— Bob-a-job-alog-a-roonie

(so please be kind. I have the ideas, just unsure if I can get them down in a likeable way).

Here be 3 beginnings to the same story, streamed out to loud music, wine and soon whisky, in an hour or so. Literature it isn’t. The genre is thriller / horror. If anyone was to actually read these, I’d take votes.

1A

I left the whisky bottle until last because it wasn’t going to fit, and it didn’t. I crawled out of the tent, which I was also leaving behind. Out of space and out of time. Time to flee.

Kookaburras hooted and hollered from close by. They sounded like a crowd at a comedy festival, but these days you avoid crowds and nothing is funny any more. And I knew it took just two to make such a noise. You’d think knowing the bush should give me a strategic advantage, but not really. It’s not exactly a jungle. You can’t really hide. Knowing which direction I was running, that’s my advantage.

I could hear voices as well. Just loud organising, commands. Not close enough to see me, and they don’t even know I’m here so I figure they are walking. Men, walking. A number of men. Their need is anyone’s guess, but to be out here my guess is that they have heard about my cache. Good luck finding that, and good luck to whoever told them.

I ran hard, zigging and zagging around gum trees every so often, but mostly in a straight line. My phone alerted again, so I would have just triggered another of my sensors. My life-savers. As much as I have been leading a primal life, technology is keeping me alive.

1B

Dreams let me go, and sirens from my phone took over. A perimeter breech. My shaking hand silenced it. Dawn light through the nylon tent walls showed my go bag, an empty whisky bottle, a half-full whisky bottle, clothing, my boots and the heavy blanket I was under. I was facing the wrong way, so that took a moment to get my head around. Then I was dressing, lacing, deciding. No time to pull down the tent. The tent would inspire them. I fled.

The triggered sensor was up hill. I ran down hill. Australian bush is sparse, and easy to run through. But downhill, in leaves, at pace, I had to be careful to stay on my feet. A sprain could kill me.

1C

Dawn breaking and snores catching, Barry was waking anyway. Crashing early and stinking of whisky were signs of a solitary life. The phone alarmed and Barry struggled to find it, he had turned around in his sleep, or maybe he had just felt like a change. There aren’t many opportunities to randomise out here.

Sunlight made the tent feel like being inside a paper lantern. Phone silenced. Blanket rolled and strapped. He struggled into his pack and crawled out through the flap, leaving it unzipped and flapping in the breeze. The kookaburras that woke him were quiet now. Just leaves tinkling softly. Eucalyptus in the air. And a man barking orders at the limits of his hearing. Unmistakably human, and the first human voice he had heard in months. Barry fled.

The forest barely got in the way, narrow tree trunks with high branches and metres apart. Like a guppy escaping a shark net was Barry and he sped downhill at a steady pace that could last him an hour. Don’t leave any trace, and don’t slip and fall in the leaves. That was all he thought about until the next thought: where to next?

The cache won’t be found, and he can return. The Henrys should be warned, but he won’t fight with them. The highway is truly a throw of the dice, and the bush is relentlessly the same for the next 30 miles in the other direction.

Panting heavily, Barry found the door ajar and the Henrys’ house was abandoned. A few worthy items lingered, signalling a hasty exit.

Paths left and right led away from the house but Barry took the stream, slowly, careful not to leave a trace. He took it for a kilometre and then took off his boots and tiptoed across a grassy glade, for several hundred meters and around a corner. The retreat of Mr and Mrs Henry that only he knew about.

Don Henry was aiming his rifle behind and beyond Barry, and saying hey. Exhaustedly saying hey, as if after all the preparation and the years he was ready to surrender to the bone dry grass and rising sun in his sights.

 

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A new NASA sponsored study is looking into the feasibility of spacecraft that rotate all the way to Mars which could simulate partial or full Earth gravity – a little like the craft in the movie Elysium, but more utilitarian and with fewer billionaires.

NASA’s Innovative Advanced Concepts (NIAC) program, which nurtures and experiments with ideas that are beyond the agency’s current mission “horizon” planning has just pumped another $500,000 into developing the first proof of concept systems, based on a concept called tensegrity. However, if all of the funding was in place today then lead principal investigator Robert Skelton has said he could have a prototype in low-Earth orbit in about three to four years.
Source

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youtube-kids

Autoplay is fine on Facebook, it is an active response to your scrolling through the feed. It wastes bandwidth, but provides additional revenue for Facebook, which means there is at least some value for someone attached to it. But is stops when you stop.

The story is quite different for YouTube, which these days plays the next video immediately after the one you chose to watch. Yes, there is value for Google, but when people stop watching, often the videos keep streaming.

While many grown ups might leave YouTube videos running in a browser tab, the chief culprit is children and Apple TV / ChromeCast. Children (and half of the adults out there) think that turning off the TV stops the streaming of the media they are watching. It doesn’t – the iPod, iPad or smartphone that is feeding ChromeCast keeps streaming youTube, even while the screen is off. For hours and days. When the TV is switched back on, the child is pleased that YouTube is still running, saves them a few steps.

Prediction: Internet providers will create advertisements pleading people to stop their app instead of switching off their TV.

 

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On two fronts, video games and pop music, it is being proven in Japan that you don’t need real live humans any more. And this is presumably where the rest of the world is heading, to some degree.

Hatsune Miku is a Japanese pop princess with a #1 single and sell-out live shows. But her voice and image are computer-generated, and her “live” shows feature a holograph that the fans seem to enjoy as much as a real performer:

And now video games are providing the same level of soft porn as rap videos. Just watch this and ask yourself why young men will really be buying Dead or Alive: Paradise

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When I say we, I don’t mean in war-torn africa, but rather the western world. And by relatively I mean compared to seemingly any other time in human existence.

According to  Steven Pinker, author of The Better Angels of Our Nature: Why Violence Has Declined (Viking, 2011):

“Violent deaths of all kinds have declined, from around 500 per 100,000 people per year in prestate societies to around 50 in the Middle Ages, to around six to eight today worldwide, and fewer than one in most of Europe.”

You can thank the upper class:

“Beginning in the 11th or 12th [century] and maturing in the 17th and 18th, Europeans increasingly inhibited their impulses, anticipated the long-term consequences of their actions, and took other people’s thoughts and feelings into consideration. A culture of honor—the readiness to take revenge—gave way to a culture of dignity—the readiness to control one’s emotions. These ideals originated in explicit instructions that cultural arbiters gave to aristocrats and noblemen, allowing them to differentiate themselves from the villains and boors. But they were then absorbed into the socialization of younger and younger children until they became second nature.”

In the USA murders are rending towards recorded lows:

homicide_offending_by_race

 

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Each line is spoken, but wth say gospel singing of Just The Same over the top of when the speaker says it.

Ausse and Kiwis – are just the same

Poms and the Scottish – are just the same

Blacks and African Americans – are just the same

Mexicans and Latinos – are just the same

Everyone in Asia – are just the same

Everyone in Africa – are just the same

Indians and Albanians – are just the same

Witch Doctors and Catholic Priests – are just the same

Athiests and Muslims – are just the same

Doctors and Nurses – are just the same

Astronauts and Street Sweepers – are just the same

Cats and Dogs – are just the same

Birds and Bees and Badgers – are just the same

The Sun and Moon – are just the same

God and Dust – are just the same

Every You in Every Dimension – are just the same

Love and God are in everything, big and small, near and far, known and unknown, and we are all just the same.

To get noticed:

sucking and fucking

blacks and niggers

abortions and grandparents

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I was having some thoughts about the future of Australia, post-resource riches. I love this country and want it to prosper, but it will be needing a new direction.

So I figure it would be a worthy ambition for Australia to be Top 10 in everything. But definitely not #1. Just be the most well-rounded example of a modern democracy.

So we could strive to be:

Top 10 Tourist Destination
Top 10 Lowest Crime Rate
Top 10 GDP
Top 10 Academic Results
Top 10 National Airline (ok, we’d have to nationalise Qantas…)

and so on. Eventually, just by being seen as the best all-round country, people will want to base their start-up here, people will want to buy our products, people would want to come and visit.

People will choose to have their business conferences here, their destination wedding here, smoke drugs here.

Like a cross between Las Vegas and Scandinavia.

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In the future I envisage a shrine room of sorts in the family home. A room for meditation, arts, weights and remembrance. Mood music. Pot plants and filtered sunlight and a gentle breeze.

The centerpiece is in the corner. A bi-fold concertina that has images of the most recent generation at the forefront. Each layer behind has the generation before – in images or stories.

Hidden to all but those who wish to look back.

It could be scrapbook-esque, or multimedia.

In the past, all people generally had of their long-dead relatives is a few black and white photos. In the future we’ll have social media posts, videos, 3D figurines and much, much more. And as organised religion fades, perhaps honouring your ancestors will make a return?

This person is on a similar track but I’m thinking TV cabinet size:

shrine-1

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After pondering on this my entire adult life, and having my own minor successes, I am starting to get a feel for what can and cannot be done. With magic**.

bb85.a.1.ps.100

Here are the parameters that I have currently decided upon:

  1. It affects the choices of living things, quite possibly just beings and perhaps only human beings
  2. Those choices are not conscious, or are close to being not conscious
  3. The target is a singular living thing, or many living things in a singular place
  4. The effect is cumulative – it grows with time, meaning short-term magic is much less effective
  5. Magic is weak, so weak it is hard to detect and even harder to prove

A bit more detail:

1. I have never attempted magic on anything other than humans. Whether it works on animals or not is like asking a Christian if animals go to heaven. As a pagan I figure it would certainly work on animals, and maybe plants, but as their capacity to make choices is more limited, the magic is harder to achieve. You can’t win lotto with magic, because you can’t influence a machine.

2. You can’t influence a judge and jury. They are putting a lot of focused, conscious effort into the choices they are making. You can influence purely subconscious choices, like what they dream about and who they love. It also works on matters that although seemingly consciously decided, it doesn’t matter much which way you do decide. For example, what you wear that day, where you park, or basically anything where you can say “I just felt like it”. For me the boundary comes from Star Wars – “these aren’t the droids you’re looking for”. Important to the heroes, but the guards don’t especially care.

3. Magic needs a focus. Try and target too many people at once, and the already weak force weakens accordingly. That’s not to say you can’t work concurrent spells, but each must be specific. I know that many people in a local space can be influenced. And I’m am quite sure you can affect many people in a single remote place as well – but you would need to know that place quite well, or at least have been there.

4. The more effort you put in, the better the results. A spell worked daily or constantly (as in an obsession) will have a snowball effect. A spell you spend two minutes on is bound to fail.

5. Magic is weak. Gravity is the weakest of the Newtonian forces, yet it still has powerful results. Magic is like blowing on a house of cards, where if you are close enough it will cause great change. If you are too far away, nothing will happen at all.

Magic is real. It is limited in many ways, but if you have imagination its uses are limitless.

 

** I am only discussing worked magic here. There are other magics that happen beyond the manipulations of people. Think karma, love at first sight, people with second sight, the universe aligning and so on. These other magics can be affected, amplified or negated by worked magic. But mostly they just do their own thing.

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Pokemon Go is the first big hit of augmented reality. It won’t be the last.

AR gaming will come and go, tidal like. There will be a new interaction, a new twist, a new franchise.

But ultimately it isn’t remotely real, nothing like the possibilities of VR.

People will give it a go, and tire of it quickly. Enough people will keep playing to let each hit experience last 6+ months.

But eventually seeing little demons and angels on your friend’s shoulders will get old.

Seeing yellow plumes of sulphuric farts erupting from your enemies butt will get tired.

The real hits of AR will be practical resources. The real gaming hits will be in VR.

#pokemongone

 

 

 

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