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Archive for Uncategorized

Poking Holes in Time

If you scratch a bit, like you do with a penny on a Lotto ticket, you can see something else.  Not winning numbers, but an underlying corruption.  A sense that the rebooted Starfleet is, in essence, a reflection of our own, modern-day society.  Sure the spaceships are bigger, the architecture more daring.  But the same essential flaws are there.  People and governments willing to do Bad Things for what they perceive is the Greater Good.  And, as much as I enjoyed the reboots, I think that something has been lost, or perhaps is simply getting subsumed in all the lens flare and flashy explosions.

Roddenbery’s Star Trek was about the best in us.  Not just that humanity evolved and matured between now and the shining future, but that we were *still* able to continue to overcome our internal and external conflicts.  Granted, Roddenbery’s future without pockets has been bagged on over the years, it still remains the only shining, hopeful future out there.  When StarWars hit the screens, then Blade Runner, the future got grittier.  Every film or show had rust under the paint and clouds in the sky.  Stories focused on doing “the best we can” as opposed to becoming the “best we can be”.  They tried a bit of that in Star:Trek, the Next Generation, and threw a bit more in during DS9 and Voyager, but it never quite stuck.  You didn’t watch Star Trek for the gritty “realism” or the dystopic adventure.  You watched it because it showed the potential.  It gave us a version of the future where we didn’t irrevocably f*ck everything up.

I worry a bit that the new generation of Star Trek writers is more interested in showing us the flaws, in exposing the impossibility of a Utopian society, than they are in building new stories in a world where it is not only possible, but that it is *probable* that people will do the Right Thing.

Consumable WiFi

GDC has an extended history of sub-par connectivity.  Which is kind of ironic when you think about it.  The games industry, particularly up here in the SF Bay Area *ought* to have the best d*mn wifi in the country.  Every bleeding edge tech company is within easy reach up here.

But every year, for as long as I can remember, the WiFi signal has been crap.  The cel signal is bad too, but that, at least, is explainable by things like concrete pilings and steel rebar.  WiFi can be/is usually handled by wireless routers within the space, and when the hall is empty you can get signal all day long.

As it fills up though, all those people, those warm saline heavy bodies start to *soak up* the signal.  The end result of this is that the hallways end up lined with clusters of WiFi users (yeah, okay, many of us take our work to GDC with us) all who are trying to find a place they can transmit from.