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# 2017-12-30 - Alexandria | |
Alexandria artistic concept | |
Recently listened to an excellent podcast: | |
Jason Scott Talks His Way Out Of It | |
Below are some excerpts that caught my imagination. Clearly a fellow | |
data hoarder whose ideals take after my own heart. | |
Episode 1 explains Jason's motivation to be a computer historian. | |
> I have a lot of weird ideas about the world and i tend to draw | |
> unusual connections, but most of all, i still have a sense of | |
> wonder. I still have the sense that out in the world there are | |
> amazing things to discover and often people just don't know about | |
> them. Bringing them to light and calling attention to them has | |
> always been one of my greatest joys. | |
> I was always fascinated by the fact that what these text files | |
> that had survived untold amounts of lost bulletin board systems and | |
> disk transfers and crappy hard drives; what made them live, what | |
> gave them that level of survivability, even to this day 40 years | |
> later you can still find them, is the fact that they were secrets, | |
> they were hints that this model of the phone system of the 70's and | |
> 80's as it fell apart, was a place of wonder that you, with a few | |
> simple steps, could control and master in a way that other people | |
> couldn't. And i've always said that that was the real power of the | |
> bulletin board system text files. It was the fact that even if you | |
> weren't going to build a nuclear bomb or hack up a conference | |
> system, or steal phone codes, you knew that this document was your | |
> simple step to do it, and that made your life something that you | |
> controlled a little more. Maybe even more than a nine year old who | |
> wonders when their family is going to be back together again. | |
Episode 2 is about phone conferences and phone phreaking. He tells an | |
entertaining story of getting caught, as a kid, by a woman working at | |
a security company. They had long conversations where she queried him | |
about the ethics of his activities and tried to tease out his | |
identity. At some point she stopped calling and he was relieved to | |
know he was off the hook. Six months later he checked the mailbox and | |
found a flyer from her security company addressed to his name, not | |
his father's name. In hindsight he thinks she was informing him "I | |
know exactly who you are." | |
Episode 3 | |
> I love my job. I feel so happy to work for a place where the | |
> things i have wanted to do all my life, i get to do all of the | |
> time. ... The job is to be myself. | |
> What i love about the Internet Archive is that it is top-down | |
> dedicated to its mission: universal access to all knowledge. That's | |
> baked into the DNA. There isn't a secondary business that it's | |
> really pushing towards. There isn't any sort of corporate master | |
> pushing things in some strange direction. There isn't any kind of | |
> subterfuge that makes the place turn out to be doing the wrong | |
> thing, while acting like it's doing the right thing. This has all | |
> become extremely precious and rare in the modern era. | |
> Fundamentally the bedrock of the Internet Archive is saving and | |
> providing information to anybody who wants it for as long as | |
> possible, preferrably forever. | |
> Brewster Kahle ... got a once-in-a-lifetime windfall of money and | |
> it's always a very interesting character insight as to what a | |
> person does when they find themselves no longer worrying about most | |
> of the points in Maslow's Pyramid. And what Brewster did, was he | |
> turned around and said "I think i would like to run a library, and | |
> not just a library, but i want to bring back the famed Library of | |
> Alexandria, and bring back the library that's most famous for | |
> burning, and make it available to the world again." And i've got to | |
> say, that's quite a pitch! | |
> Everybody at the archive [is] focussed towards the dream, the | |
> goal, the idea. If there are arguments, the argument is over how to | |
> do it better. If there are any raised voices, it's in defence of | |
> doing the right thing. And if there are any misunderstandings, it's | |
> two people who are both trying to achieve a really great goal and | |
> finding that they would have different ways to achieve it. That is | |
> not a situation i had in my previous career as a Unix admin, where | |
> i worked for a company which has bought two other companies that | |
> themselves had bought another company that i worked for, and that | |
> company changing name 5 times. If it sounds weird and boring, it | |
> was. | |
> If you are somebody who is in a job that you hate, or where you | |
> realize that nothing about the company is inspiring you where you | |
> feel like you are part of something greater and making the world | |
> greater, then please don't settle into thinking that it's you, that | |
> you did something wrong, that you deserve to not enjoy what you are | |
> doing, and that it's about a paycheck, because it's something that | |
> rots you inside. Because at some point you wake up, and you wake up | |
> unpleasantly, and i would rather you did that sooner rather than | |
> later, and move on to your dream job, where you wake up every | |
> morning excited to see what's going to come in and going to bed at | |
> night happy at what just happened. | |
Episode 4 is about Jason interviewing people for a couple of | |
documentaries he made. | |
> Turns out for me The Face is the most important part of the | |
> interview. If you don't have a face that encourages people to want | |
> to tell you more, a kind of nodding, knowing, enlightened face that | |
> says "I want to hear even more about this," people will get a weird | |
> vibe and they'll shut up. They won't go deeper. So i built up that | |
> face and i learned to listen to what others say in a way that would | |
> pull out the next question. | |
> If you actually listen to people and you listen to the words that | |
> they are saying, they drop so many hints about where they want | |
> things to go. | |
tags: inspiration,notes,podcast | |
# Tags | |
inspiration | |
notes | |
podcast |