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<editorsnote> Hi, I'm Jen Friel, and we here at TNTML examine the lives of nerds outside of the basements and into the social media, and dating world.  We have over 75 peeps that write about their life in real time. (Real nerds, real time, real deal.) Sit back, relax, and enjoy some of the stories!! </editorsnote>

 

 

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Thursday
Feb032011

#Egypt: What is this, 1984? 

#TalkNerdyToMeLover's @MikeDelic

it's feb 3 now, morning, and the struggle in egypt continues.  hold on, i have to put on some music.  alright.  dark white winter scary beautiful changing world dawn music.  tannhauser overture feels right.  something is rising.

the last point of departure for a post from me concerning this involved the internet shut down and some other things.  the internet is back on now, though things are changed.  once people could use their smart phones again a lot of them start ed receiving texts inviting them to pro-mubarak demonstrations.  this is very 1984.  so now the tactic of the police state is not to just shut down the internet  since it is a threat but to assimilate it to their propaganda and surveillance systems.  so instead of keeping people from talking they will just join the conversation and record as much of it as possible.  they use u.s. made equipment to survey wireless digital signals. 

now, among book nerds and intellectuals, one of the interesting development has been malcom gladwell's pronouncements about how important social media is to this revolution.  he posted some article at the new yorker that ignited a lot of nerd rage on twitter and elsewhere.  i have read one of gladwell's books, the tipping point, and thought it was great, and have read different articles and reviews of his other books.  the term "tipping point" has become fairly common now and gladwell is a very intelligent man who is good at writing books.  but he's not fast enough to keep up with what he has decided to take part in.  this is ironic since he wrote a book called "blink" which is about consciousness and velocity and crap like that.  ten years ago he was ahead of his time and now he's fallen behind.  the concept of medium being more important than message a la mccluhan looms large here.  but it's essential.  it's like how you can look at the protestent revolution in christianity as having to do with christian principles or that kind of thing or you can focus on the fact that without the technology of the printing press as communications medium so that people could have bibles on a scale heretofore unknown the reformation simply couldnt have happened.  the difference between the two perspectives is profound because of the nature of technology.  things that mechanically reproduce content are completely disconnected from their content.  this is the essential thing to remember about information technology. 

etc.  there's other stuff going on that's more important than some of the silly nerd arguments.  which there have been a bunch of.  i've been following a lot of this stuff mainly on twitter.  that was the first thing i did when i got up.  okay, well, start some coffee and get the woodstove burning, then check the twitter.  seems the most recent developments involve a change in the dynamic where the "pro-mubarak protesters" who'd been attacking the original protesters (police state thugs and agitators in plainclothes) and journos.  anderson cooper from cnn got punched in the head a bunch of times.  last night before i got to bed people were saying there was some gunfire.

now from what i'm reading it appears that the military is helping the people against the state and protecting the people from the state thugs.  So we have three factions now -- the state, the people and the military.  the military is breaking away from the state and maintaining order.  the police disappeared days ago.  the military is in a sense looking after its own interests.  the thing is, even if the government is overturned the military will still be there.  there may be a full on coup any time now.  i'm sure that's what obama wants and has the cia working on it.  [update, i am now listening to a guy who is saying that the military is not doing enough and that the people want the military to give them more protection from the mubarak people because protesters are getting killed and hurt.  military guys did step in when machine gun fire broke out.  so it's complicated.  seems to me like the military is moving toward the people even (in terms of sympathy) even if not quickly enough.]

obama has publicly stated that it wants a transfer of power and that it wants mubarak to step down.  this is a big deal.  the guy was our buddy for a while.  but he was one of those seedy dictator types who we like because he will buy f16's and packetmining surveillance technology from u.s. based companies, and he'll let us use our country to torture people, and he's basically this dictator of a police states who hates human rights, but he was our guy until we threw him under the bus.  sam as with a guy like qaddafi or saddam.  the u.s. likes dictators.  we dont really care about democracy in other countries that's just the sales pitch for u.s. military hegemony and global capitalism.  but so anyway obama's basically like "you have outlived your usefulness i'm through with you."  on the one hand i'm glad because this could potentially be a good revolution with lasting positive results.  who knows though.  with revolution the odds are against you.  but some things if you cant try for them well then you simply have no soul.  this seems like one of those things to me.  i'm actually watching democracy now and they have footage of people asking obama to exert more influence.  i agree but i dont expect much of a president in times like this. 

oh and the craziest thing of all in all this is that it is another intense news event that more people on the internet seem to think involves the illuminati and crap like that.  or zionists.  it's really getting crazy.  more and more people are getting into conspiracy theories.  this is actually pretty disturbing.  we live in a time where people are suffering and riled up and therefore paranoia and scapegoating are both at high tide.  i am actually fairly paranoid and think that in the coming ages only the paranoid consciousness will survive.  i mean, people will survive physically, but most will be drones because they were not sufficiently suspicious enough of the world in general.  the paranoid crazies will be the only people who maintain freedom of thought and the rest will be drones serving a small oligarchy of fat, decadent jerks. 

or not.  these are the times that test us.  for now i am still thrilled and hopeful and scared.  a popular uprising against a brutal dictator is a beautiful thing but the truth is when things get to a high level of volatility all kinds of crazy things become more probable.

still listening to democracy now.  woman is talking about people being brutalized, the identities of the pro mubarak thugs.  sirens in the background.  it's interesting.  outside there's about a foot of snow on the ground.  everyone in the house is still in bed.  the peace and quiet are profound.  and yet over that snow and those trees information is flying everywhere.  there is joy and sorrow and repression and revolution and new news and old news and sex and poetry and lulz all flying around.  invisible words are zipping around everywhere all over the world.  sometimes you tap into it and you realize we're all neurons in one brain firing together in the service of a single decision.  okay more coffee.  later.

 

Saturday
Jan292011

#EgyptShutdown: A global conversation 

 #TalkNerdyToMeLover's @Mikedelic

so things are hot in egypt right now.  people are protesting in large number.  the government is surrounding them with tanks in tahrir square in cairo right now.  it's 4 a.m. where i am, in upstate new york.  far away from the unrest of the world in the quiet snowy wastes of the jefferson county winter.  but i can get instant updates because we have wireless. 

i am still impressed by how fast news spreads now and how certain world news items become popular.  we have a constant large scale -- huge scale -- international conversation going on now on the internet.  it's a huge paradigm shift in global culture and we're right in the middle of it.  things like wikileaks and the egypt internet shut down that i am trying to get around to talking about are very significant in terms of understanding where the world is at and where it is going.  these are not singular problems they are just early episodes of a type of problem that will become more and more frequent as technology advances, in particular telecommunications media.  one of the things that frustrates me when i read a lot of commentary on this kind of topic is how little people seem to understand about how much the world is changing.  freedom of information is going to be a really big deal for a long time. 

right now, this thing i'm writing is part of the big conversation going on.  hashtag it #foi #cablegate #egyptshutdown #etc i dunno.  over the internet via computers and smartphones, at all hours of the day, all over the world, a conversation.  this is leading to new developments in culture, politics, the economy, everything.  it's transforming the world.  egypt as a nation had previously shown a lot of interest in getting on board and have a growing tech industry that they'd hoped would grow even more, but things have changed.  because during their political turmoil, protesters were organizing via social networks, so egypt shut down the internet and cellphones.  i think for a large scale thing like this in a place like egypt you just contact service providers and tell them to stop providing service.

in the u.s. it would be more complicated but this incident should raise questions about our own policies and possibilities as regards this stuff.  in egypt it doesn't seem to have worked.  it was bad for public and international relations and will probably end up being bad for business as well.  big tech companies wont be as interested in bringing business there.  they already have a pretty poor human rights record.

i personally like seeing how much the internet scares The Man sometimes, and how internet activity can provoke from authority the kind of reaction that once can consider a win for civil disobedience in the age of information.  i worry sometimes that too much freedom of information will cause huge backlashes of oppression on a global scale and lead to a dystopian future in which only the rich and connected will get to have social networks and status updates.  judging by a lot of the comment threads this does not seem likely.  not because of the power of the people, lol, but because i don't think governments will need to repress people.  so many people just choose to conform.  and this is amplified by the very things on the internet that also make fast and effective grassroots political activism possible.  we are in the time in history now where we are choosing collectively how it will happen.  some people out there are trying to choose revolution, or evolution, or whatever, while some people are caught up in the massive flow of consciousness that new technologies have made possible.  that is a big part of the worldwide conversation we are having even if not always addressed directly.

the craziest thing about this all is how it is tied to stuff like facebook, twitter and youtube.  those were the main platforms that became socially threatening during this time of civil unrest.  they became culturally and historically significant in a way that i don't always associate with them.  so much of what you read on both places is just completely meaningless ephemera.  these are the homes of farmville and bieber fever for crying out loud. 

i guess it's like with other communications advances in some ways.  look at television.  95% dog shit but really good when you need to broadcast one thought to the entire groupmind in a hurry.  the internet is of course different in many ways from television but i think they share a similar chaff/wheat or noise/signal ratio.  but then, so does dna, from what i've read.   i dunno.  whatever.  finished randombling.  i'm chilly and need to go start a fire.  i like these quiet winter mornings.  later.

#nerdsunite

 

Sunday
Dec122010

#Cinema: how much has changed and how much stays the same?

#TalkNerdyToMeLover's @Mikedelic

a lot of people think of charlie chaplin as just some clown who made silent movies, but this is one of the great serious speeches of all time.  like most great speeches it addresses the problems of its own time while also speaking truths of times yet to come and times long past.  that is what makes things like shakespeare and the bible great works of art.  if you look at this speech, when chaplin talks about "the airplane and the radio," he's also talking about the internet.  he's talking about our lives now, too.  it's an essentially optimistic speech that does not deny the ugliness of a world plagued by war and hate.  it is one of the most beautiful things ever committed to film.  in simple black and white.  mono.  forget 3d and surround sound and all that crap.  the two plus hours of avatar dont mean one hundredth as much as this five minutes.  i just wish there was more stuff like this out there.  remember people, dont be machines.  one of the dangers of our hypertechnologized age is that the technologies that seem to so resemble the human mind will replace it.  butbut the value of true culture lies in its capacity to create the true human beauty that we call soul.  dig it.  charlie chaplin ftmfw.

#Shadoobie

Click here to follow Mike on Twitter

 

Wednesday
Dec082010

To RT or not to RT that is the question ... 

#TalkNerdyToMeLover's @MikeDelic

i couldnt decide which one to retweet. decisions of relevance are crucial to the age of information overload.

 

Monday
Nov292010

#Wikileaks in real time @twitter and on Ustream.

#TalkNerdyToMeLover's  The Mikedelic Breakdown


okay so yesterday wikileaks dropped it's latest info bomb.  some of it was classified some of it wasnt.  and wikileaks didnt really drop it the news agencies did.  wikileaks gave stuff to five outlets -- the new york times (u.s.), the guardian (uk), der spiegel (germany), el pais (spain) and le monde (france).  there was a team of 120 people i think who went over everything and removed names of people and vetted everything and tried to find out what was relevant.  we are in the age of information overload and we need people to sift through information to get the real knowledge.  we also need people to sift through the knowledge to get the real wisdom, but that takes longer.  anyway the papers released stuff yesterday.  the internet got hot.  news junkies got excited.  there's already a lot happening what with korea and the european financial crap and everything else.  so it was a fast news day.  i was dealing with it in real time it was nuts.  there is a lot of stuff in the wikileaks documents involving the behavior of the u.s. state department and what we are talking about with other countries.  stories will develop involving why people will say we should attack iran.  the saudis are really pushing for this apparently.  also we spy on everyone in the u.n. and did some crazy hacking in china.  maybe google was in on it lol.  but i'm not really looking to write about that.  that stuff will all come out in the papers.  i recommend the guradian and der spiegel.  check the foreign press to get perspective people, even so called liberal papers like the new york times and the washington post are very often part of the u.s. state-corporate propaganda machine. 

anyway though that's not what i want to write about.  the tntml angle involves the social media aspect and the internet and stuff.  for me this mainly involved two things, twitter and ustream.  when the stories started breaking i was on twitter and at ustream.  on twitter i follow a lot of news junkies and political people.  @digby56, @emptywheel, @timothys, @ggreenwald and @barryeisler are all great.  tim and barry are my favorite they are both hip and know about the cia and stuff.  i also follow some news feeds.  so the links were flowing and there was good commentary.  those guys are not big mainstream people but they are fairly conventional.  i consider them respectable.  so i was keeping track of what they were doing.  they were tweeting a lot and shit was happening fast.  twitter was really a-twitter for me lol.  i bet i'm the first person ever to say that in the history of the internet.  anyway it was happening in real time like i say.  meanwhile newspapers wouldnt be out for another day and the t.v. stations were taking their sweetass time because they're a bunch of freaking dinosaurs.  so twitter was feedin me.  i was getting perspective from these smart people and trying to skim through articles there.  this already wouldve kept me busy enough

but i had other things going on over at ustream.  ustream is really fun.  sometimes i go there when @jenfriel broadcasts though i dont chat or anything.  anyway you have a person streaming on video while there is also a chatroom going.  very fun.  forget t.v. man this is so much more democratic and interactive.  you're not just sitting there watching someone you'll never talk to in your life you are interacting with the people broadcasting and the other people watching.  this makes it such a more interesting medium.  the ustream show i was at was called deadtv.  it's usually music but there are news and interviews too.  it's hosted by anton newcombe of the brian jonestown massacre, one of my favorite bands of all time, and it's his friends and fans hanging out there.  anton is a madman.  he plays lots of really cool music, he is a total audiophile, but he's also a news junkie.  very well informed and interesting.  i dont agree with some of the stuff he says, he is a little too far into the shadows of fringe conspiracy stuff but he's well informed too.  a little paranoid lol.  i mean he's very crazy in general.  but it was really fun experiencing the news with him.  we were listening to music with people and chatting about stuff and the mod of the chat is a news junkie so we were talking about wikileaks and like when is the story gonna drop.  for me this was sunday.  lol fuck church and football and all that i wanted me some world theater drama and some information age revolution dig it.  we are in an actual age of revolution in a lot of ways.  i have talked about that with @jenfriel a bit.  she sees how much stuff is changing.  this sunday was a great example.

so while t.v. was dragging it's dinosaur ass and probably talking about lindsay lohans tits in rehab or whatever i was in a chatroom with one of my favorite rocknroll musicians who stopped music to surf news stuff on his show and talk about it while we chatted.  me and the mod of the chat were getting links and telling the other people tons of stuff.  i was kind of new but i can be very loquacious in a chat so i just talked a lot and since i knew a lot and can do web stuff fast in real time it was all good and i wasnt seen as spamming or flooding the chat or anything which was good.  so i'm getting links from my feed and astrodaise the mod is getting links and we are breaking it down for people in the chatbox as anton is talking about it and stuff.  anton lives in germany and is very critical of the u.s.  he's an angry expatriot which i enjoy.  i think my conservative friends back in jersey think i am a freedom hating evil doer but i love freedom and rock n roll so i consider myself a real american lol.  in a democracy dissent and critical thought are way more important than jingoism and blind loyalty because we the people are supposed to govern ourselves.  in order to do this we need to know what is going on that's why media transparency and free information are important, and we need to talk about it all to decide as a group what's right and that's why free expression, open dialogue and new media are important. 

so in this chatroom at ustream there were people from america and europe mostly.  one guy from mexico i think.  some folks from germany and britain.  some new york city people.  i like having non americans in the mix for a more mixed perspective.  and not only is this going on but anton newcombe is actually participating in the discussion a bunch, which was totally far out.  this guy is one of my faves!  ever!  his music changed my life.  and we were talking about the news as it comes in.  people there are all like anarchists on acid though lol so a lot of them think julian assange is working for the mossad and the cia because he wouldnt still be alive otherwise.  i'm not inclined to believe that.  it doesnt add up based on what i've read.  i think he really is an information cowboy on the new frontier.  a lot of people think he should be dead because he puts lives in danger.  i can understand that but i disagree.  it's complex however and i enjoy talking to smart people who disagree with me about it as long as they arent jerks.  as it developed though it was interesting.  because we were interpreting it all in real time during the information overload.  all this news is coming out and we have different people doing research and giving bits of commentary while others watch and learn.  what's cool is that i am pretty good at research and can be fast in a chatroom so i made a good first impression on this new crowd and made friends with the mod of the chat who was doing a lot of great fast research too.  so we're posting links and speedreading articles and cutting and pasting relevant text and all that.  it was so freaking nerdy but so cool at the same time.  it was new media nerdiness and real rocknroll.  it damn near broke the needle on the nerdometer in my brain and blew a tube in the amp of my of my rocknroll heart.  it was one of those days where i am hanging out on the internet and realize that we are witnessing the dawning of a new light and lo it is totally groovy yea verily brothers and sisters.  and none of it was really planned or anything. 

it helped having my twitter feed tailored to get me smart commentary and great links.  twitter is the kind of thing where it can be a bunch of trivial b.s. but in terms of current events twitter is supercool because it becomes this giant virtual newsroom where regular people get to mix it up with reporters and interact and see how other people are talking and what links and opinions are going around.  and because i'd gotten in the habit of doing this i came in really handy in the chat and made some cool new rock n roll friends.  it was great.  well i guess i better shut up because i am running on.  but before i go i'll say this -- when guys like the pope and president obama speak out against the new technologies and say that people are getting too distracted, which both of those guys have said, just remember, they are not who it's for.  all of this stuff is for us.  we can let it make us into an attention deficit nation, we already have to some extent, but we can also let it facilitate a massive change in consciousness and politics.  there are tons of options.  and it can be real fun.  most of the t.v. news comes from rich corporations whose interests are not the same as those of the general public and who pursue certain goals that are pretty damn shady.  but right now there is a lot of interesting information out there and there are a lot of really interesting people talking about it.  for nerds like me it does not get any better than days like this.   well, except for the part about finding out what scumbags politicians and diplomats are.  not that i didnt know that already but you know what i mean.  rock on borhters and sisters.  over and out.

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#NerdsUnite