i lost my phone – it was left in a cab dropping off @ 105th street ~ 6pm today.

i am fucking bullshit right now.

THANK YOU ALL SO MUCH!

As a result of your valliant efforts, I was able to retrieve my phone. Special thanks to and everyone else who gave a holler.


hastings knows his shit.

work has removed the fun part of my brain. i fell asleep on my couch last night at around 3, and forgot to set my alarm. this led to an interesting morning.

i am re-reading ‘s series. i am trying to get juiced for novemeber, for nano – i’m finding the spirit willing and the flesh weak.

i went to the farm this weekend with my folks. it was adventurous. i took some neat pictures.

i started wearing new colonge. for those of you who know me irl, i have always stuck to two-three signature scents over the years, and it has been about three years since i’ve changed/added anything to the mix.

unfortunately for my heterosexuality, it is called ‘Spirit’, and marketed under Antonio Banderas’ name (and my dad’s company).

my life is jack’s boring barbiturate trip.

I find it interesting how many of these I have done, but how they are mostly towards the middle/bottom.

Go to http://www.careercruising.com/default.asp
Username: nycareers
Password: landmark
Do the career matchmaker, then post the results on LJ

  1. Curator
  2. Director of Photography
  3. Set Designer
  4. Costume Designer
  5. Multimedia Developer
  6. Director
  7. Professor
  8. Historian
  9. ESL Teacher
  10. Special Effects Technician
  11. Website Designer
  12. Foreign Language Instructor
  13. Cable Installer and Repairer
  14. Family and Consumer Scientist
  15. Music Teacher / Instructor
  16. Optical / Ophthalmic Lab Technician
  17. Computer Support Person
  18. Lobbyist
  19. Industrial Designer
  20. Desktop Publisher
  21. Computer Programmer
  22. Technical Writer
  23. Fashion Designer
  24. Cartoonist / Comic Illustrator
  25. Animator
  26. Computer Trainer
  27. Interior Designer
  28. Criminologist
  29. Electrician
  30. Electronics Assembler
  31. Dental Lab Tech
  32. Small Engine Mechanic
  33. Recording Engineer
  34. Conservator
  35. Office Machine Repairer
  36. Chef
  37. Makeup Artist
  38. Archaeologist
  39. Video Game Developer
  40. Health Care Administrator

I rode in to work this morning thinking of that very different world I lived in several years ago. Things were not just different then from a “state of the nation” or “number of my rights that have been taken away” standpoint – I was in a very different place – different job, different life, different zip code, different goals.

I began to ponder the significance of those things, and how little they meant in the melange of millions of people all about me.

I’ve read an awful lot about technological singularity, as well as the never-ending theme in my head in regards to simulated reality.

One of the things that occurred to me, as I wound my way downtown, was the ego of human, which so often gets in our way when making sensible or meaningful decisions, plays such a large role in our perceptions. There is this gross assumption that once technology passes us by, we’ll still have a viable place in the world. An important place (I think this may be true for a short period of time, but thereafter, not hardly at all). What I began to wonder this morning, is if we even have a significant place in the world now?

One of the reasons I liked the movie M.I.B. is the animated segment which comes at the end of the movie. Powers of ten. Homer had a good take on it too. The concept of size and importance seems intrinsically linked in our perceptions of the physical world. That clip does a wonderful job of putting that in context. Despite our perceptions of linked size-importance dynamics, AIDS, which is so small you can’t see it with your naked eye, has killed way more people than crashing planes and falling buildings ever will. The sun is much larger than the planet we live on, yet I can block “seeing” it with my hand, or a hat. Size, its importance, and the significance of things size is very much skewed in reality, despite instinctive perceptions.

So, too, is our sense of importance.

When you get deep into information theory,you start to question the importance of storage medium. How reliable is it? How much can it express? How durable is it?

What if we are all just bits? How is that for importance? The sum total of our being is to store the most basic building block of information. We start when 0 becomes 1, and scurry around our medium for an uncertain passage of time, then go back to being 0’s. What if all our mad-dash live, love, tears, pain, laughs are just the agitated particle state of being a 1?

Six years ago was a sector fault.

Krakatoa and Vesuvius were head crashes.

I’m not trying to dehumanize, or minimize. I lost people – there are still holes on my insides. The world changed. My city changed. I could spin words on how it hurts, how the aftermath makes me angry, or sometimes disgusted to be considered the same species as some of the people who have taken advantage of the shift in the winds.

I could do it, but why bother? It changes nothing. Awareness of recursion, apparently, does nothing to change it. Ask the Ottomans, or the Romans, or the fucking Dinosaurs. Without that big comet a few million years ago, we would have very little interest in the sandy parts southwest of the Mediterranean to begin with these days. In that world, would there have even been two scyscrapers to miss?

Entropy abounds, and when in interacts with us, it seems to take very predictable patterns. The more history I read, the less I believe that any real forward momentum has been made.

This is all perception-level stuff. System level? I bet the events six years ago barely registered. At the motherboard, things are moving about impossibly fast. At the monitor, the keyboard and mouse seem like the only moving parts.

Have a ginormous music library? Running out of space on your hard drive? Storage is cheap, but so is this app, which also means you can fit more music on your portable MP3 player.

Wired’s article about it comes complete with comparison links. I’m not going to go full compression, but to be able to cram another 500 songs onto my mp3 player, I’ll take the minor hit in quality. I’ll just keep an uncompacted archive on my network hard drive for stereo listening.

Yeah, so new item on my buffet tray – Podcasts! Video podcasts. No-cost podcasts. When asked how we could produce something which was going to gobble up bandwidth, even if we skimped on production costs, for no money, I was informed that bandwidth is an IT cost, so not really a cost at all.

I may see if I can write off 30k in new IT gear, since it won’t be a real cost. If anyone asks, I’ll blame the podcasts.

iPhones for everyone – oh, wait, that’s right, they aren’t selling as quickly as hoped, so they are a lot less expensive now. Hmm. Have to think of something else to waste money on.