Aug 112021
 

Blather Mode On:

Assume for the moment that there is not just an “alternate reality” but an infinite number of them… and that they are accessible. Worlds where the Americans lost the War of Independence, or where the Crusades were successful, or where the Justinian Plague was slightly more powerful and wiped out the entire population of the Old World. Assume further than they can be accessed by some form of technology, able to transfer people across worlds, or even swap bits of terrain. It seems to me that if there are more than just a few accessible alternate timelines, there should be an infinite number of them.

In this sort of scenario, you’d imagine that most of the stories would be something like The Man In The High Castle, with high drama involving agents, scientists, historians going and checking out timelines where history diverged in exciting ways: the Nazis won World War II, or the space race was a rampaging success, that sort of thing. But then I had a thought: what if you could find a timeline where, for whatever reason, humanity simply wasn’t. The Toba supervolcano 70,000 years ago successfully wiped out the species, say. The Earth is just like our Earth, just… no people. And if there are in fact an infinite number of timelines, there would be an infinite number of these Earth, virtually indistinguishable from each other.

If these worlds exist and are accessible… *imagine* the land rush. With an infinite number of worlds, you will have individuals escaping to their own private world. You will have criminal justice systems dumping convicts onto their own private worlds. And you might have whole populations deciding that the thing to do is swap their chunk of land here on Earth for the chunk of land on some uninhabited Earth. Your entire city, county, state, nation could find itself, willingly or not, suddenly the sole occupants of a pristine world. For some this would be a nightmare. For others, this would be the answer to a series of prayers.

What brings this up? Recent events:

I can imagine that as societies tear themselves apart there would be a *hell* of a drive to flee to other worlds. There is a hell of an incentive right now for first worlders to flee from incipient societal collapse… but the problem is there is nowhere left on Earth to go. Few enough places in the first world have the room to accept a million South African farmers and shop owners… and even if they could squeeze them it, it’d be right next to a million third world refugees.

The rational thing to do would be to cut your territory off from the world for, say, a  year, and see if the resources within the boundaries are up to the task, or if you need more stuff. If it works… flip the switch and suddenly your region ceases to exist, replaced with natural terrain and foliage and some rather surprised critters. Your region appears on a pristine world without outside forces trying to destroy you.

I can see anything from “compounds” of racial or religious extremists out in the boonies wanting to go their own way, on up to entire nations. All of Palestine, perhaps… or all of Israel. At first it would be easy for Earthly nations to simply say “screw ’em, let ’em go,” but if this sort of thing gets *really* popular, some counties or regions might start finding themselves running short on population or wealth. If, say, all of Nebraska vanished, there would be jokes about nobody knowing for a few weeks; but the reality is that Interstate 80 would go with it and transcontinental transport would become kinda challenging.

There would also be exciting new industries: just as there are today companies that sell you stuff to help you survive a disaster, there would be companies that would sell you pre-packed Restart Civilization Kits. These would almost by definition have to be a *large* number of intermodal shipping containers filled with various technologies… power, mining, transport, medical, etc. A large empty field could be filled with hundreds of these, then thousands or tens of thousands of evacuees show up and the whole place goes “poof,” replaced by another empty field, ready to be refilled with Restart Civilization Kits and a bunch more refugees.

 

And then there’s a flip side to this sort of problem: if there are an infinite number of desirable empty Earths all more or less the same, there should be an infinite number of Earths just like ours. For every person planning on fleeing to an empty world, there would be an infinite number of the exact same guy all planning to go. When dealing with infinities, an infinite number of refugees would still all find themselves alone on their own private worlds. But there might be occasional problems: let’s say Israel decides to wander off to their own private world, only to find that they’re sharing an otherwise empty world with North Korea, even though the North Korea from Israel’s original world hadn’t actually left.

 

And then there’s *this* wrinkle: time travel. Presumably with an infinite number of worlds to go to, you could dial in a world just like ours, but at whatever point in the past (or future). You’d have people gathering together the technology to build the universe shifting tech and going back in time. Neo-Nazis going back to 1935 Germany to translate Nazi Germany to an empty world. Or Imperial Japan. Or the Aztecs, the Navaho, Vikings, Druidic Ireland, you name it.

 

Netflix: where’s my money.

 Posted by at 12:45 am
Aug 102021
 

This works remarkably well, and I’d loved to hear it full length:

Interesting thing: go to the guys YouTube page and look at the videos he’s uploaded, and this one stands out: it’s had 1.9 million views. But his others? Generally only a few dozen to low hundreds. This doesn’t make much sense, since he’s really good and the music is unique and interesting.

For instance, this one has only had 91 views as I type this:

And this one has only had 39:

 Posted by at 1:36 am
Aug 102021
 

Featured Course – Black Holes: Race and the Cosmos

Black Holes: Race and the Cosmos is a new hybrid course taught by Profs. Parisa Vaziri (Comparative Literature), and Nicholas Battaglia (Astronomy). No prerequisites are required, and the course is open to all undergraduates. Please see the description below and attached poster. For more information, you can contact Prof. Vaziri at pv248@cornell.edu. The course can be taken for Physical Sciences credit for students who matriculated in 2020.

Black Holes: Race and the Cosmos

MW 11:25-12:40

Conventional wisdom would have it that the “black” in black holes has nothing to do with race. Surely there can be no connection between the cosmos and the idea of racial blackness. Can there? Contemporary Black Studies theorists, artists, fiction writers implicitly and explicitly posit just such a connection. Theorists use astronomy concepts like “black holes” and “event horizons” to interpret the history of race in creative ways, while artists and musicians conjure blackness through cosmological themes and images. Co-taught by professors in Comparative Literature and Astronomy, this course will introduce students to the fundamentals of astronomy concepts through readings in Black Studies. We will experiment with what it means to engage with astrophysics concepts both inside and outside of the disciplinary framework of astronomy—for example, in genres like film, afrofuturist science fiction, and critical theory. Do astronomy concepts lose coherence outside of their scientific contexts, or do they acquire a different kind of sense? Why are humanities scholars everlastingly drawn toward the stars? In particular, what do artists and theoreticians of color gain from turning identity politics toward cosmological reflection? Texts will include works by theorists like Michelle Wright and Denise Ferreira da Silva, authors like Octavia Butler and Dionne Brand, and others. Astronomy concepts will include the electromagnetic spectrum, stellar evolution, and general relativity.

Neat. So, parents sending your kids to Cornell: is your money well spent? Students racking up vast student debts: will these courses actually help you become good astronomers and astrophysicists? Is this a good use of your limited time and resources?

Working class people who just barely make ends meet and who cannot *imagine* ever going to Cornell for an astrophysics degree: so how excited are *you* about having your taxes raised in order to pay off the student debts of people who decide to take these ᛒᚪᛚᛚᛋᚻᛁᛏ courses and then find that their degrees are worthless, and who then demand that *you* pay for their years of screwing around and for their bad financial and life planning?

 Posted by at 1:23 am
Aug 072021
 

… for only 200 feet per second. Still, it’s progress I suppose.

GR-1 “Anvil”

$3,375.00

AVAILABLE FOR PRE-ORDER w/10% DISCOUNT
75 ft-lb semi-automatic Gauss Rifle
The world’s first handheld Gauss Rifle – (alpha) batch 1

 

Hmmm.

The Arcflash Labs GR-1 “Anvil” is an 8-stage semi-automatic high voltage Gauss Rifle. It is the most powerful coilgun ever sold to the public, and also (very likely) the most powerful handheld coilgun ever built.

The GR-1 is capable of accelerating any ferromagnetic projectile (under 1/2″ in diameter) to 200+ fps, and can deliver up to 75 ft-lbs of muzzle energy.

The GR-1 uses the world’s most advanced capacitor charging system, a dual Clamped Quasi-Resonant Inverter, which allows the GR-1 to fire up to 20 rounds per minute (at full power) or up to 100 rounds per minute at 50% power.

The GR-1 is capable of accepting 3 different standard projectile lengths (32 mm, 42 mm, and 52 mm) with a unique variable magazine system.

75 foot-pounds is not so much in terms of bullets. 9mm Parabellum is about 342; .22 Long Rifle is about 137 and .22 Short is about 87. .25 ACP is about 73. .45 Win Mag, a Man’s Round, is a healthy 1406. I wouldn’t want to take a slug of steel moseying along at 200 feet per second, to be sure, but i’d rather have a .380 automatic than this thing. Give it a few decades, though, and *maybe* it’ll be there.

 

 Posted by at 7:15 pm
Aug 042021
 

This book looks interesting:

Star Trek: Designing the Final Frontier: How Midcentury Modernism Shaped Our View of the Future

Celebrate Star Trek: The Original Series and the show’s distinctive Midcentury modern design that would change design– and television–forever. 

Star Trek: The Original Series (1966-1969) was the first installment of one of the most successful and longest-running television franchises of all time. Today, Trek fans champion its writing, progressive social consciousness, and aesthetic. Designing the Final Frontier is a unique, expert look at the mid-century modern design that created and inspired that aesthetic. From Burke chairs to amorphous sculptures, from bright colors to futuristic frames, Star Trek TOS is bursting with mid-century modern furniture, art, and design elements—many of them bought directly from famous design showrooms.

Together, midcentury modern design experts Dan Chavkin and Brian McGuire have created an insider’s guide to the interior of original starship Enterprise and beyond, that is sure to attract Star Trek’s thriving global fan base.

After the atrocities of STD and STP I’m not sure the Trek fanbase is “thriving,” but some of us are old enough to be fans of TOS.


 

But if you can only buy one book on Amazon, buy ten copies of this:

It seems to be available there now, though there are as yet no reviews. Plus, the price seems to jump all over the place.

Note: I’m hoping to finish up the 18X24 CAD diagram prints in the next day or two for those who want signed copies. Sorry it’s taken so long… I’m *still* buried under the B-47/52 project.

 Posted by at 1:44 am
Jul 282021
 

The WTFery continues, this time with a trailer for a stop-motion movie that Phil Tippet began working on before Jurassic Park. Say what you will about the trailer… it’s not one of those where the trailer basically lays out the whole plot, where you come away thinking that there’s no point in actually watching the movie because you’ve already got it all.

 

 Posted by at 9:42 am