Re: OFF TOPIC Snow Crash [was Re: Hello World]

2014-12-26 Thread alister
On Fri, 26 Dec 2014 15:13:25 +1100, Steven D'Aprano wrote:

 
 Deep in the brain, well underneath the level of modern languages and
 consciousness, there is a deeper machine language of the brain. If you
 can write instructions in this machine language, you can control
 people's brains. Back in the distant past, the Sumerians learned how to
 do this via spoken language, but few people speak Sumerian any more,
 hence there are two versions of Snow Crash: one is a drug plus virus.
 The drug is to encourage people to inject themselves, which then allows
 the virus to get into their brain. The other is an animated bitmap,
 which contains machine code for the human brain, and is injected via
 the optic nerve (i.e. when a hacker sees it).

is this why web designers are now embeding QR codes in web pages?



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Re: OFF TOPIC Snow Crash [was Re: Hello World]

2014-12-25 Thread alex23

On 24/12/2014 2:20 AM, Grant Edwards wrote:

And even _with_ all the technical jibber-jabber, none of it explained
or justified the whole writing a virus to infect the brain through
the optic nerve thing which might just have well been magick and
witches.


While I love SNOW CRASH, I do think it'd fundamentally flawed. The worst 
for me is that in a fictional universe with a VR system capable of 
displaying anything, the crux of the book revolves around a couple of 
characters having a long, long discussion about Sumerian history.


A: blah blah blah blah blah Sumeria
B: And then what?
A: blah blah blah blah
B: etc

It's been at least a decade since I read it, but wasn't that also the 
explanation for how the virus worked?



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Re: OFF TOPIC Snow Crash [was Re: Hello World]

2014-12-25 Thread alex23

On 24/12/2014 9:50 PM, alister wrote:

what feels like 3 or 4 chapters in  it is still trying to set the scene,
an exercise in stylish writing with very little content so far.
even early scifi written for magazines on a per word basis were not this
excessive (because if they were they would probably have been rejected or
seriously edited).


My personal theory is that Stephenson polishes and polishes the first 
few chapters until the whole creative process really engages - the first 
chapter is especially overwritten - and then tears through the novel in 
an increasingly unrefined way, until it arrives at its anticlimactic 
conclusion. He was notorious for a while for not providing satisfying 
endings to his books.



Hopefully it will finally settle down  amend my current impression.


SNOW CRASH doesn't, I'm afraid, but Stephenson himself does as a writer. 
CRYPTONOMICON is a great geek read. ANATHEM is a fantastic piece of SF 
(possibly my favourite of his) THE SYSTEM OF THE WORLD is an amazing 
accomplishment and really shows that modern infotech didn't spring out 
of nothing like Venus from the foam.


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Re: OFF TOPIC Snow Crash [was Re: Hello World]

2014-12-25 Thread Steven D'Aprano
alex23 wrote:

 On 24/12/2014 2:20 AM, Grant Edwards wrote:
 And even _with_ all the technical jibber-jabber, none of it explained
 or justified the whole writing a virus to infect the brain through
 the optic nerve thing which might just have well been magick and
 witches.
 
 While I love SNOW CRASH, I do think it'd fundamentally flawed. The worst
 for me is that in a fictional universe with a VR system capable of
 displaying anything, the crux of the book revolves around a couple of
 characters having a long, long discussion about Sumerian history.
 
 A: blah blah blah blah blah Sumeria
 B: And then what?
 A: blah blah blah blah
 B: etc


Keep in mind the limitations of the media. The novel is written word, so
there are only a limited number of ways of getting background information
to the reader. In this case, having one character (an AI) tell another
character (the protagonist) what he needs to know is arguably the
least-worst way.

The many pages of info-dumping is one of the lesser parts of the book. I
wonder what Stephenson's motive for writing it as dialog was, because in
other parts of the book he demonstrated great skill in imparting background
information to the reader without dry info-dumps (e.g. the Rat Things).

At least it is information that is *not* common knowledge in-universe. Old
pulp SF used to be filled with cheesy dialog like this:

   Attractive but stupid female: Professor, I know you've told me 
   before, but how does the microwave oven work again?
   Avuncular male authority figure: Well my dear, as you know all
   foods contain water molecules. The oven uses radio-frequency
   subatomic radiation, know as 'microwaves', specially tuned to
   excite the oxygen-to-hydrogen molecular bonds in water 
   molecules. As you know, heat is just the action of excited 
   molecular bonds, so this has the effect of beaming heat 
   energy deep into the food so that it cooks from the inside
   out without burning.

and then the microwave oven is not used for anything more exciting than
making a cup of tea for the rest of the book.

In the case of Snow Crash, I think we need to keep in mind when it was
written. In 1990, the idea that you might *carry on a conversation* with
your computer still seemed (1) plausible to SF readers, who expected strong
AI and robots with Asimov's Three Laws to be just around the corner, and
(2) the widespread public Internet, or even use of computers, was still
pretty rare. The idea that you could only get information out of a computer
by typing, or pointing, would have struck readers in 1994 as terribly
unrealistic. The other interface, the holographic interface so beloved of
recent SF television and movies where you push screens around in space,
hadn't been invented yet, and isn't terribly good for getting information
to the reader since they can't actually see what is on the screen.


 It's been at least a decade since I read it, but wasn't that also the
 explanation for how the virus worked?

Deep in the brain, well underneath the level of modern languages and
consciousness, there is a deeper machine language of the brain. If you
can write instructions in this machine language, you can control people's
brains. Back in the distant past, the Sumerians learned how to do this via
spoken language, but few people speak Sumerian any more, hence there are
two versions of Snow Crash: one is a drug plus virus. The drug is to
encourage people to inject themselves, which then allows the virus to get
into their brain. The other is an animated bitmap, which contains machine
code for the human brain, and is injected via the optic nerve (i.e. when a
hacker sees it).






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Steven

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Re: OFF TOPIC Snow Crash [was Re: Hello World]

2014-12-24 Thread alister
On Tue, 23 Dec 2014 16:20:10 +, Grant Edwards wrote:

 On 2014-12-23, Steven D'Aprano steve+comp.lang.pyt...@pearwood.info
 wrote:
 Chris Angelico wrote:

 On Tue, Dec 23, 2014 at 12:15 AM, Roy Smith r...@panix.com wrote:
 If I really didn't trust something, I'd go to AWS and spin up one of
 their free-tier micro instances and run it there :-)
 
 How do you know it won't create console output that stroboscopically
 infects you with a virus through your eyes? Because that's *totally*
 what would be done in the town of Eureka.

 Anybody in IT who hasn't read Neal Stephenson's Snow Crash needs to
 hand in their Geek Card immediately.
 
 I tried, but I got so tired of the author doing stuff like pointing out
 that there were 65536 of something or other (and that it's a power of
 TWO, kids!) that I gave up.  The annoying thing was that there was no
 real technical reason why the quantity _needed_ to be a power of two. 
 Too many of the technical details that you got constantly beat over the
 head with were
 
   1) not even remotely relevent to the story
 
   2) mostly an effort by the author to demonstrate that he had a
  junior-high level understanding of a 68K based Macintosh and knew
  lots of cool grown up tech-sounding words -- and even if had only a
  vague idea of what they meant, he could still impress the other
  13-year olds.
 
   3) just plain wrong
 
 And even _with_ all the technical jibber-jabber, none of it explained or
 justified the whole writing a virus to infect the brain through the
 optic nerve thing which might just have well been magick and witches.

I am reading it now thanks to this list  I currently agree that it is 
quite annoying

what feels like 3 or 4 chapters in  it is still trying to set the scene, 
an exercise in stylish writing with very little content so far.
even early scifi written for magazines on a per word basis were not this 
excessive (because if they were they would probably have been rejected or 
seriously edited).

Hopefully it will finally settle down  amend my current impression.



-- 
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really really fast.
-- Jake Johanson
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Re: OFF TOPIC Snow Crash [was Re: Hello World]

2014-12-23 Thread Grant Edwards
On 2014-12-23, Steven D'Aprano steve+comp.lang.pyt...@pearwood.info wrote:
 Chris Angelico wrote:

 On Tue, Dec 23, 2014 at 12:15 AM, Roy Smith r...@panix.com wrote:
 If I really didn't trust something, I'd go to AWS and spin up one of
 their free-tier micro instances and run it there :-)
 
 How do you know it won't create console output that stroboscopically
 infects you with a virus through your eyes? Because that's *totally*
 what would be done in the town of Eureka.

 Anybody in IT who hasn't read Neal Stephenson's Snow Crash needs to hand
 in their Geek Card immediately.

I tried, but I got so tired of the author doing stuff like pointing
out that there were 65536 of something or other (and that it's a power
of TWO, kids!) that I gave up.  The annoying thing was that there was
no real technical reason why the quantity _needed_ to be a power of
two.  Too many of the technical details that you got constantly beat
over the head with were 

  1) not even remotely relevent to the story

  2) mostly an effort by the author to demonstrate that he had a
 junior-high level understanding of a 68K based Macintosh and knew
 lots of cool grown up tech-sounding words -- and even if had only
 a vague idea of what they meant, he could still impress the other
 13-year olds.

  3) just plain wrong

And even _with_ all the technical jibber-jabber, none of it explained
or justified the whole writing a virus to infect the brain through
the optic nerve thing which might just have well been magick and
witches.
  
-- 
Grant

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Re: OFF TOPIC Snow Crash [was Re: Hello World]

2014-12-23 Thread Rustom Mody
On Tuesday, December 23, 2014 9:50:22 PM UTC+5:30, Grant Edwards wrote:
 
 And even _with_ all the technical jibber-jabber, none of it explained
 or justified the whole writing a virus to infect the brain through
 the optic nerve thing which might just have well been magick and
 witches.

You find that far-fetched?
I would have thought it commoner than common-cold -- basis for the trillion 
dollar
industry called advertising
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Re: OFF TOPIC Snow Crash [was Re: Hello World]

2014-12-23 Thread Steven D'Aprano
Rustom Mody wrote:

 On Tuesday, December 23, 2014 9:50:22 PM UTC+5:30, Grant Edwards wrote:
 
 And even _with_ all the technical jibber-jabber, none of it explained
 or justified the whole writing a virus to infect the brain through
 the optic nerve thing which might just have well been magick and
 witches.
 
 You find that far-fetched?
 I would have thought it commoner than common-cold -- basis for the
 trillion dollar industry called advertising


[controversial and perhaps annoying]

To say nothing of religion, both the supernatural/mystical kind and the my
editor/programming language/brand of car/gaming console/etc is better than
yours kind... 



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Steven

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Re: OFF TOPIC Snow Crash [was Re: Hello World]

2014-12-23 Thread Steven D'Aprano
Grant Edwards wrote:

 On 2014-12-23, Steven D'Aprano steve+comp.lang.pyt...@pearwood.info
 wrote:
 Chris Angelico wrote:

 On Tue, Dec 23, 2014 at 12:15 AM, Roy Smith r...@panix.com wrote:
 If I really didn't trust something, I'd go to AWS and spin up one of
 their free-tier micro instances and run it there :-)
 
 How do you know it won't create console output that stroboscopically
 infects you with a virus through your eyes? Because that's *totally*
 what would be done in the town of Eureka.

 Anybody in IT who hasn't read Neal Stephenson's Snow Crash needs to
 hand in their Geek Card immediately.
 
 I tried, but I got so tired of the author doing stuff like pointing
 out that there were 65536 of something or other (and that it's a power
 of TWO, kids!) that I gave up.  The annoying thing was that there was
 no real technical reason why the quantity _needed_ to be a power of
 two.


Neal Stephenson's technical chops, and his limits, are well established. He
is a writer first and foremost and it is quite obvious that he's often
showing off his technical knowledge even when it's not strictly relevant.

Remember to that Snow Crash became a cult classic among hackers, but it was
written for a science fiction and cyberpunk audience. To them, 2^16 is a
strange and exotic concept: 1, or 5, or 10 would be a round
number, not 65536.


 And even _with_ all the technical jibber-jabber, none of it explained
 or justified the whole writing a virus to infect the brain through
 the optic nerve thing which might just have well been magick and
 witches.  

Any sufficiently advanced technology.

I disagree. I think he did a good job of making such a thing seem plausible
without getting bogged down with inventing a detailed mechanism which could
only ever be wrong.

But then I was easily convinced, because I already knew of various related
facts and concepts which probably primed me to accept the concept of the
Snow Crash virus:

- Zombie ant fungus and various other parasites which manipulate the 
  brains of organisms, including human beings (Toxoplasmosis, syphillis
  and others).

- The optic nerve is technically not a nerve, but part of the brain, 
  and there are deep and subtle connections between it and the rest 
  of the brain, e.g. blind-sight.

- The theory of memes, or perhaps I should say the meme of memes, 
  since memetics has never been quite vigorous enough to count 
  as an actual theory.

- Super-stimuli.

- The human brain considered as an information processor.

- Julian Jaynes' book The Origin Of Consciousness In The Breakdown
  Of The Bicameral Mind, a hypothesis so wonderful that it needs to
  be true (alas, it's probably rubbish).


Personally, I don't believe that in this day and age of Java programming,
anyone could be programmed by looking at a black and white animated bitmap,
but back in the 1990s it was probably a bit more plausible that hackers
would spend their time learning to read machine code. But there's always
the chance that somebody will find a way a stimulus that crashes the human
brain and lets them run the arbitrary code of their choice...



-- 
Steven

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OFF TOPIC Snow Crash [was Re: Hello World]

2014-12-22 Thread Steven D'Aprano
Chris Angelico wrote:

 On Tue, Dec 23, 2014 at 12:15 AM, Roy Smith r...@panix.com wrote:
 If I really didn't trust something, I'd go to AWS and spin up one of
 their free-tier micro instances and run it there :-)
 
 How do you know it won't create console output that stroboscopically
 infects you with a virus through your eyes? Because that's *totally*
 what would be done in the town of Eureka.

Anybody in IT who hasn't read Neal Stephenson's Snow Crash needs to hand
in their Geek Card immediately.

Snow Crash is nearly 20 years old now but still as much of a ripping yarn
today as it was the year it was written. Under-achiever, freelance hacker
and part-time pizza delivery boy for the Mafia, Hiro Protagonist, discovers
that somebody has written a virus that hacks into computer programmers'
brains via their optic nerve.

This book has drama, adventure, humour, vast amounts of exposition that
might even be almost true, a murderous Inuit who is his own sovereign state
(a *nuclear armed* sovereign state at that), Rat Things, Sumerian myths,
Reverend Wayne's Pearly Gates franchise, one of the most spunky teenage
protagonists I've ever read, and pirates listening to Reason.



-- 
Steven

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