For my money, the worst thing about Blade Runner is how it created a franchise based on its own adaptation. The net negative outcome is we're now categorically unlikely to ever see a cinematic portrayal of Rachael Rosen throwing a goat off a roof.
The best stuff in Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? is not in Blade Runner. The animal worship is tricky. It's a source of dark humor that takes time to blend in with the rest of the world; while it lampoons the insanity of industrialized passions, it runs the risk of making the world goofy, and thus also the characters. I understand why Scott and company evaded it. It's the chess that I love and miss.
There are multiple scenes in which opposing characters attempt to outmaneuver each other so subtly that the reader isn't immediately aware it's happening. The experience I loved so much was going back to reread the last few pages armed with the knowledge that these characters are actively trying to kill each other without letting on. I can't think of anything else that gives me those particular tingles, and it's a shame that the theme was unintentionally scraped out of the visual media franchise. I would love to see a different take on the source, but I also love the secret knowledge of this ultimate game of cat and mouse. Regardless, Electric Sheep remains an excellent example of a book with so much going on that thirty million dollars couldn't capture it all.
On a barely related note, I'd love to see a feature film adaptation of Eye in the Sky.
I joined Reddit in 2008. I remember it as a perpetual series of discoveries. Every time I logged in, I would learn something I never would have seen otherwise. New technology. New comedy. New ideology. New pornography. New ability to interpolate a unique string of characters related to current events and suddenly take control of a fresh memetic stream of independent media. New feelings, identities, behavior patterns, collective ethical architectures, and business opportunities. I was an isolated adolescent allergic to all the authority and social structure in my churchy suburban youth. Reddit was an electric neon string dangling from infinity and buzzing with the secular hum of freedom, sex, and reason. I grabbed on and didn't let go for fifteen years.
We must remember it was always a business. It was an advertising marketplace operated for profit. It happened to operate at a particular scale which afforded small groups of key thinkers subjective judgements of the value of abstract concepts. For example, the value of community trust in an ad business.
I am guilty of describing recent events as "the death of Reddit." While it's cathartic to type after watching a community so formative to my identity sink into the swamp of astroturfed parasocial media hosting the U.S. Congress thinks is the same thing as "the Internet," it's wrong. Reddit didn't die, it just outgrew its ideals. What died was that stupid moose. Furthermore, I'm glad it's dead. It lied to me. It convinced me to forget something very important that Frank Herbert tried to tell me a long, long time ago.
The Spice Must Flow
Most people just want content. Sad but true. People living in specialized industrial/postindustrial societies have access to infinite sources of worry restricted only by the awareness of imminent death. The role of computers in society according to almost everyone alive is to help them hang on to their jobs or to temporarily distract them from their jobs. You can put the secret truth of the universe on tap and the vast majority of people simply won't care unless it helps with one of those two things. It's human nature; getting angry and vocal about it doesn't change it. You are entitled to try.
It is because we know we will wither and die that we construct apparatuses to care for us in our impending weakness. For this reason, businesses of a certain size either grow or disappear.
Steve Huffman is taking a lot of shit right now, and that's fair. That's his job. My friends, do not confuse the face of the business for the inherent nature of the business. It is composed of mortals. Worse, it's composed of software.
September Is a Function of Connectivity
If you've migrated to a federated Reddit substitute this week, you may have already encountered ActivityPub's biggest limitation. Defederation is a massive pain in the ass. When a popular instance decides to take its toys and go home, everybody who was federated with them gets kicked in the metaphorical dick while the network figures out how to heal. On a technical level, the reason this is so expensive has to do with the inherent limitations of client-server architecture, but that's a topic for another day. Right now, defederation is being used the way it was arguably intended: to protect communities who feel threatened by massive growth. Before you know it, the natural forces of conglomeration that killed our beloved Silly Moose will turn defederation into the same political token that's represented by today's private API. The gnashing of teeth will echo across the internet as pseudointellectuals like me bemoan the "death of the Fediverse." They will be as wrong then as we are now, and we will be old.
In these fleeting moments preceding imminent death, we must use technology to love one another.
Developers, content creators, and content moderators really need you to step in and remind them that what they should have been doing for the last twenty years was making you wealthy. After all, how are you going to sell everyone's personal info to the Chinese if it's open to everyone?!
"When we said you should nationalize controversial industries, steal from the rich, enshrine corruption, and grow the welfare state, we meant you should do it in a nice, aesthetically pleasing way that panders to our social demographic."
I always wanted a cat. I like the stupid little furballs. Can't help it.
I know it's irrational and expensive and environmentally suboptimal
and you're basically just setting yourself up for inevitable heartbreak,
but when they bump their dumb soft heads into me I melt like a chocolate
bar on the dash of a black car in the August sun.
My Dad was allergic to cats, so I wasn't allowed to have a cat. Then my
Dad left and I still wasn't allowed to have a cat. In retrospect that's
pretty suspicious, Mom. My college had an extreme zero tolerance policy
for pets: they caught this one dude red-handed and called animal control
to come murder his pet snake. Then someone in that same dorm burned a
bag of popcorn and the sprinklers wouldn't shut off, flooding the entire
building and destroying everybody's shit. I've never been a big fan of
the "snake guy" archetype but no one deserves that degree of irony.
In my first apartment, I wasn't allowed to have a cat because there was
a cat quota which was already filled by my roommate, whose cat hated
me. That cat would wait until I brought a girl over and then walk up to
us while we were making out and just piss right there in the middle of
the floor, making eye contact with me. At the time I really had no idea
how devastating cat urine can be to a rental property.
I stayed there for way too long because I hate moving. You know when you
start to hate everyone who lives in a city, like it's their fault that
your personality grew out of that lifestyle? Time to go. I carefully
selected only rental units with pet clauses, paid everyone in the world,
and slowly realized that the carpet was saturated with cat urine from
the last tenant. I report this to the property manager, who reports
it to the property owner, who replies back to the property manager, who
tells me, "Yeah, no more pets."
So now I'm sitting in a townhouse that smells like cat piss, waiting weeks for
these colossal dipshit moron douchebag numbskulls who installed carpet
all over a pet rental to go through the doomed process of paying a
series of professionals to tell them that you can't actually get
crystallized uric acid out of a carpet pad, and I'm still not allowed to
have a fucking cat.
In this thread, let's discuss keyboard-driven use of the Lemmy desktop
web UI.
The elephant in the room is Reddit's recent decision to destroy its
longstanding relationship with community development which, in my view,
helped that website retain its stature as The Link Aggregator for years
and years after its core content stream and central administration had
fallen into the toilet. Today I chose Lemmy as my new aggregator because
its development philosophy and resulting implementation of the
ActivityPub federation protocol meet my insane standards. There's only
one thing I'm missing.
How Can Into Mouse-Free?
I miss the Reddit Enhancement Suite, colloquially known as RES.
Navigating content and comment trees without dedicated keybindings is a
big slog relative to the obscene convenience and customizability of that
venerated plugin. I imagine that other users of the Old Reddit + RES
combo are in a similar position to my own. Now, there are
general-purpose keyboard integration layers for web browsers. I daily
use and highly recommend
Tridactyl, though it does have
a hell of a learning curve if you're not coming from the
Vim school of UX, and
it's Firefox only. I can't imagine Tridactyl being any more flexible
than it is, yet its intent as a general DOM parser means it can't really
compete with something native, explicitly designed for parsing content
lists and comment trees of embedded media.
I'd like to turn this over to the community. If you're familiar with the
Old Reddit + RES lifestyle, what were the essential features you'd like
to see implemented on top of the federated backend? If you're using
something to fill the void, tell us about it, regardless of how hacky or
specific it might be. If you love your mouse and don't see the issue
here, feel free to chime in.
Please note that this discussion is not intended as and should not
descend into a list of demands for Lemmy features. As I hope I've
already made clear, the ideal situation is a wide variety of different
applications connected together. Let's hack on stuff.