Second Life

Filed Under (Digital Love, Sanity Check) by Bogo on 26-10-2011

I am still not convinced that people fully grasp the significance of the web and its effects on human psychology.  Maybe others don’t spend as much time here or don’t interact with as many people online as I do, but I know for a fact that there is a collective (I was going to say army, but then people would claim I’m trying to spread fundamentalist ideas online or some other crap like that) of like-minded individuals out there who spend more and more of their lives in the digital world. Are we wasting our time here? Is this our life ending one minute at a time? I think not…

What makes your life significant? Is it not the trace that you leave through interaction with others? I do not mean to discuss the meaning of life here (how hypocritical of me, since this is exactly what I am going to do right after I close these parentheses), but I don’t believe that your existence in isolation has any significance. You go through your way and leave a trace, through achievements, impressions, all in the mind of others, and this is what will supposedly be left when you’re gone. This symbolic footprint will one day be your epitaph. And then you are no more…

How is real life different than your time spent in the digital world then? You go through the web, create, interact with others, leave a mark. Every facebook update, every forum post, every online character in a game, this is you leaving your digital footprint out there. Others see that, recognize it, and remember it to a lesser extent. Perhaps your impact on other individuals online is smaller due to the informality of the interaction, but you no longer need the minds of others to keep the flame of your existence alive. As long as the web lives, your trace will live. It is a different form of life, though. The concept of “you” as a human being and even an individual gives way to the concept of “you” as an entity. We use different aliases in the web. Every one of us usually has at least 5, some more than 50, which would mean that most likely, others would perceive 5 or 50 individuals; in truth, those individuals represent the same digital entity…the same person in real life. Out there you are split into many many pieces, but you are still you, nobody can change that.

As time goes by, more and more of our real life will give way for our digital one. This is no longer science fiction, this is happening here and now. The computer revolution gave us the web. Yesterday the laptop allowed us to take the web with us in our backpack wherever we went. Today the world is in our pocket, tomorrow it will be in front of our eyes, and the day after it will be in our heads. Your digital and analog (see, clever) lives will become parallel until the web becomes an essential part of our lives (and I really mean that, and no, the web is not essential for your existence today, you can end your internal dialog) and possibly takes over. A voluntary Matrix.

In conclusion, I don’t believe that the fact that people spend more and more time online should be alarming. Human civilization can exist both in the web and in the real world. This is still your life, and you should make the most of it wherever you choose, be it offline or online. As long as you don’t come here to run away from something, because one day you may regret that…

Old Engine Oil

Filed Under (Photogamy) by Bogo on 05-06-2011

I’ve often wonderer how kerosene tastes (no doubt due to the occasional rumor of some dumb Russian kids drinking kerosene after realizing vodka no longer does it for them), but to be honest with you, I’ve never been tempted to try engine oil. By now I am absolutely sure that this is what it is supposed to taste like. The fact that I am beginning to like it is, frankly, quite disturbing…

 

Judgement

Filed Under (Sanity Check) by Bogo on 23-05-2011

All jobs are the same. Your instinct would and should be to challenge that statement, but if you think about it, everything and nothing is the same depending on how basic or detailed comparison you would like to make. Since I will obviously try to make a grossly overstated generalization here, it should be evident that this post will be devoted to the basics. The foundation of every job is judgement: this is your purpose and main task. Coincidentally, this is also what guarantees that your workplace will not be taken by a machine for the next 1/5/10/20/50 years (depending on what you do).

You can ask, if all jobs have the same basics, then how come one person is better suited for something and another for something else? The answer lies in the fact that judgement is not always a hard-cut decision; if it were black and white, then let us be honest, you would be useless. Therefore, judgements are hazy, and their outcomes are not so trivial to predict with an untrained eye. Thus a better judgement can be made by a person who is better qualified to make it. It is qualification and capacity that separates different people on different jobs: the qualification and capacity not to do the job itself, but to make the judgements that it requires. All your hard work in education and later on in work training is oriented towards arming you with the capability of making better judgements.

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