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Bitchy rants
Born into it
Brain candy
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Foma at the mouth
Head games
It's all about me
Life in Texas
Mixed bag
Nothing in particular
Out of my mind
Self-referential topic
Totally Betty
Various webshit
Random Link of Dubious Interest
Cucui [.pdf]
You have something to say?
So say it.

Monday, 6 December 2004
In no way surprising
Mood:  chillin'
Topic: Various webshit
You scored as alternative. You're partially respected for being an individual in a conformist world yet others take you as a radical. You have no place in society because you choose not to belong there - you're the luckiest of them all, even if your parents are completely ashamed of you. Just don't take drugs ok?

alternative

88%

Lower Class

54%

Upper middle Class

46%

Middle Class

46%

Luxurious Upper Class

29%

What Social Status are you?
created with QuizFarm.com

Brought to you by entrOpy MULTIMEDIA at 8:11 PM CST
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Sunday, 5 December 2004
Watch out for that tree
Mood:  special
Topic: Nothing in particular
We had a big list of things to do today, but only one of them got done. We're having the hubby's mother over for xmas this year, so I have to get the house clean. I'm going to be busy for the next couple weeks, very busy.

I did manage to get the boxes of xmas decorations out and the tree is now up, twinkling merrily in the space by the front door. That door is now just a chunk of wall for the duration of the holiday. There probably won't be very many presents under that tree, but it'll still be pretty. I'm thinking of just putting random shit and empty boxes under it to make it look cute.

Brought to you by entrOpy MULTIMEDIA at 10:21 PM CST
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Relatively accurate
Mood:  party time!
Topic: Various webshit
You Are Beer!

You don't need to get totally wasted when you hit the bars. More of a social drinker, you just like to have fun with your friends. And as long as the beer keeps flowing, you're a happy camper. But don't mix things up: "Beer Before Liquor, Never Been Sicker!"
What alcoholic drink are you?

Brought to you by entrOpy MULTIMEDIA at 12:36 AM CST
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Friday, 3 December 2004
Here we go again
Mood:  irritated
Topic: Head games
I'm gonna have to kill someone. Rondak's Portal is out of service through the weekend and possibly longer due to some sort of dick waving bullshit between their ISP and the phone company. Last night I was wondering why nobody had been posting to the game, but I couldn't get the portal to come up, so I figured maybe they were doing maintenence. Not so - I just got an email letting me know that the 2 games I'm in are stuck in limbo indefinitely.

Just stab me in the eye right now. Right here, in the eye, right now. It would be a relief compared to this crap storm. Why can't I ever have a no-hassle game situation anymore?

Brought to you by entrOpy MULTIMEDIA at 1:56 PM CST
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Nice package
Mood:  mischievious
Topic: Out of my mind
You know that silly joke, the one about how when you corrupt, er I mean convert, someone to homersexuality you get a toaster oven? True. No, really it is, for the most part.

See, only the lesbianese get those. It's all a part of how they're entirely too mannish to make a proper chi-chi breakfast and they need something to heat up their butch little bagels and whatnot in. The fags, seeing as how we're all too queeny to get our hands dirty, get a mechanic.

Mine finally got here. You'd think they would have been on top of this, but apparently things have been backed up at the Homo Depot. (Formerly based in Hawaii but now with a branch in Vermont.) Poor guy must have been in the dead letter office for a while, and he's starting to smell. I feel kinda bad for him. And from what I can tell he might have been cute too. He's got those porno mechanic coveralls on, with a name patch that says Chad. (Because you know in a gay porn there has to be someone named Chad.)

I'm just going to assume he doesn't have underwear on. I can't bring myself to check - that's entirely too nasty. I don't know where to bury him, and I know they're not going to send a replacement.

Brought to you by entrOpy MULTIMEDIA at 1:16 AM CST
Updated: Saturday, 12 February 2005 3:20 PM CST
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Wednesday, 1 December 2004
What can I say? The cold makes me sluggish
Mood:  lazy
Topic: Nothing in particular
I've been lazy, and nothing really all that interesting has happened around here, so posting has been at a minimum. Let's see... what's happened lately...

We let the cows out to eat in the back yard so they would discover the fence. One either got out or hid somewhere we couldn't find him, so they had to get penned back up. He showed up again the next day, and I hope the other ones are kicking his ass, because he ruined it for them.

The game, no wait - games, have been going well. A tad slow, but what can you expect from a pbp?

I had this really geektacular dream the other day, doing the Dune rant at one of my step-nieces. She had brought a baby with her, and I think I bored the poor kid to death. The dream was so bad I had to wake myself up from it to make it stop.

'Twanky' is a word. Did you know that? I didn't, but it showed up on Word Up (too lazy to link today) and was worth a decent pile of points.

That's about it really. Wow, that was exciting.

Brought to you by entrOpy MULTIMEDIA at 9:19 PM CST
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Sunday, 28 November 2004
But it's so small
Mood:  a-ok
Topic: Head games
I finally went ahead and posted the remake of the missing evil interlude for BCB. I finished it just a little before we went to Lamesa for turkey day, but it was so short I figured I'd let it simmer a bit.

Nothing came to mind. It's not bad, but I'm a little disappointed. I remember the original was about 1/3 longer, and it revealed just a bit less information. There's no way I can recreate the original - it's just plain gone. This one will have to 'fice.

Now I have to get unlazy and start editing the next post.

Brought to you by entrOpy MULTIMEDIA at 10:33 PM CST
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Thursday, 25 November 2004
Look at me, posting on someone else's laptop
Mood:  celebratory
Topic: Mixed bag
We had some trouble posting the past couple days. Apparently some sort of crazy static nonsense was going on with our phone line that had nothing to do with the house that just got fixed today. I'm assuming it wasn't on us because I didn't have to see anybody today. But all that is moot because I'm posting from the bro-in-law's machine.

I have several things to post actually. Or at least I think I do. The main thing I wanted to post has to do with the game. See, I've been doing this thing lately called the Evil Interlude. No, I didn't invent it - in fact, one of my gaming friends from waaaaaaay back came up with the concept. But anyway, what it all amounts to is that I periodically post an entry into BCB that only the lurkers can read. It reveals events going on with characters that the players have yet to interact with, or other events outside of what they see. The thing is, the first one of these that I posted ended up getting lost in a crash that happened on Rondak's. I'm at the point right now that I have to repost it, which means I need to remake it. I don't remember at all exactly how it came out originally, so I have to do it all off the top of my head again. I have it done already actually, I just haven't posted it.

Other than that not much of importance has really been going on. The hubby and I are in Lamesa right now for the holidays, which explains me using a foreign machine. I'm sure I'm neglecting something important, but I'll get to it later when we're home. I just figured I should post while I have a computer handy, since I was dumb and didn't post earlier. So now you know - my internet has been screwy lately.

Brought to you by entrOpy MULTIMEDIA at 12:04 AM CST
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Saturday, 20 November 2004
Oh really...
Mood:  caffeinated
Topic: Various webshit
You are 40% Leo
How much do you match your zodiac sign?

I tried out the Virgo one, to see if it was the cusp factor screwing things up, but that one only netted a 58%. Figures...

Brought to you by entrOpy MULTIMEDIA at 6:31 AM CST
Updated: Saturday, 20 November 2004 6:34 AM CST
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Wednesday, 17 November 2004
Not quite getting it
Mood:  chatty
Topic: Brain candy
I'll probably get laughed at for defending The Matrix and chances are I'll deserve it, but reading criticism about the physics used in the movies at Insultingly Stupid Movie Physics kind of annoyed be because of lame real-world assumptions made by the critics. The thing about Matrix reality is that it has nothing whatsoever to do with any kind of physics - real, implied, computer generated, or otherwise.

Mind you, I am not defending the movies' other problems. I recognize that it isn't perfect. I don't care - I enjoyed the movie for its anime style and I rather enjoy brain candy. I am also not going to refute any criticism about the real world as portrayed, because I know it has glaring errors. I just want to put in my $.02 regarding complaints about how the hackers and agents get away with their crazy stunts while in a computer simulation. Anyone who has played Mage: the Ascension will understand exactly what I'm talking about.

ISMP says:

Everyone's connected to a sophisticated computer simulation of the late 20th century. Unfortunately, people are still restrained by the same old societal norms, petty rules, and laws of physics, that is except for a few enlightened hackers who've discovered reality, and are trying to free the rest of humanity. It's hard to argue with the physics of a movie like The Matrix. Considering the action takes place mostly in a computer simulation, flaws in physics can usually be dismissed as bad programming.

Okay. So any time something unreal happens it is the result of bad programming, or the side effects of someone reprogramming the Matrix. This is basically how these hackers and the agents who chase them manage to routinely ignore the physics of the Matrix. However, ISMP doesn't quite understand how this programming works. It's idea based, and not constrained to any causality based reality model.

For instance...

at the beginning of the movie Trinity (one of the hackers) jumps five feet off the ground and pauses in mid air before kicking a policeman just below his neck. The policeman is swept off his feet and translates straight backwards into another cop. The two continue translating until they slam into a wall. A kick this far above the policeman's center of gravity would have caused him to rotated backwards. The slightly downward direction of the kick would not have swept him off his feet. What's more, since Trinity was about half the cop's mass and the collision of her foot with him was largely elastic (it didn't stick to him) Trinity should have bounced backward to conserve momentum. Okay, okay, we are forced to admit that Trinity is one of the enlightened hackers who can bend a few laws of physics inside the simulation. But the cop was just a regular joe and should have rotated.

All wrong. Just because Trinity is kicking the cop doesn't mean she's translating any sort of kinetic force to the cop. Just because she has a program loaded into her brain that simulates real world martial arts techniques into the Matrix environment does not mean that real world physics are exchanged in the use of these techiques. Her intent was to kick the cop into the wall - hence, the cop is kicked into the wall. She wanted to float up in the air and remains stationary while the kick was enacted, and it was so. The martial arts is just window dressing. The mundane status of the cop would not force him to behave according to natural physics, rather his mundane status prevents him from defying her will.

When the characters are inside the Matrix fighting the machine's minions, it's like watching Saturday morning cartoons. There's lots of violence and exaggerated motion but no one gets hurt. On the other hand, every poor human slub who gets in the way is blown up, shot, or, at minimum, kicked in the face.

Yes, that's exactly right. Those poor humans are locked into the idea that the Matrix is reality, and are thus limited by the very physics that ISMP expects. The hackers and agents are above this and do as they please, for good or ill.

Since human bystanders in the matrix can morph into agents of the machines, the movie's heroes dispatch them without remorse or hesitation. It's all very stylish and cool. But wait, these bystanders are not just props. They are people who feel pain and die in the real world when killed in the Matrix. It seems like some moral ambivalence would be appropriate yet there's none to be found. That might be boring.

Sure it's sad that these innocent bystanders are being killed left-and-right by the hackers. However it's made clear in the first movie that unless one is very young, transitioning out of the Matrix is a painful, and often futile exercise. All those innocent bystanders are effectively dead anyway - and even worse, potential knives in the backs of the hackers. The hackers don't go out of their way to kill innocents, but they cannot let it cross their mind at any time that these people must be spared. They are the mushrooms in vast game of Centipede.

Neo is miles away but somehow detects the distress of his Lois and flies Superman-like at extreme velocity to save her. His velocity is so high that the turbulent shock wave behind him not only smashes windows but throws cars in the air as though they're caught in a horizontal tornado. Clearly, he's flying faster than a speeding bullet. He grabs Tinity just before she hits the ground and flies off without a pause.

We know a bullet can kill and presumably a fall from great height can also kill at least if the person is wounded and unable to control the landing. Yet being "caught" by a man of steel flying faster than the falling person or a handgun bullet produces no harm. Obviously, the rules have been broken but hey, it's Neo and he's D'One.

All that collateral damage (besides being purely for the wow factor) makes sense if you realize that Neo is pushing his power to the max to get to Trinity in time. He has no concern for his environment, because it isn't real anyway. But he is indeed violating the laws of physics as far as mundane perception in the Matrix is concerned. When the agents make radical changes strange effects, sometimes subtle, manifest as well.

However Trinity is real, so she is protected by that collateral damage because Neo wills it so. And as for any damage due to her being suddenly jerked out of the air by him flying at such incredible speed, the same rule applies.

In another scene, Trinity races down the freeway in a car loaded with Morpheus (Laurence Fishburne) and the Keymaker (Randall Duk Kim) as a pair of villainous albino twins (Adrian Rayment) give chase. One of the twins continuously sprays Trinity's car with bullets so that there's hardly a place on the car without a hole in it. Even the door posts are riddled. Yet, no one in the car is so much as scratched. Throughout the scene the albino has no trouble killing other motorists when they get in the way but can't hit a soul in the good guys' car even from a few meters distance. What's more, none of the bullets apparently penetrate the thin sheet metal in the car's body. Yes it could be simple luck, however, it certainly looks like the rules have once again been bent.

Why must it be luck? These characters are being protected by something that in most other movies would be silly. In gaming we call this the PC Shield - the players' characters are automatically protected from such casual damage because they belong to the players and having them die that way would be boring. However in the Matrix it makes sense - these hackers exist in a reality very similar to the characters in Roger Zelazny's Chronicles of Amber. They know the Matrix is not real, thus they are more real than anything in it and they can extend this state to anything within their sphere of influence. This isn't some magic aura that they emanate because they are important characters, it is part of being one of these super hackers. They have an operator hovering over their metaphorical shoulder who adjusts the code to their benefit at all times. The poor mortals around them do not, and thus the bullets hit home every time.

During the scene an agent jumps from one moving vehicle to the hood of another and crushes the whole front end of the car. This is typical of movie's exaggerated storytelling style. While the scene has a considerable coolness factor its physics are illogical. We say illogical rather than incorrect because the scene does take place inside the Matrix. Moreover, the scene only happens once and so does not represent a computer generated rule of physics. However, it's illogical for an agent to smash a car when it makes it impossible for him to catch the prey he's programmed to seek.

This is just like Neo's superflight damage. The agents are AI constructs, so they have an emotional component. Agent Smith demonstates this several times. The agent in question was bending the programming rules of the Matrix so strongly that an error resulted - the car got crushed in a really cool way. If the agent had really cared and wanted that car, then I'm sure he would have kept it intact - instead he let his zeal get the best of him. Hooray, nice thrill for the audience.

The freeway scene finally ends with Morpheus and the keymaker atop an eighteen-wheeler as it crashes into another one head-on, but don't worry, Neo comes at high velocity from afar and snatches them away just before they're engulfed in the crash's fiery explosion. Again, how can such a high velocity snatch produce no injury?

See - not quite getting it.

While analyzing romantic aspects is not our main purpose, we must say that there's more romance in a chemistry set than chemistry between Trinity and Neo. Something about mixing remorseless homicide with passion just doesn't click. Yes, we know that if humans in the matrix are not dispatched they can morph into agents, but it's not their fault. Furthermore, as we noted in our last review, they feel real pain as well as die physically when they die in the matrix. The film gives us the excitement of violence free from bitter realities or moral ambivalence that might spoil the fun.

No, it isn't their fault. But they are effectively nonentities, already dead at this point, so killing them because they can turn into agents at any time makes perfect sense. Yes, they can and do feel real pain, and they do die, just like all the enemies in a video game die when you kill them. But just like in the video game, with rare exceptions, they were already dead.

Although the Matrix series has some masterful parts and philosophical moments it is neither a masterpiece of philosophy nor of science fiction. It's simply a well-made cinematic comic book and unlike endless complicated explanations, this genre does indeed free it from the constraints of reality.

Yes, that is the reason fans of the series will forgive the really bad physics used in the real world. However, the reality model within the Matrix is still essentially consistent despite, or even because of the gratuitous flaunting of the rules of physics.

Brought to you by entrOpy MULTIMEDIA at 9:57 AM CST
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