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A look at the unreleased sequal to the Infocom Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy game

Andy Baio’s gotten a hold of an entire backup of an Infocom shared network drive from 1989, and it includes a look into the history of the aborted sequel, and a peek at what it would have looked like:

MILLIWAYS or RESTAURANT AT THE END OF THE UNIVERSE

Takes up where “Hitchhiker’s” left off. Manufactured planets, Deep Thought, white mice, time travel, 1001 verb tenses, digital watches, the Frogstar, Total Perspective Vortex, the End of History! (Does Douglas really want to work on this at this time? Does it matter?)

1. It seems natural to include a scene in the restaurant, Milliways. Could be a bit of fun: strange parties, unctuous compere, self-introducing food. Perhaps there’s an object there that you need to get. (It could be a SPORK, a spoon with sort of forky tines on the end. Or would that be a FOON?) It could be a vehicle from the car park — Marvin has the keys. If you manage to re-enter Milliways at another time (oops! on another occasion), you will not meet yourself, “because of the embarrassment that usually causes.” What about a visit to the Big Bang Burger Bar?

Full Story: Waxy.

(Thanks Gabbo!)

Abortion art prank

A Yale University art student is causing a national controversy with her senior art project that revolves around self-induced abortions. Aliza Shvarts says she artificially inseminated herself ‘as often as possible” in order to become pregnant and reportedly used herbs to cause abortions.

Shvarts, a senior art major, intentionally caused the death of the babies with the herbs.

Afterwards, she allegedly saved her blood and the blood from each of the babies she killed to create an art display.

The display consists of a cube with video footage she took of the miscarriages on either side and a canvas in the middle with paintings created from the blood.

Full Story: Life News.

It was a hoax, a Yale spokesperson claims:

Ms. Shvarts is engaged in performance art. Her art project includes visual representations, a press release and other narrative materials. She stated to three senior Yale University officials today, including two deans, that she did not impregnate herself and that she did not induce any miscarriages. The entire project is an art piece, a creative fiction designed to draw attention to the ambiguity surrounding form and function of a woman’s body.

She is an artist and has the right to express herself through performance art.

Had these acts been real, they would have violated basic ethical standards and raised serious mental and physical health concerns.

(via Hit and Run)

Update: Maybe not a hoax after all…

Only Scientologists are worse than atheists according to Americans

poll on the perception of various religions in the us

Full Story: Gallup.

(Thanks Bill!)

‘I Love the World’

Another one for today. Can’t get much better than this! xo
Kudos to agency 72andSunny and creative director Glenn Cole for this inspirational piece of advertising.

Amazing what a power a positive note can have on one’s day. When’s the last time you made a stranger feel this way?

LET GO

We interrupt your regularly scheduled blogging activities for this brief Fight Club moment. Thank you.

Peak Population

Sometime in the latter half of this century, human population will peak. Having swelled to a bit over nine billion people, our numbers will begin to drop as people age and women worldwide pass through the urban transition, gain control over their own life-choices and have fewer children.

After that, population will proceed to decline by the middle of the 22nd century to a number somewhere between 8.5 billion and 5.6 billion (depending it seems largely on whose assumptions about longevity growth you find most credible).

That’s pretty much the consensus position among demographers (though there is a range of belief about when the peak will happen and whether we can expect to more or less plateau at 8.5 billion or experience a long bumpy slope to a stable-state population of about 6 billion). Note that we don’t need to assume any sort of apocalypse here: this is the orderly progression of human beings passing through a post-industrial demographic threshold you can already see in cultures from Japan to Italy to Finland.

[…]

The standard response to these facts is that some new technology will “save” us, and make limits irrelevant. But I am consistently impressed, when I speak with folks who are hard at work in the fields of biotechnology, molecular engineering and software design, at how real a sense of limits actually exists among the smarter ones. There are things we don’t know how to do now and may never (in any foreseeable time span) know how to do; there are others that seem like good ideas until you start doing them and encounter the unintended consequences; there are still others that work, but work in ways that mean something different than we expected. Where in the 90s we expected emerging technologies to unleash the boundless, more contemporary thinking about these technologies seems to me to be all about seeing them not as magic but as tools: profoundly useful, if used right, but perhaps far less transformative than once we hoped. They may greatly extend the range of actions we can take within the fundamental limits we face, but they most likely won’t change the limits themselves.

Full Story: WorldChanging.

Cut in half man walks again

cut in half man walks again

He survived against all the odds; now Peng Shulin has astounded doctors by learning to walk again.

When his body was cut in two by a lorry in 1995, it was little short of a medical miracle that he lived.

Skin was grafted from his head to seal his torso – but the legless Mr Peng was left only 78cm (2ft 6in) tall.

[…]

Doctors at the China Rehabilitation Research Centre in Beijing found out about Mr Peng’s plight late last year and devised a plan to get him up walking again.

Full Story: Metro UK.

(via Lupa).

Father of Chaos Theory, Edward Lorenz, Dies

Edward Lorenz, the father of chaos theory, died at his home in Cambridge, Mass., Wednesday. He was 90.

He was a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology when he came up with the scientific concept that small effects lead to big changes, something that was explained in a simple example known as the “butterfly effect.” He explained how something as minuscule as a butterfly flapping its wings in Brazil changes the constantly moving atmosphere in ways that could later trigger tornadoes in Texas.

His discovery of “deterministic chaos” brought about “one of the most dramatic changes in mankind’s view of nature since Sir Isaac Newton,” said the committee that awarded Lorenz the 1991 Kyoto Prize for basic sciences. It was one of many scientific awards that Lorenz won. There is no Nobel Prize for his specific field of expertise, meteorology.

Full Story: Wired.

Top 5 Recreational Drug Experiments

5. Harvard Scientists Build a Device to Smoke Weed During a Brain Scan
4. Stanford Chemists make THC from Scratch
3. Researchers Learn How Salvia Works
2. British Army Tests LSD on Soldiers
1. Researchers Combine Chemicals from Sea Urchin Eggs and Weed to Make Powerful Painkillers

Full Story: Wired.

(Thanks Bill!)

Artist Pierre Dacruoix in Portland, OR

 

I know a lot of the Technoccult community is located on the west coast, particularly in Oregon, so:

Skull Skates presents artist Pierre Dacruoix in his first showing in the USA at Diesel Fuel in Portland, Oregon – Sat. April 26th from 6:00 pm to 10:00 pm.

From Take Me To Your Prom (Color Magazine):

RECENTLY WORLD GOVERNMENTS AND MEDIA HAVE BEEN TAKING STEPS IN THE RIGHT DIRECTION BY ACKNOWLEDGING THAT THERE IS IN FACT A GLOBAL WARMING PROBLEM. AS SUGGESTED BY AL GORE IN HIS EYE OPENING DOCUMENTARY "AN INCONVENIENT TRUTH", IT’S NOT THE LARGE HUMAN POPULATION, BUT RATHER THE EXCESSIVE LIFESTYLE PRACTICED BY MANY THAT IS GOBBLING UP OUR RESOURCES AND EATING OUR ATMOSPHERE.

IN RESPONSE TO THE GROWING TREND TOWARDS THESE EXCESSIVE LIFESTYLES AND AS AN ACTION TO INITIATE A STYLE SHIFT, VANCOUVER ARTIST PIERRE DACRUOIX HAS DESIGNED A SERIES OF TEN T-SHIRTS UNDER THE "GREEDCLOWN" LABEL. EACH OF THE DESIGNS CARRIES A THOUGHTFUL IMAGE AND MESSAGE, MOCKING THE "BLING" LIFESTYLE AND DEBUNKING THE "SUCCESS IS EXCESS" IDEA.

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