Archive for November, 2004

A Scanner Darkly

Sunday, November 28th, 2004

A depressing tale of drug use in the 70s, told from what would have been the near future at that time. Substance D, aka Death, is heavily used along with more familiar substances. Substance D splits the brain of the user into multiple personalities such that the main character of the story, Fred, is at the same time the person he is covertly monitoring, Bob Arctor. Much of the book is spent on the very mundane aspects of both strangely symbient lives. After the drug becomes too much for Fred to handle, he can no longer continue his job and is discarded by the police, even cited and fined for the very drug use required by his job. Fred/Bob is sent to a recovery clinic with a new identity, Bruce, where farm work is eventually used to rehabilitate - farm work where the source of Substance D itself is grown.

Overall, not a happy story, told from the point of view of someone who obviously has been on the wrong end of the needle. The dialog, even comical at times, can only come from knowing that path in life. Dick’s most telling line in the book comes in the Author’s notes, where he talks about what he has gone through and the friends he has lost to that same personal battle.

“They wanted to have a good time, but they were like children playing in the street; they could see one after another of them being killed–run over, maimed, destroyed–but they continued to play anyhow.”

The title of the book is a reference to 1 Corinthians 13:12, a letter from St. Paul to the Corinthians:

At present we see indistinctly, as in a mirror, but then face to face. At present I know partially; then I shall know fully, as I am fully known.

That the universe is reflected in a mirror, and there will come a time when we will see reality face to face. Where St. Paul’s mirror is a not glass, but polished metal or a pool of water, which reflects a backwards reality that a primitive viewer would be familiar with. Similarly in the lens system of a camera or Dick’s scanners, the viewer will see themselves not reversed and thus find themselves and their reality unfamiliar. This describes the paranoia that runs throughout the book.

Cool News Tools

Friday, November 12th, 2004

Stop by at 10×10, a news photo aggregation tool. This is site is similar to the Google News Treemap. 10×10 evens out the viewing space for each story, makig it hard to really see what the top headline is. Conversely, the small nuggets of news are lost in the Google News Treemap, effectively giving you only the soundbites. Similarly, the NewsMap tool from NewsIsFree, where I get many RSS feeds.

Halo 2 is Out!

Thursday, November 11th, 2004

Halo 2 is out and I’m about half way through the game a couple of days into it on Normal difficulty just to give it a quick run-through. I’m setting up Clan Clam for online playing and will get into some Live games over the next couple of days. So far the game seems just like the original with longer cut scenes, but there is enough new stuff to keep you interested. This weekend will no doubt be spent on the XBox. Here are the single-player levels, none of which seem to be much of a spoiler.

The Heretic
Armory
Cairo Station
Outskirts
Metropolis
The Arbiter
Oracle
Delta Halo
Regret
Sacred Icon
Quarantine Zone
Gravemind
Uprising
High Charity
The Great Journey

Bush Wins!

Wednesday, November 3rd, 2004

Bush wins re-election and all is right in the world again. Four more years!!

Vote!

Tuesday, November 2nd, 2004

Today is the day we have all been waiting for here in the US. I voted for George Bush and will be staying up late with bated breath for the results. Here’s hoping that we’ll have a definitive answer by morning.