?”
So many times it’s because someone else said so.  And because we’re afraid to take that first step. And we’re afraid of what others will think of us.   And we’re afraid of the unknown.  
The unknown is my home.  And Voyager navigates by the stars.  
My last day of work at the phone job will be Friday.  
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wd40k · 2 years
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Dipping my toes back into the world of computer science, I've also found the history of computing fascinating, particularly the open source/free software movements that remain alive and well, at least for now.
The proliferation of software development in the 70's brought the nonsense of patent laws and intellectual property into stark relief, as it boiled down to corporations telling *all* outside engineers what they can and can't do with their own equipment, dividing up the most advanced technologies humanity has ever produced into tens of thousands of little medieval guild-secrets.
The open source movement was a merely practical response, yet fundamentally anti-captalist in its nature. By just allowing people the building blocks they need to design their own solutions, for their own reasons, it undercuts the still-growing corporate domination of the technosphere. But you rarely hear about open source and anti-capitalism in the same place, and I think that's only because open source platforms are so convenient that it doesn't require much justification to get involved - which is fair enough, and a good thing in its own way.
To split some hairs, the free software side of the movement means, on *moral* grounds, to put the power of computing - the techniques themselves, mere knowledge that is infinitely transferable and reproducible - in the hands of, well, anyone who has a use for it.
My hypothesis is that capitalism has NOT been the driving source of tech development over the last fifty years, and has actually been a regressive force against the true potential of computing from the start. Whether for convenience or conviction, the enormous amount of knowledge collected and redistributed by engineers through open source and free software platforms, without one cent of profit incentive, betrays that corporate lie.
As I continue to learn, of course I'll continue to check this hypothesis against the for-realsies of it all, but I'm also interested in anyone else's thoughts on this.
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gokitetravel · 2 months
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Immersive Experiences Await Discovering Aya Universe Dubai
Welcome to a unique journey of discovery at Aya Universe Dubai. In the middle of this bustling city, Aya Universe stands out as an innovative center of entertainment. It combines the latest technology with immersive experiences. The goal is a unique adventure where reality and fantasy blur, allowing visitors to step into a world where the unimaginable is everyday.
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Immersive Experiences Await Discovering Aya Universe Dubai
An Exciting Future Adventure: Getting to Know Aya Universe Dubai
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Discover Interactive Exhibits: Where Creativity Meets Tech
Step into Aya Universe and you'll discover a world of interactive exhibits that marry creativity with tech. For instance, the TechnoSphere is packed with the latest in robotics and AI. It's a sneak peek into the future of how humans and machines could interact. Then there's Artisan's Alley, paying tribute to the age-old art of craftsmanship. Here, traditional methods meet modern tech to create one-off wonders. At Aya Universe, we don't just shine a spotlight on innovation. We celebrate the sweet spot where human creativity meets tech.
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For the thrill-seekers, the Adventure Nexus at Aya Universe is ready for you. This park area delivers heart-thumping rides that stretch the definition of fun. Whether taking on our ultra-fast virtual roller coasters that laugh at gravity or nailing escape room puzzle penalties that assess intellect and team effort, the Adventure Nexus makes sure you're spoiled for choice in your search for exhilaration.
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Conclusion
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n0xieee · 2 months
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Some of you may be wondering why I reference from being from a different parallel timeline.
It's because I quite literally am.
My Porygon Z has some cool properties that, with my timelines technology, we can utilize to access social media of people in different "active" timelines. We get to witness and talk about history like never before. And make some cool friends, too.
It doesn't affect anyone else's timeline too much. We can't physically access another past timeline, but we can communicate with them through advanced social media technospheres.
My timeline is a cyberpunk-esque timeline. Crime exists and companies rule the pokemon world. I sometimes envy those who are in the world before.
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