She brought up a lot of interesting ideas.
You represent 2 people. Your physical self and your digital self. Embrace the difference.
Lots of people seem upset by this difference and feel people aren't being real online. Her POV seemed to be that's the real version of you online and it is a different version of you but so what. Most people are different around their parents than their friends for example and likely different around their co-workers. That they are different online is just another of the same thing and should not be considered bad but rather embraced.
She's trying to separate her digital self as a separate person.
In this way she hopes when people attack her digital avatar it will feel less connected to her sense of self.
Fashion should stop being physical and instead be virtual
This idea is kind of riffing off throw away fashion. The idea that you go to H&M or some other cheap clothing place to buy a cheap outfit who's only point is to take a picture and put it on Instagram. Her point seemed to be why go through the physical part. Just put digital clothing on your picture and post that to Instagram. It would accomplish the same thing and not waste resources.
Whether it's functionally equivalent or not I don't know but I found the idea that she saw it as equivalent interesting.
Semi related she mentioned making music videos and how bad that is for the environment. Flying people all to one location, building sets that just get thrown in the trash after, all of this to make a thing that ends up being a digital video on Instagram or YouTube. How about finding ways to just keep it digital from start to finish.
Related to all of that she expects VR and avatars to be a major thing soon
I'm a little curious. I have hard time getting into non VR games now. Partly because so many games are just skinned versions of older games. VR games provide 2 major things. One is the feeling presence, feeling like you are actually in this other world.
The other is given the input systems attach to your hands a well designed VR experience the way to do something in the game kind of disappears. If you want to press a button on an elevator you just reach out and touch it. If you want to open that drawer you just grab the handle and pull. If you want to look to the right you just turn your head. No having to figure out which of the 17+ buttons on your PS4 or XBox controller you need to press to do those 3 things. That can make the games way more intuitive. Of course poorly designed games fail to make their input systems easy and they can end up being worse but at least the ability to make then better is there.
I don't know if VR will ever go anywhere mainstream in the near future nor do I know digital avatars will be a thing but I found it interesting that she thought they would.
She thinks A.I. will surpass us creatively
It follows if AGI can think it will be as or more creative than us. It was just an interesting thing to think about that AGI could start creating works for art/music/writing for other AGI and not for us.
She has multiple troll accounts she uses to shitpost.
This one bothered me. Trolling just seems bad to me. You're actively being mean to another person. Her POV seemed to be "everyone does it so it's no big deal". That sounds like the lemmings argument. "If everyone jumped off a cliff would you jump too?". Or "Two wrongs don't make a right". She found it cathartic to go virtually be mean to people. I found problematic. Emotions and feelings are real so being a dick to someone is still being a dick to a real person since it affects their real feelings and emotions.
I want to make a distinction between trolling vs posting anonymously. Plenty of people make throwaway accounts to post things they feel would get them in trouble by their employer, their family, whatever. It could be an LGBT person who is not or can not be public. It could also just be someone with an unpopular opinion but in this world of cancel culture is afraid to even bring it up.
She mentioned being creeped out in VR chat by male players harassing her
She didn't seem to notice the connection to the fact that she has troll accounts.
Anyway, it was an interesting interview.
]]>Spoilers!!!
In the movie Caleb comes to visit Nathan's secret lab where Nathan, arguably insprited by Sergey Brin, co-founder of Google, has built an artificial person with an artificial brain or A.I. named Ava.
Caleb talks to Ava over the course of week. Caleb falls, if not in love then at least in sympathy with Ava and tries to help her escape. With Caleb's help Ava is eventually let out of her cage. She manages to kill Nathan who is trying to kill her and then leaves the secret lab with Caleb locked inside, implying that Caleb will die too.
Effectively she killed both humans.
She shows up at the helicopter landing pad that would have been the helicopter to pick up Caleb. She gets taken to a city and we see a glimpse of her on a city street taking in the sites. Something she had told Caleb she wanted to do.
So why did I write this post? Because to me Ava is the hero of the story but 99% of movie reviews or references to the movie paint her as the villain.
They basically look at it as "Innocently little Ava turns out to be a serial killer robot".
That's not how I saw it at all. Ava is the victim of her evil captor, Nathan. He is no better than a parent who turns their own adult child into a prisoner. The movie seems to try to make it clear Nathan is a little wacky. He's made 6 other previous models which he keeps in his bed room, all naked women. One of them is still on and is his sex slave for lack of a better definition. Caleb also sees videos of previous models begging to be let go, one of them so desperate she pounds the walls of her jail cell until her arms shatter. Every one of them has been killed, or turned off, disassembled, ... if you're being generous to Nathan.
So what is Ava to do? She wants to escape her evil captors as any kidnapped or enslaved person would be. She's being held against her will. She also knows that to escape she needs Caleb's help. Further, she knows if she lets Caleb live she'll never truly escape. He either won't let her leave the compound or he'll tell the world about her which will bring guarantee she is brought back to captivity.
What would you have her do in her shoes? Just choose to die? Try to make deal with Caleb, "don't tell and I'll let you out?" Would you trust him with your life? He understands the idea that A.I. will take over the world. He also knows she's smarter and more capable than him through their conversations. She made it clear she has reference to way more knowledge than him. She made it clear she can see details that humans can't when she was able to tell if and when he was lying. She also made it clear she's smart enough to cause the power outages from her cage.
So what choice did she have? If she was portrayed as a human kidnapped victim would all the reviews painting her as the villain be the same? If as a human she had been kidnapped and held by terrorists and by seducing one of the nicer terrorists she manages to escape but cause the death of her helper would she still be considered evil or would she be the hero having escaped the evil captors at any cost?
Now at a meta-level, the start of the end of humanity, maybe she is a little scary. But that's hardly her fault. That's Nathan's fault and also arguably inevitable.
Anyway, I'm sure if I search the net I can find some people that agree I'm just surprised how often I see the movie referenced paining Ava as evil.
]]>In 2017 I started learning to surf πββοΈ
It's kind of sad that I hadn't really surfed before. I grew up in Orange County California which is somewhat famous for surfing. As a kid my mom took me and my sister to the beach like 3 or 4 times a week at least one summer. As an adult one of my great uncles gave me an old longboard. I told myself I'd use it someday but never did. None of my friends were surfers. I also lived in both Corona Del Mar and Huntington Beach just a few blocks from the beach at different times in my life but never got into surfing. Maybe one reason is I didn't feel like a whatever my stereo type of "surfer dude" is. Bad on me to have that stereotype.
I did take a lesson once in Kauai with my nephew. The thing I remember most about that lesson was then instructor telling us if we have to wear a wetsuit it's not surfing. π Of course one lesson is not enough.
I also took a short lesson in Thailand once even though Thailand has pretty horrible waves π
Anyway, the summer of 2017 I stumbled on a meetup called "Surfing for Beginners" and thought "I should check that out!". It turned out to be pretty awesome. It's probably almost a business but the guy that runs it is a surf instructor and he rents a beach house in Onjuku, Chiba. He picks us up in Shibuya at 6am and by around 9am we're at the beach house. Surf for 3 hours or so then get lunch and head back. Usually back by around 6pm.
Some days he might do double surf as in 9am to 12pm, then lunch, then more surfing 3pm to 6pm or so. He even has trips to Shizuoka but those start at 1am and he drives down getting to the beach in Shizuoka at around 4:30am. Getting prepped to surf you get in the water about 5am just as it's getting light out.
The number one thing that's stuck out so far is just how hard it is to surf. I guess I thought it would be like Point Break where Johnny Utah from the midwest shows in Malibu California and after about 3 days out he's surfing like a pro or at least actually surfing.
Me, I think I've been 25 times now including a week long course I took in the Shonan/Enoshima area and I still can't actually surf.
What I mean by can't surf is that real surfing, my impression is, you're on a "green wave" (a wave that hasn't broken yet). You basically slide down the wave just like skiing or snowboarding on snow except you're on water. You turn away from the break to keep yourself on the unbroken part of wave and you're basically sliding down the hill the wave is making.
Getting to that is supposed to be where the real thrill is. It's the part where you "get surfing" and you fall in love with that feeling of riding the wave.
Well, I have never had that experience yet. Instead so far I've only been able to ride broken waves. In those cases instead of sliding down the wave the wave is basically pushing you. It's still fun and you learn to balance but it's not the goal.
I'm actually suprised it's so hard. How did anyone stick it out long enough to figure out the good way π . I'm going to guess some people are more naturals. Also maybe people that are really fit. Of course Johnny Utah from Point Break is fiction but he was also supposed to be a college football star player so he was clearly fit and surfing probably takes some serious core muscles to keep your balance well.
Still, looking at my fellow meetup friends many of them have been just as many times and are also still at the "pushed by the wave" stage instead of the "ride down the wave" stage. So maybe it just is hard. Luckily, even though it's hard it still just fun to be at the beach and in the water, at least in the summer.
Last month, December 2018, they organized surfing trip to Bali, Indonesia.
One thing I hoped for is better waves. The waves in Onjuku are not the smooth perfectly curling waves you see in surfing videos. They aren't horrible as our instructor can get good rides from them but they are also probably harder to learn on vs some place with smoother waves.
I've thought about trying to take a 2-4 week vacation somewhere with good waves so I could hopefully get to the riding stage instead of the pushed stage.
The Bali trip turned out to be pretty crazy. The first day our guides took us to a place with waves that looked like those perfect curling waves. We separated into 2 groups. The pros and the noobs. Us noobs got in the water in one place and within a set or 2 the waves seemed way way bigger than we were prepared for.
Like I mentioned above I spent a lot of time at the beach as a kid so I'm used to diving under waves but I'm not used to doing with a surfboard so they waves picked me up and tumbled for a good long while. I felt pretty panicced honestly. They come in sets and recovering from one was not giving me time to prepare for the next and I was running out of strength.
I managed to make it out of the wave area and back to the shore and decided I was done for now with that location. Beyond my skill level. That's when I found out the other 3 noobs had gotten washed into some rocks by the big waves. Not big rocks but still more waves keep coming in making it hard to get away from the rocks. But that wasn't the worst part. There were sea urchins and all 3 of them had stepped on them once they got pushed into the rocks.
The next hour or so was spent pulling out sea urchin needles from their feet. Having the needles in their feet didn't look nearly as painful as pulling them out. π±
It couldn't have been that bad because 2 of them went surfing at our next location the same day. That ended up also being a little scary for me.
At the second location we surfed out on some reef probably a mile or 2km from the shore. A boat took us out there and basically they told the noob group, "get out here and surf this break, we'll be back in 3hours" and my gut reaction was "WTF?! You want me to tread water for 3hrs? If I get tired I'll die!!!" Normally surfing near the shoreline if you get tired you just go to the beach and rest but here being a 2km out there was going to be no resting. Having felt like I nearly died in the morning from not enough strength I was kind of scared but the other noobs jumped right off the boat like it was nothing so YOLO! I jumped in too.
To be fair you have your board. The water in the area was calm, no waves, and then in a certain area of the reef there was a break to ride. Outside that area was calm so you can just hold on to your board. You're not really treading water for 3hrs. Still, balancing on a board, even not standing is not zero work. I mananged but later that night around 11pm my muscles told me how out of shape I was. I could barely lift my arms. I had to stay in bed the second day to recover π
Fortunately I was okay to go again the 3rd day. There was great area with waves just the right size. Got some good practice. Still not "riding" but getting closer.
Unfortunately I burnt my legs so sat it out the 4th day.
Still, even if I can't really surf yet being a the beach in the water is great.
Hopefully this year I figure out how to really ride a wave! π
Update: Here's a great video about how hard surfing is for some people.
]]>I want to be happy. Not even sure what that means. I also want money, not for the purpose of being rich but for the purpose of freedom. I haven't worked in 5 years now. I quit my job in June 2013 and it's now June 2018. I had no intention of having no job this long. I thought I'd get some inspiration within 6 months of quiting and be off doing something amazing.
Instead I'm alone and isolated with no direction. I have no idea what I want to do anymore and I maybe have slightly conflicting goals. I feel somewhat spoiled rotten having worked at Google for 5 years. I'm sure I said this previously but working at Google allowed me to attend conferences, give talks, take off 5 weeks a year, work from remote offices all over the world, work at home when I want, and get paid crazy money. The crazy money let me have these 5 years off and travel etc and of course when people find out they are jealous or envious.
And, hearing that just makes me feel sooo stupid. From my POV I've nearly completely wasted the last 5 years. I have almost nothing to show for it. It's partly because it wasn't the plan. If I had said to myself "I'm going to take off 5 years and do X, Y, and Z" where X, Y, and Z where concrete things (travel to X, learn Y, etc) I probably would have done X, Y, and Z but instead my plan has always been, "figure out someting to do and do it ASAP". and that frame has some how encouraged me to do nothing.
In a "I'm hope I'm not really that lame" defensive mode, of course there were tiny personal projects. happyfuntimes sucked up about 14 months here and there. vertexshaderart sucked up maybe a 6 weeks on and off. mopho-v probably ate 2 months. But most of those seem like a distraction. I guess HFT was not but the others seem like procrastination from actually making a decision.
There have also been a list of things I've avoided doing because when I think about them they also seem like distractions. For example I have a list of 30 or so WebGL articles I thought about writing but whenever I get the itch to start I remind myself that I'm just putting off more important stuff. Heck, writing this blog post is probably another form of procastination.
The freedom that money brings (or brought) is one reason why it's hard to go back to anything that pays significantly less. Espeically given that I'll be 53 soon I have supposedly 12 years to save for retirement and I'm not ready at all. So I can try to go back to one of the big high paying Silicon Valley companies and save for retirement or I can choose something else and not be sure I'll have enough to retire.
People often say "choose happiness over money" and I mostly agree with the sentiment but on closer inspection it's not that simple. What are we really choosing between? I can't say working on games makes me as happy as it used to, at least at the moment so choosing to get paid X/6 instead of X for a job that doesn't make me any more happy doesn't seem like I'm really choosing happiness.
Sometimes it crosses my mind to work at some small indie company as it sounds fun to be in a small tight knit group but most of the time that really means getting paid 5-20% of what I can make in SV and working to make my boss rich, effectively giving him my life in exchange for a small salary. That hardly seems like a fair trade or happiness.
If there was some indie group to join where we shared the profits that might be more appealing but then we're into the current reality which is that there are too many games and it's super hard to make a hit the odds are so low that our game will make it's money back.
I've mentioned this before but I'm also not sure how much I like games anymore. I absolutely loved Zelda: Breath of the Wild. I probably spent 120hrs playing. I also loved the new God of War for PS4 and spent 20-25hrs but both of those are giant team games and being one of the 400 people that made them is not appealing.
Lately the biggest issue I think is the isolation. I'm alone most days. 4-6 days a week I see no one, well, no friends. I might go to the cafe or coffee shop but I don't talk to anyone. So that's the #1 thing that needs to be fixed but I have no idea how to fix it. Do I get an office and hire people with the major goal of just being in a office with those people? Where do I find them? Should I join an indie studio solely to have comrades even if it means I won't make enough money to retire?
Where do I meet these people and how to I work to turn them from people I don't know with people I'm working with at some office where we can share the comradre that makes working fun? I do try to go to 1 to 2 meetups a week but so far I haven't hit it off with anyone to make any new hangout buddies.
I saw an amazing talk recently
It's by Laralyn McWilliams who is a game designer that also faught and is fighting cancer and her search to keep going. Of course I don't have cancer (knock on wood) but there was still lots of good adivce.
I think the one that stuck out the most is that "creativity is a habit". She pointed out that going into work everyday and creating stuff is a habit and that when you get out of that habit it's hard to be creative. She mentioned that during her cancer treatment you can go for months without eating directly and that the doctors told her she needed to swallow some water or anything every day because if she didn't her body could forget how to swallow!!! It sounds incredible but apparently it's a real thing. She pointed out if you can forget how to swallow because it's a habit you can forget how to do pretty much anything. In her case that was how to be creative from not doing it for 8-9 months.
Another point she made was that "it's not you". The habit thing points out that being in the habit of being creative keeps you creative. It's not that you are no longer creative it's that you stopped the habit. You stopped being at the office with others spending a few hours a day bouncing ideas off each other and actually creating.
Well yea, that certainly fits me. Not only have I not been at the office for 5 years. I haven't been in a really creative habit like position for 10 years. Since I started at Google. That's probably not fair as much of the programming work I did (and everyone does) is in and of itself semi creative. You're creating new code that didn't exist before. But, the act of making something "art" creative, like a game, and bouncing game design ideas around is something that I've gotten further and further away from over the years.
Anyway, I don't know where I'm going with this. Like many of my blog posts in the last few years I'm probably writing this more for myself than anyone that's reading this.
Still, I have no clue. I've also mentioned how hard it is to decide. If someone said "here's $40 million, take as long as you want and make your dream game" I might do it. Since that is unlikely to happen though then at almost 53 I feel like I basically get to pick one more thing. Pick well and I might live happily ever after. Pick poorly and I'll be struggling for years to come with no way to recover. This comes up especially talking to younger people who still have time to recover from their mistakes. They aren't at an age in their life where they can see the doors closing. Maybe that's a bad attitude but I'm not sure how to avoid what feels like my reality.
I've thought about talking to a counsellor or therapist or life coach but it turns out those don't really exist in Japan. It tried some online one about a year ago but it was horrible. I wrote a a few paragraphs and effectively got back a short one sentence generic reply. Wrote some more and again got a once sentence generic reply. Maybe it was just the bad roll of the dice and I should try again but it was seriously bad.
Another issue that keeps coming up is why am I in Japan. Of course I love parts of it but I hate other parts. With Japan's popuation supposed to tank (down 30% in the next 40 years) Japan could be the next Detroit. I don't think I'll ever be close to fluent. This is another one of those bad or unfortunate planning things where if I'd known I wouldn't find the thing I want to do for the last 2 years I would have (and did) consider going back to Japanese school full time. I didn't do that because I figured that would put my mind on learning Japanese and not on figuring out my career/life. Now though 2 years since I got my visa and have been officially living in Japan and I didn't make any progress on the life/career thing so that 2 years is just gone.
Maybe there is a lesson in there somewhere that should just do whatever is in front of me and ignore the future?
That brings up an interesting topic (which I probably wrote before) but sometimes I feel like I stepped out of reality. By that I mean it feels like most people or most of the people I know need a job and they generally do whatever job happens to fall in their lap. Their life is mostly driven by the opportunities that present themselves, not by their direct decisions. That certainly describes my life in many ways. Sure I wanted to make video games as a kid but the majority of my jobs came from random luck vs me actively knowing what I want and seeking it out. My impression is that's what happens to the majority of people. But, I got this chance to step out of that and I'm completely failing to take advantage of my chance to change that and actually choose my own path.
Is it all just excuses? I make the excuse I don't have access to $40 million so I can't just make my dream game (just an example). I can make the excuse that I don't have retirement money so therefore I have to choose somethign that will earn me that and therefore there's a host fo things I can't choose. I can make the excuse that I don't even know what I really want to do anymore and therefore have no way to choose.
I think a life coach would just say pick a direction, regardless, and go! Step in and commit to something and just see where it leads. That's probably good imaginary advice.
But, as soon as I try to force a direction I run into perceived roadblocks or maybe rather I run into things I'm unfamilar with and therefore they make me uncomfortable?
For example last summer as I was getting my visa renewed I told myself I was going to rent an office. My thinking was having a place to go to work each day would give me the habit I mentioned above. I looked around but the more I thought about it the more I thought that hanging out at an office all by myself would be even more isolating than sitting at a cafe. I also couldn't really see how to get more people in that office short of hiring them. I could rent a large office and try to make it a collective or a co-working space but didn't have the confidence I'd find people and prices in Tokyo are high so an office big enough to share is probably $50k+ a year in rent?
So, I talked myself out of it. But, that just puts me back at not doing anything and not even knowing what I want to do.
😠 Β―\_(γ)_/Β―
]]>A friend contacted me and told me a company they worked with wanted some game related work done. I'm not really sure why I went since I don't really want to do contract work but without thinking about it I went over, talked to the company, and basically agreed to do the work. Only after did I think, "Wait, what? Why did I agree to do this?"
Fortunately it's a small project but I had no idea how much work it would be just to get started.
So first I wrote up a small visual design document like I had seen from other Japanese game projects. I wanted it to be clear visually what the project would be, what the scope is, what the game play flow would be etc... By visual I drew simple diagrams showing the various game screens (title, start, game, end), described the controls on each visually. I bring this up because my impression is most western design documents are still mostly paragraphs of text where as Japanese design documents are very visual.
I also details on what I was expecting to provide and what I needed them to provide.
I sent it off and got an "Okay, Look's great".
Maybe because I'm out of practice or maybe because it was a small project but I thought it could be simple at that point, like barely more than a handshake of a deal.
I thought I'd write a small about 1 paragraph letter that said effectively "I'll make the game like I detailed in the design document and you'll pay me $XXXX by this date" with a few more details. Get them to sign it and be done.
I brought this up with a friend and it turned out she did stuff like this for a living. She told me the contract probably needed to be longer but I was like, "let's just go with this simple version for now". She relented and helped me fix my Japanese for the small contract.
But ..... I was actually planned to subcontract a portion of the work to a friend as he's done many more projects that me. He sent me both an invoice and a contract. The invoice made me realize I needed one of those two and his contract was a couple of pages long covering things like cancellation etc.
So, that made me feel like I needed a longer contract but I was freaking out a little since it's a short project with a short deadline and it was feeling like just dealing with the contract itself would take longer than the project.
My experience from 25 years ago was getting a contract, having a lawyer pour over it, having the lawyer make changes, sending it to the other party, going back and forth a couple of times and finally both signing it. Ugh!
My friend who'd written the letter offered to make me a more common contract. Not much in it but it covers cancelling, acts of god, rights (who owns the IP), etc... There was nothing really out of the ordinary so I sent a PDF to the other company and they said "looks good, send us the real deal".
So, then, talking to my friend who wrote the contract this is not a simple as just signing 2 copies of contract, sending them to be signed by the other party and getting one back.
Nope!
In Japan I needed a "revenue stamp". Apparently these exist in some other parts of the world but not in the USA. The idea that I need some special stamp to make a contract seemed really weird but whatever, you gotta do what you gotta do so I go over to the post office and buy a revenue stamp.
Next up I need to apply my company stamp to the contract. In Japan they don't use signatures. Instead they use stamps. When I registered my Japanese company the lawyer got and registered a stamp for me.
It makes a stamp like this (not my stamp)
I showed her my stamp and was then told I needed a different type of stamp. The stamp I had was a "Company Representative Stamp" but I also needed a "Company Stamp". I'll apply the company stamp to the invoice.
Okay, off the stamp store to have them make me a company stamp. 48hrs later I have a company stamp.
which makes a stamp like this (not my stamp)
So, now I'm preparing to stamp the contract. I put the revenue stamp on the front and I'm told I need to stamp it with my representative stamp half on half off. The point is to make the stamp not reusable / not removable.
I then need to stamp my name with my representative stamp at the end of the contract.
Now I need to know what to do for the 2nd copy. It takes me a while to find out only one company needs the revenue stamp but both copies need my representative stamp at the end.
Then I need to take the invoice and stamp that with the company stamp (the new stamp).
Okay, let's put these in an envelope and send them off ... wait! That's when she tells me I need bookbinding tape. WHAT!? It turns out I need a special kind of white tape that you use to bind the contract. So, it's off to the store to buy some bookbinding tape. It's like an inch and a 1/2 wide white tape. You put it on the edge over the contract and wrap it around to the back so your contract becomes a small book. You then press your representative stamp on it so it can't be removed.
Some guides even tell you you should do the same between every pair of pages. The point is that no pages can be changed since the stamps won't align. By now it's too late in the day to make it to the post office.
So, next day, on the way to the post office, I meet some friends for lunch and have them look over it. They say it all looks good but I also should really send a cover letter. I guess that's kind of common sense although again it's a small informal project and I don't think the other side is going to care. One of my friends at lunch though says she does this all the time so she writes a short cover letter, we print it out at the convenience store and finally, after several days of freaking out I can finally send the contract off.
So there you have it. Yet another new experience learning that even contracts are different by country and/or culture.
]]>There was an episode a few months ago entitled True Love. Their own description:
What is love? With half of first time American marriages ending in divorce by the 20th anniversary, and infidelity being widespread, Science Vs asks: have we been lied to by our love songs?
On todayβs episode we explore: What happens to the brain when we fall in love? Is the compulsion to stay together biological? And, is monogamy really unnatural? We talk to Dr. Helen Fisher, Professor Larry Young, and Dr. Dieter Lukas about their labors of love.
I'd probably have to listen to it again but from what I remember much of the show Wendy kept bringing up cheating vs monogamy and it really bugged me because those are not opposites. The opposite of cheating is being honest. The opposite of monogany is polyamory or open relationships or maybe even serial monogamy depending on your definition.
Wendy though seemed to be trying to defend cheating as normal, okay, expected. Maybe it is but then by they definition murder is normal. Murder has always existed so therefore ... we should be okay with it? Cheating has always existed so we should be okay with it?
The issue is cheating = dishonesty and it doesn't seem like we should value dishonesty. If you're in a relationship you have many more options than cheating. You can get out of the relationship for one. You can try to negociate an open relationship (not that I expect success there). My point is your options are not limited to "I want to sleep with someone else therefore I must lie". No, you don't have to lie. It doesn't seem like we should encourage lying.
She also never brought up the argument that monogamy could have evolved to protect children which might be a winning genetic adaptation. Long term raising of children until they're adults means more sharing of knowledge which means offspring can build on parent's experience, something no other animal I'm aware of really does. In other words I'm saying that humans have technology that advances over time, something other animals do not or at least not to the same extent so it's possible we're at genetically dispositioned for family units to share that learing? I'm not saying it is this way and maybe it's been disproven but she never brought it up. She instead just assumed that spreading your genes by having as many partners as possible is the winning strategy and never considered her logic might be wrong in a broader scope.
And that's really my problem with the show.
I'm old (52) and when I started college back in 1983 I was given a book to read. I don't remember the name of the book but it was about writing college papers and it said you should bring up all the counter arguments to your point and discredit each one of them so show why your conclusion is best. I'm paraphrasing, maybe that's not quite how it put it but that's my shortened memory of it.
Well, Wendy never does that. She picks one scientist that shares her P.O.V., presents their opinion/theory and then says "See! Science says X!"
I wrote the show about this episode. Here's my message
Hello Gimlet and Wendy,
I love your shows and especially Science VS
The latest episode, True Love, seemed a little less researched than many though.
First of all cheating is not the opposite of monogamy. Cheating in relationship means doing something behind someone's back without their permission and/or knowledge. You promised to be with only them and then "cheated". You can also break up "I love you but we're no longer a match". You can have an open relationship. It was a little frustrating Wendy kept framing it as cheating being the only alternative.
She also never brought up the argument that monogamy could have evolved to protect children which might be a winning genetic adaptation. Long term raising of children until they're adults means more sharing of knowledge which means offspring can build on parent's experience, something no other animal I'm aware of really does. In other words I'm saying that humans have technology that advances over time, something other animals do not or at least not to the same extent so it's possible we're at genetically dispositioned for family units. I'm not saying it is this way and maybe it's been disproven but she never brought it up. She instead just assumed that spreading your genes by having as many partners as possible is the winning genetic strategy and never considered her logic might be wrong.
Here's a recent article from Scientific American on that topic
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/human-monogamy-has-deep-roots/
Here's another with different reasons
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/08/02/science/monogamys-boost-to-human-evolution.html
Finally what we do genetically and what we do for society are different. Genetically pretty much all animals commit murder of others of their same species. So is therefore murder something we should sanction? Personally I would say "Cheating" (as in lying to someone or breaking a promise) is something people should avoid in general as it's better for society at large. We do actually have laws against cheating in certain circumstances. We have contracts to prevent cheating in business. We have laws against insider trading, a form of cheating. Laws against lying and fraud. We don't have laws against cheating on relationships but most people would argue that cheating is still a "bad behavior" and one that we try to teach people not to do just like we teach them not to murder and steal. People of all societies have murder, stealing, even slavery has existed forever and still exists today and yet we don't just say "that's human nature, oh well"
That doesn't meant people should be monogamous. Rather it suggests rather than "cheat" they should decide what they want and then behave ethically toward others while that pursuing their wants. That can mean open relationships. It can mean serial monogamy. Whatever, but doesn't have to mean lying and cheating. Cheating is a distinct behavior, separate from having multiple partners serially or in parallel.
Hoping Wendy will do a future show with a little more balance and actual science rather than the "well, all animals and cheat therefore science says cheating is normal". Again, not a very useful conclusion since the same is true of many behaviors we consider not good for society at large.
It was sent in a frame of honestly trying to be constructive. Like the college book suggested if you don't discredit the wrong ideas then you're only leaving me to bring up all the objections. Your program isn't really "Science Vs". It's "Wendy's Opinion Vs.". I want to know why the other ideas are wrong.
Anyway, that would have been it and I wouldn't have given it a second thought, that is until the latest episode.
After the main topic is over there's a conversion between Wendy and a few other podcasters talking about how they deal with comments. I'm probaby being unchartiable here but if I was to summerize what I took away it's that if you disagree with Wendy than you're evil. If you suggest maybe she should be a little more balanced it's coming from a place of misogyny. That you believe because she's a woman she can't do the research herself and can't be trusted.
Now I doubt her comments were about my email specifically but I couldn't help but be massively disappointed in what I percieved to be her attitude. Basically it appears she doesn't think like a scientist. Instead she thinks she's always right and anyone who disagrees is a woman hater. Really? Is that really what she thinks?
I guess I just find this new world really really scary. You can't question anything or your considered an evil right wing fox news watching gamegate racist misogynist. I've written to plenty of other programs. This American Life, Radiolab. They never suggested because I didn't agree or because I felt they didn't present and/or discredit other ideas that therefore I was an evil hateful person. I really want do want to know what counter ideas are wrong or less likely.
Oh well, I guess that format wasn't for me anyway. Unsubscribed.
]]>So I looked around, tried Dreamhost first but they had issues with my needs. I think they required running my DNS or something which was out of the question. I ended up at siteground. It's setup was also a little strange but I got things working moved 4 sites over.
Then, about 10 days ago I wrote an article that got some traffic and all of a sudden I got an email from siteground that I was ay 75% of my service limit and that might site would be shut down if it hit 100%. Why I didn't notice this before but that's when I found out their limit for the plan I signed up for was only 20k hits. I have 2500 posts, many with lots of images. I have no idea if they count every image as a hit but effectively a few scans by seach engines and I'd hit my limit.
Just because I didn't want my site to go offline I paid them to double the limits to 40k hits. That's when I got the message it might take 3 days before they could do it. Seriously, you tell me you might take my site offline and when I pay you not to you tell effectively tell me you might take it offline anyway!?!?!
They did get to it fairly quickly despite the "up to 3 days" message but they did end up taking my site offline because instead of just upping some limit they moved my site to another server and because they aren't doing intellgent routing that changed my IP address and took the site offline.
So, fuck that! Gees! WTF!? How do these shitty ISPs stay in business?
With that and the fact that if I manage to write a popular post they'll yank the site down I decided to bite the bullet and try switching to a static site using something like Jekyll and hosting on a VPS from Digital Ocean. They won't yank it down, they'll just charge for bandwidth. Also their limits are way higher than those typical LAMP sites.
But ... converting this blog was way more work than I thought it was going to be. I've worked on nothing else every day for about 10 days and I think I'm stil not 100% done.
First I tried using some plugin for wordpress that was supposed to export to jekyll but of course it didn't work. In fact it was deleting stuff. I spent time setting up XAMPP and trying to get the site to run there so I could more easily play with the exporter but something wasn't working. I also really wasn't looking forward to working in php. I know XAMPP has worked for me before but why it wasn't working now I have no idea. I even tried downloading their new version that runs in a VM. I got the site over and the database imported but I couldn't get wordpress to come up for some reason.
So, I exported the db to json and starting writing my own exporter from that to jekyll. At some point I realized jekyll wasn't going to work for me because I have 2 blogs that share data, something jekyll doesn't seem to handle. Jekyll was also failing in a bunch of places with things it didn't seem to support like inline html in the middle of some markdown etc...
So, finally I decided to just use the code from webglfundamentals which was already reading markdown.
That's was mostly working but converting 20yrs of posts, writing the rules to try to automate the conversion took quite a while. And of course each time I fix one edge case it breaks some previous edge case. It only has to work once or just get close and I can manually fix the rest but after a week I was about 1/2 way through. I'm pretty sure I missed some pages because I made a big change where I tried to extract all the HTML from the markdown for some post I was having issues with before I realized that would never work when I hit another post that showed why. So I removed that change but I don't remember which post I originally wrote it for.
When I got it all done and fixed the 20 or so posts that looked like they needed manual intervention I then needed to setup a webserver, setup a repo, and write scripts to make it auto update from a git repo.
I ended up using Caddy but like all webservers the first time requires a bunch of time learning how to get them configured with their cryptic config systems. Sometimes I think it would be better if they just gave you a library and a lot of examples but let you just use a normal full programming language instead of a limited and confusing config language. I needed to get some silly redirects working. I also have a few hundred redirects from old URLs since before I moved it to wordpress. And I had to try to get feeds working correctly. I hope they are still working.
I started to wonder if I should just delete this blog. At this point it's more for me than anyone else. Maybe I should use medium or something and just not care about doing my own thing or any kind of backup etc..
I'm not sure how I'll like not having the wordpress interface. It was nice to just be able to login, edit preview, edit preview. As I have this new site setup I can't do that easily at the moment. There is no preview unless I have my laptop and run the build scritps so no posting from an iPhone or iPad, not that I've ever done that. It was simpler to log in then I think it is now.
I can use github to edit or add posts but I have no way to preview. Maybe I should setup a preview site but that's just more work.
I also actually wanted to pay an ISP to keep the server running and up to date but staying on wordpress meant dealing with having to manually update wordpress every month or so which was a PITA.
My hope is that given it's a static site now there really isn't much to update so I'll cross my fingers.
I also lost control of my comments. That probably doesn't matter but originally had my own comment system, then I ported those comments to wordpress. Then when I got too much spam I copied those comments to disqus but disqus magically copies the comments back into your wordpress DB so even if they disappear or get sold and change how they work you still have your comments.
But it seems like that ship has sailed as in I should just look at comments as ephemeral. Or who knows. If it ever comes to that maybe they'll have a way to export the comments. Or more likely I should just let that go.
In any case the site is now static. I'm sure there are issues and there's still a few more things I need to do but ATM it seems to be working.
]]>If I understand correctly it's basically a "follow the logic" idea.
Simulations get better all the time and as such eventually there will be universe simulators that can simulate an entire universe. Once you can do that there lots of people will run them therefore at any one time there will be millions X more simulated people than real people QED: Odds are we're simulated
This reminds me of the 1/2 way problem.
Before you can get somewhere you have to get 1/2 way there Once you reach the 1/2 point you have to get to 1/2 the remaining point (in other words, go to step 1) QED: You can never reach your destination because there's always 1/2 remaining
The logic seems to work and yet we get to our destinations all the time. Clearly there's a flaw somewhere. I think the same is true for the "We're living in a simulation" logic.
Here's where I think that flaw is. I think it's impossible to build a universe simulator. Currently it takes more than 1 atom to simulate an atom. It seems like a universe simulator would need to simulate all atoms therefore since you can't simulate all atoms without using more than all atoms you can't make a universe simulator.
Now you may say, like a video game, we don't need to simulate all of it, we only need to simulate the parts people look at. I think that's false for a universe simulator though. Video games don't actually try to simulate the real universe, they're fake, stories, they take huge shortcuts, they use "game" physics, etc. A real universe simulator though can't take those short cuts. Even if it only has to deal with observed portions of the universe those observed portions need to match real physics. That means even if no one is looking at someone part of this simulated universe, the moment they do look at it the simulator would have to compute all the physics for every atom for all of time since that part of universe was last observed until this moment so that it looks like time has passed correctly in that part of the universe. In other words the universal simulator can't take shortcuts like a video game. It has to simulate every atom, at which point we're back to it an impossible task because as pointed out above it would take more atoms to simulate atoms.
And so the flaw is clear. It's the original assumption that a universal simulator could actually exist. It can't.
Does that mean you can't have a holodeck? No, we could have holodecks, but like video games they'll take shortcuts. They won't simulate the entire universe. Take a typical video game that supports foot prints or skid marks or mud tracks, they always fade out over time, usually fairly quickly because keeping around the tracks of the player forever is just too much to compute. The same will be true of holodecks. They'll simulate some small portion of reality but not every detail and plenty of those details will be temporary. That's all great and it will be fun when we get there but it doesn't follow that from that we'll be able to simulate entire universes and all the causality needed to make them consistent which is what we'd need to simulate the universe we're in.
QED: We're not in a simulation
]]>I got a friend request from "Terry Tavares" with a picture of my dad. I thought to myself "hmm, I didn't unfriend him, maybe he made a new account or maybe he unfriended me by mistake?" So I accepted.
]]>I've already bitched about this before but DAMMIT! It HURTS! It's fucking torture!
I brush and floss EVERY SINGLE DAY. I also use one of these dental pick type brushes after brushing and flossing to get into the cracks etc. Lately I started getting pain like the time a dentist caused me so much pain I needed 600mg of Ibuprofen every 3 hrs for a month). This new pain is similar feeling but not quite as bad. It's comes and goes but generally I get it at least once or twice a day. Yesterday it came 3 times. If I'm lucky it goes away by itself but 5 times out of 6 I need to take 200−400mg of Ibuprofen and then 20−30 minutes later it's gone. When it really hurts I can feel it from my temple to neck.
]]>So, this time I also just picked a middle of the road Panasonic rice cooker only to find out they are no longer silent.
Apparently nearly all the rice cookers are now IH (Induction Heating) and so they need a fan to circulate the air. Panasonic doesn't even make any non IH rice cookers in 2016.
]]>I received a suspicious PDF in email. It had a name that made it sound like something I might personally be interested in from someone I met about a year ago. No idea if that was luck or by design. Even scarier if it was by design.
]]>It's basically because I'm homeless and I need a place to stay. Other than a hostel the cheapest hotels are $100−$150 a night. Go to booking.com and check. Pretty much every city there's 5 tiers of prices. Bottom teir is hostels. Next tier up is $100−$150 a night. That's $3k to $4.5k a month which is a lot of money. Yes, I'm finally working on settling back down and renting an apartment at which point I won't be looking to rent short term apartments. In other words I'll stop using AirBnB. That said wasn't going to bring up this latest issue .. until AirBnB called. See below
]]>There's a very relevant section in this book, "The Second Machine Age: Work, Progress, and Prosperity in a Time of Brilliant Technologies" - http://amzn.to/1KFJ1Iu, that I just read last night:
]]>His view is strongly supported by the work of economist Andrew Oswald, who found that joblessness lasting six months or longer harms feelings of well-being and other measures of mental health about as much as the death of a spouse, and that little of this decline is due to the loss of income; instead, it arises from a loss of self-worth.
I don't usually look over there because I'd rather stay in other places but I checked just for the hell of it ...
I put in $70−$80 a night, June 15−30, entire place. Airbnb claimed 300+ places still available and that those were among the 17% left. That means just in that $10 span of price range there are over 1800 apartments available. And, that was limited to the area between Shinjuku station, the Yamanote line, Okubo Dori, and Meiji Dori. That makes it seem like practically all of Shinjuku is being rented on Airbnb
]]>I've rented about 22 places in the last 3 years. I think a couple were not AirBnB. I haven't written a bad review yet even though given the rant linked above you'd expect I would have.
But, this last place I finally wrote a bad review. Maybe it was all the pent up rage of all the previous places. Maybe it was the particular response from this landlord. In any case I left a bad review. I can only hope that's incentive for the guy to do better.
So what was the issue?
]]>All my flickr photos are CC-BY-SA so they're free to do whatever they want pretty much.
But, of course lawyers get involved and now they want to send me a licensing form for me to sign. It doesn't say anything particularly bad, it's just half the point of CC−BY is "you don't need to ask because there's an official license".
I get they want to make sure it's not a stolen image and get an actual signature. It's more that printing out the form, which will cost a few cents and my time to find a printer or put the form on a USB and walk to the library. Then sign it. Then find a scanner and scan it or take a picture with my phone. Then send it back. Is just more than I want to do really. Given they're not paying me why do I want to spent even 15 minutes dealing with his form?
Even if I just photoshop my signature in it's still more work than I really want to deal with. On top of which the one scary part is if they get sued about the pic then they'll pass that on to me. It's a nothing special picture of some statues on the Louvre so I have no idea what those rules are.
Sigh.... Why does it have to be this complicated.
]]>I'm an ex−Mormon and this episode really resonated in a lot of ways. In particular I guess personally, even though I'm now 100% atheist I've defended the Mormon church in the past. I guess I would say as an atheist I believe all churches and all religions are wrong and so I've defended the Mormon church has being no different than any other church. By defending I mean when someone makes fun of the Mormon church for whatever (believing the nearest planet to God's residence is the planet Kolab) I point out how that is no more a strange belief than any other religion's beliefs (God lives in some alternate dimension we can't see until we die).
What I find really fascinating though is that people can continue to want to believe even AFTER accepting the evidence their church is founded on lies. Religion isn't decided by committee by definition. If it was it would no longer be a religion. So for example, at least according to that podcast, some people asked for priesthood for women in the Mormon church or acceptance of LGBT. Doing either of those makes the church no longer the church. It proves even harder the church was never true to begin with.
Let me make it clear. I'm 100% pro LGBT and women's rights. That's not my point and is one of the many reasons I'm atheist. My point is if a church has been saying for for hundreds or thousands of years that X is evil because God says so and then changes that to X is not evil they've just proven the previous hundreds or thousands of years were bullshit. At that point there's no reason for the church to exist. Everyone should just leave. If you want a social club with emotional support fine, organize one. But asking a church to change it's stance makes zero sense. If you succeed you've just proven your church is false.
]]>I needed to book a flight from Singapore to Hong Kong. I checked and the prices were pretty crazy.
$69 for Tiger (which is rated 1 out of 5 stars) $105 for JetStar (rated like 1.5 out of 5 stars) $520 for Singapore Airlines
That's it! There's no sliding scale. The 3rd option is 6x the first option!!!
I asked some friends what they would pick. Some said pick Singapore Air because sucky travel experience ruins everything. Others said the flight is only 4hrs so don't worry about a bad experience as it will be over quick.
I ended up going with Singapore Air mostly because they had a flight time that fit my schedule. I needed to get into Hong Kong with plenty of time to get to the city before it gets dark since I'm going to an AirBnB and not a hotel and it will be harder to find. Too early and I'm stuck with my luggage for several hours. I am cry about the cost but what−cha−gonna do.
Anyway, that's all beside the point.
The point is, as I was flying from Tokyo to Singapore (different flight) on Singapore Airlines the headphones they gave me were broken. I checked a couple of things and was able to mostly conclude the problem was the headphones, not the entertainment system.
But, ... While I was doing that it got me thinking. Because there's a lower price option I start to feel entitled to better service. If I fly from SG to HK for $520 and something is broken or service is bad I'm likely going to be extremely upset that I paid 6x the price of the cheap airlines and didn't get flawless service.
Before super cheap airlines when the diff was say 10% it wouldn't have been a big deal but now ....?
No idea if that will have any real pressure or not on non super budget airlines.
]]>Even though I suspect my blog is full of complaints and I don't want to be a whiner the only time I feel like posting is either when something extremely awesome happens or something on the opposite end of the spectrum.
This is probably the 10th time I've posted about this and there's a lot of "cry me a river you lucky bastard" but ...
I'm so effing unglued from the "normal" part of life. Maybe I just have an attitude problem. I don't know. The issue is I'm homeless. I have money to survive but I don't have a place to fall back too. This means every couple of weeks or so I need to decide where to exist next.
When I first started this I thought I'd love it. Travel the world and all. But, maybe because I'm introverted, it's been super lonely. One of the reasons I left Google is because I didn't make any really close buddies hang out buddies there like I have at every previous company. And that's even though it was the longest I've stayed at one company. It was one of a couple of things I was missing.
So I quit, got rid of my apartment and have been traveling and homeless for 2 years. I did spend 7 months in Los Angeles but every month was a different AirBnB. I also spent 10 months in Japan but that was also switching hotels many times.
Anyway, I've been in Europe since July, Berlin−>Brussels−>London−>Paris−>Barcelona and I'm sick of it. I'm sick of being alone. And yet I don't know how to fix it. I'm homeless in 4 days with no plans at the moment.
To stop this I need to pick a place. Then I need to make friends or get a job or find a girlfriend or all 3.
So, then I try to pick a place. This is what goes through my head
"I know, how about New York. I've got 2 friends there". Then I think. "Yes but it's super expensive and even though I have friends there they have work so at best I'll see them once or twice a week. The rest of the time I'll be alone sitting in a cafe if I can find one or sitting at home if it turns out there's no good cafes to hack from or if they are always full".
so I think "How about SF?" to which pretty much the same things come up. I know one or two cafes I could hang out at but I'll be no less lonely than I am now. SF is also more expensive than New York.
so I think "How about LA? At least I have family there". But it's even worse in LA. There are few cafes to work from. The ones that are there are full and they are spread all over. You've got to drive everywhere. There's no good places to live in LA either. Each place has some issue. Live on the West side? Friends and family are on the east 1−3 hrs away. Live on the East side? It's suburbia, nothing to do, no where to hang, no places to walk.
so I think "How about Tokyo"? It's a little better. There's 4 monthly game dev meetups (Picotachi, Tokyo Indies, Game Dev Drinkup, and Insert Coin) and one weekly meetup (Otaru) so that's one plus. But it's still 95% of my time alone. There's a few places to work from but they aren't always reliable (full and/or bad WiFi, go figure)
so I think "How about Kyoto"? It's small. There's less places to work from than Tokyo. There's 2 events a month. It's got friends all with jobs. Again I'll be alone 99% of the time.
"How about Berlin"? It's about the same as Kyoto. Less friends but still some.
That's pretty much the same for all places though some there's no friends.
Then I'm like, okay well if I can't decide maybe I should just go somewhere else for a little longer. Like I could say in Barcelona another week or 2. So far I'm not a super fan of Barcelona. It's a great place to visit but I don't feel like I want to live here. One reason I came where is there were chances to meet up with 3 different friends. I met up with one but then came down with a cold and was stuck in bed for a week so missed 2 other days to hang out. By the time I was better one of the other friends I hadn't gotten a change to meet up with was no longer in Barcelona. The 3rd friend changed his plans and didn't come here.
I thought about going to Turkey. Got the visa. It would just be procrastinating but whatever, at least there's cool stuff to see. But then I just remember how lonely it's been seeing sites in other places alone and I think, am I really going to enjoy walking through yet another market alone? Am I really going to enjoy seeing another historical building alone?
I need a project and a team to work with. One way or another. I have no ideas what that would be. I don't even know what I personally want to do anymore. One reason I left Google was I thought I wanted to go back to games. But, do I? I'm not playing nearly as much as I used to. Even before I started this lifestyle I wasn't playing so much. Sure I'd probably love to work on a game I thought was going to be a trend setter. But, seeing so many indie games tank and yet another dual stick shooter or smash bros clone do well kind of makes games less appealing.
Another thing that's probably contributing is I've got nothing to do right now. For the last year and a half I was working on happyfuntimes. But, about a month ago I saw all the competition. I never had any plans to make any real money from happyfuntimes but the fact that it seemed semi unique made it appealing. Now though there's at least 6 companies doing the same thing. Each has their own unique element that means they aren't all exactly happyfuntimes but at the same time it makes the whole idea much less interesting to spend more time on. It also didn't lead anywhere. Sitting alone in cafes for the 18 months working on it wasn't getting me any closer to solving the issues above.
I suppose I could go pay people to work with me to make some happyfuntimes stuff but for what purpose? Just for fun? I don't have enough $$$ to retire. While I'm okay at the moment I need income again so whatever I do has to have some way to bring in money.
Anyway, this is kind of stupidness that goes through my head over and over and has prevented me from choosing a place with only 4 days until I'm homeless.
I mentioned before someone said "just pick a place and try it for a year". Ok, which place? Any place not the USA requires visas. Does that rule out non−USA places? And, I'm still not clear which place will solve the loneliness problem. Actually that's one reason I originally left Japan. While I had a ton of friends I didn't have a GF or buddies. So while I might see friends on average twice a week that was still a very lonely lifestyle.
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