• popE x Mass = accelerated_j e s u s

    From Bill D@RICKSBBS to All on Sun Mar 8 07:17:21 2026
    Date: Wed, 02 Mar 94 13:37:00 PST


    ... . . . . . . . . . . . .


    popE x Mass = accelerated_j e s u s

    ... . . . . . . . . . . . .

    --- issue 1, no 2 -----------------------------------------------

    #include <stdio.h>
    int main() Hmmm... this is
    { the second issue
    printf("Editor: Johannes Kepler \n"); of PxM=a_j.
    printf("Copyright (c) 1993 by James Still"); Got an excellent
    } feature piece by
    Patrick Salsbury
    on gettin' every

    'zine, so please
    one up to speed
    I notice that Borland is updating their C++ in cyberspace.
    compiler to version 4.0. Didn't they just Hopefully with t
    put out 3.1, or am I losing track of cyber- he addition of P
    space & time? It used to be a year or so at's piece, more
    before anyone had the nerve to make a full of you will begi
    update to their software, but now something n to see the for
    is a Jurassic Park fossil after a month or mat I'm shootin'
    two. What gives? I myself feel the pinch for here. Send
    as more and more people ask me to throw out me your submissi
    an update to PGPShell. (I coulda swore 2.2 ons for the Janu
    was just released in August....) ary issue now! I
    need 'em right a
    After deep consultation with a TI calculator way. E-mail me
    I've come upon a frightening conspiracy of at still@kailua.
    an exponential scale. Check this out: colorado.edu or
    call up the Hier
    Longevity (L) of a given piece of software oglyphic Voodoo
    is exponentially denegrated over time (t) Machine BBS at
    at a rate times demand (D). So, +1 303 443 2457.

    L = e^(Dt)

    Well, crunch this and you get a cool looking function of x that
    looks like a stock market crash as variable (t) gets smaller.
    I've got it all figured out: pretty soon the programmer will be
    cranking out code just like those old Walt Disney movies where
    all the townfolk pass pails of water to the barn that is on fire.
    (Hurry up dammit, my software is ten daze old; where's that next
    update!?) Of course sooner or later, one of us will stop and
    realize that we didn't even know how to work the last gizmo let
    alone this new bell and whistle just out. Ah well, tumultuous
    times require fast food approaches--we did grow up with Starsky
    & Hutch cool car chases after all. Please excuse me now while
    I send in for C++ version 4.0. I just can't wait to get it.


    ------ f e a t u r e -------------------------------------------

    On the Relationship of Safety
    to the Development of Culture

    Copyleft: Patrick G. Salsbury
    salsbury@netcom.com
    -------------------

    I was just thinking about PGP and privacy and how they relate
    to the psychological development of individuals, and thence,
    subcultures. People, in fact, all creatures, seem to have a
    need for safety. The more comfortable one feels, the more one
    will be able to relax, and devote energies to the creative portion
    of one's mind. Doing this, one focuses more "process time" to
    exploring new regions of thought, rather than on various defense
    mechanisms.

    On the Net at Large, people aren't as likely to post all their deep-dark-secrets, at least, not without an anonymous account.
    But in more private newsgroups, not as populated...rapport and
    community develop. People feel safer, and open up. On mailing
    lists, things can be more open, and on *private* mailing lists,
    great intimacy can develop, with people you've never met, but
    with whom you share some deep-rooted interest.

    With PGP and other new technologies, people are availed of an
    even greater level of privacy/openness, which allows for a great
    amount of freedom to be and express oneself... One can be assured
    of talking only to those whom one chooses, and others who get the
    messages won't get the real message which is hidden inside. With
    techniques such as these, one can send a message to several
    groups and have multiple messages contained within it. Sort of
    like nested levels of privacy.

    The Net seems to be expanding as people join large groups, or
    who have small groups which grow to large groups, and then
    smaller, self-selecting groups splinter off into a new topic, or
    a refinement of the original one in some new area.

    This, I think, is the main argument of this essay: That by
    assuring people of their level of security, they will
    spontaneously and automatically extend themselves to whatever
    level they feel comfortable. As people open up more, some
    individuals may notice further similaries with others, who
    splinter off into another sub-culture, and the process begins
    anew.

    I feel that this blossoming of sub-cultures may well point the
    way to an ever-growing knowledge pool, hyper-linked by the
    technology which made it possible in the first place. This pool
    of knowledge, freely and easily accessible to any person on the
    planet, would lead to an educational boom on a planetary scale
    the likes of which have never before been seen.

    Individuals, when allowed to freely explore, find that which
    intrigues them the most, and follow along that route until
    they bore of the topic, or find something new to grab their
    attention. This, I think, is the basis behind "Net Surfing."
    People hop from topic to topic, learning new things, integrating
    them with past experiences, and arriving at new ideas, which
    they might then contribute to the Net at Large, which spurs new
    ideas in others, who form new groups, ....and so it continues.

    Essentially, it seems that the most practical way to increase
    the standard of living for the citizens of planet Earth, is to
    increase the mind-power which is working on the various problems
    of the era. The best way to do that is to educate more people.

    And it would seem that the Net at Large may well be the most
    efficient method of info-delivery to the greatest amount of
    people with the least amount of time or cost.

    For example: People often talk about the "problems" of population
    growth in Third World countries, and debate about methods of
    birth-control or population growth-rate moderation. But an action
    as simple as running an electrical wire into the center of a
    village will allow such an improvement in living standards, that
    population will naturally decrease. This power source would allow
    for everything from water purifiers, to light, heat, food
    production, and of course, communications. When people's basic
    needs have been met, such as food, shelter, and warmth, they are
    able to focus more energy towards learning. ("Maslow's Hierarchy
    of Needs")

    More population means more mind-power on the planet. (That seems
    to be the one world-resource that never makes it onto the statistics
    charts as being in demand.) If there all these people out there,
    and they get access to satellite TV with thousands of world-wide
    channels, and get access to the Internet, with it's millions of
    users, and all the Internet browsing tools (such as as Archie,
    gopher, WWW, WAIS, and Xmosaic), which are becoming ever-easier
    to use, then I think we'll see such a boom of intellectual and
    artistic development as to make the Renaissance pale in comparison.

    How to arrive at this? It seems that as technology continues to
    advance, it becomes cheaper and easier to stay in touch more of
    the time, from more places around the globe. And with the advance
    of technomadics, people can now bring along a small computer, and
    "jack in" to the Net from almost anywhere on the planet. So
    suddenly, it doesn't really matter as much WHERE you are, because
    you can carve out your own private niche in Cyberspace, and take
    it with you. Go to a foriegn place, hook up to the Network, telnet
    to your main system, and you're back home, with access to all of
    your information, addresses, files, and friends, regardless of
    where you physically are. And since there are no racial, ethnic,
    age, or even gender-specific indicators over the Net, a person is
    allowed to be whomever they truly wish to express themselves as.

    It seems fairly profound, that a person...ANY person...can go
    into any group, and spend some time learning whatever their heart
    desires, and become an expert in the field. They don't have to
    know a whole lot about computers, because there are places along
    the way in the Net where they can learn computers as they go.
    They don't have to know how to spell or read very well when they
    first start, but their language and vocabulary will improve as
    they go along. There are spell-checkers and dictionaries, and
    sometimes even grammatical and style-checking programs built
    into various text processors. They don't have to be any specific
    age. All that comes across is how well you can express yourself,
    and _that_, as we've seen, is a function of feeling safe.

    Imagine some of the development of these vast expanses of
    knowledge: People can browse through the Internet as they please,
    learning whatever they need, to accomplish whatever it is that
    they want to do. And along the way, there will be spinoffs that
    benefit others. And they will form new groups...and these will
    produce new ideas...and the Net/human mind-power will probably
    just keep on growing...


    ----.sig --------------------------------------------------------

    popE x Mass = accelerated_j e s u s is published
    periodically by the sysop of the Hieroglyphic Voodoo Machine BBS
    which boasts and toasts --> V.32bis N81 at --> +1 303 443 2457.

    entire contents of this file is copyrighted (c) 1993 by James
    Still, aka Johannes Kepler and may *not* be extracted or re-
    published in part, or in its entirety without prior consent
    from James Still. All Rights Reserved Poncho...

    send submissions, gripes, comments to: still@kailua.colorado.edu

    REMEMBER: You *can* make a pig out of push pins and an eraser.

    Pave the Earth!

    ----EOF----------------------------------------------------------


    Bill Dean
    http://ricksbbs.synchro.net:8080
    telnet://ricksbbs.synchro.net:23
    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Rick's BBS telnet://ricksbbs.synchro.net:23