British and French nuclear submarines collide
via War Is Boring
I’m reading Emergence, by Steven Johnson. I’m not terribly impressed in general, it reads at the depth of, well, a WIRED article. Which is fine when its free and article-length, but is a bit frustrating in a book-length format for which I paid.
There’s one particular point he makes which is not only flawed, but really quite sloppy. He’s discussing if the World Wide Web has the potential to form a self-organizing emergence like a metropolis or Teillhard’s noosphere, and points out:
“Plenty of decentralized systems in the real world spontaneously generate structure as they increase in size: cities organize into neighborhoods or satellites; the neural connections of our brains develop extraordinarily specialized regions. Has the Web followed a comparable path of development over the past few years? Is the Web becoming more organized as it grows?
You need only take a quick look at the NASDAQ most active list to see that the answer is an unequivocal no. The portals and the search engines exist in the first place because the Web is a tremendously disorganized space…”
OK, so first, the assumption that the Web is unorganized and has no structure is just wrong. See Albert-László Barabási’s Linked, or any one or the multitudes of visualizations of interactions between blogs to disprove the proposed lack of structure.
The killer is what Johnson goes on to discuss, which is the various projects to track people’s surfing habits, as a way to “introduce” that structure which cities have and he claims the Web lacks. He never seems to make the connection that the sidewalks of a city, like the links between websites, would never exist without the decisions of people interacting with the system as a whole. People need to choose to visit a website and link to it, just as they need to choose to visit a particular section of the city. The major portals, that link to a few experts, and that everyone else links to and reads, serve as the “neighborhoods” of the web, and their emergence follows the same mechanisms as the emergence of shopping districts where all the goldsmiths are on the same block.
I just sprang for the “pro” version of Remember The Milk, entirely so I could get the native iPhone app. It’s $25 per year, and I wonder if there’s any other examples of iPhone apps which are effectively subscriptions. $25 a year also seems a little steep for another interface to a database which they maintain for free.
The other thing that struck me, as I reloaded the main RTM page, is that they still brand themselves as “beta”. I know that we’re in the age of the perpetual beta, thanks to Google, but last I checked, I wasn’t paying for those Google betas.
C’mon, can we please have the book now?
http://www.notquitewrong.com/rosscottinc/2009/02/11/the-system-150/
Occasionally, code comes out too.
Wired on how humans have evolved to rely on cooked food.
So of the various Lord of the Rings movies, only the first and third are available to stream via Netflix, at least for a Mac. What the hell?
Ron Moore, and some of the writers, pontificate on the latest Battlestar Galactica episode here. Spoilers abound, if you’re not caught up and you don’t want to be, move along.
So… how ’bout that 5th cylon? For all Moore’s comments about how it’s been planned since season 3, he’s been known to lie to preserve the surprise. This piece of speculation was very interesting, and makes more sense given what Starbuck found.
I’m a little worried that with all the emotional investment in what might have been the last episode, next week’s going to be a little slow. Also, after last season of Californication, did anyone else think Leoben was going to deal with his shock by finding a nubile 16-year-old? Just me?

“I was wrong. I don’t know what to do. I thought I saw streams and rivers and I thought I saw stuff, but I don’t know.”
After all, they’ve all got their apocalyptic and post-apocalyptic fiction. Via The Daily Dish, an interesting review of L’Apocalypse dans l’Islam. Judging by the review, I don’t have nearly the background in Islamic studies necessary to easily appreciate the book, but just the review is illuminating. I can’t imagine why Hegghammer, the reviewer, didn’t refer to this dreck, but maybe he didn’t want to admit to knowing it exists. But do the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles show up in the Left Behind series?
“The fertile imaginations of apocalyptic writers have identified forces ranging from the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles to the illusionist David Copperfield as agents of the Antichrist.”

Are these writers intentionally blurring the line between politically motivated apocalyptic fiction and slashfic?
image from flickr user The Eggplant