I’m thinking of coming back

September 11, 2009

WordPress is a lot different from Tumblr.

I really love Tumblr — it’s perfect for short-form, mixed-media blogging, it’s like Twitter on PCP and crack cocaine. The community is great. It’s fun!

But I get urges to write longer posts occasionally. Sometimes I need to flesh out an idea more, and Tumblr just isn’t the audience for that. Usually, anything more than a paragraph or too is tl;dr: too long, didn’t read.

WordPress, however, is perfect for the longer posts, and has much less distractions. Perfect for flashing out. Plus, it’s fun being here after not posting for over a year and a half.


Insane in the membrane

March 25, 2008

A while ago I wrote about ‘terraforming’ on Earth. I wrote about how in a few generations places that are now deserts could then be grasslands or forests even.

Okay, I realize it’s not really terraforming at all. It’s more like climate change. Which makes is wholly unremarkable. But it’s still almost an adventure to be here in the Mojave Desert as parts of it turn into fields of green and yellow.

I was up there with Sean and another friend, Ian, at that same rocky perch, and not only were the fields more green than brown, but there were meadows, small meadows of bright yellow flowers. California poppies I think. It was beautiful. I got a lot of photos. I’ll have them up here soon.

Nutty.


You Are Happy

March 13, 2008

An observation: Terraforming on Earth

February 22, 2008

I moved to this desert town fairly recently — about two and a half years ago. I’ve always hated the dryness of it, how dusty and sandy and gritty and windy it gets. It has its upsides — less traffic, lower rent, all that jazz, so the pros and cons just about cancel each other out until the town becomes just an ‘OK’ place to live.

About a year ago, after reading this science fiction book series, I wondered about terraforming and just how plausible it really is. The whole process on an alien planet, on a long enough time scale, is indeed plausible, in fact possible, it would just be really difficult. I scaled down my thoughts, on to smaller environments and ecosystems. For instance, the desert.

It wouldn’t really be terraforming, since you’re already on Earth and it’s already habitable. But to see green here, to see something resembling places you’d actually expect humans to settle. That was my dream.

I thought it over, ran mental ‘tests’ and such. Introducing such-and-such amounts of water into the environment here, and thanks to the water cycle, it will rain more, more things will grow, requiring more water, we’ll bring more here, there’ll be more to evaporate and go up into the environment, over and over, until we’re as green as can be. But I wondered: if it’s as easy as one-two-three, why haven’t we seen anything yet? So I thought the whole idea was just the musings of a bored teenager.

But last week, while my friend Sean and I were out taking photos, I noticed something I have never noticed before. The fields I looked down on from our high rocky perch weren’t brown like they should have been, like they were all over and around town. (We were a good distance from the city.) There was green there, in the fields. Growing naturally, without human aid. Sure, it was a little hard to see, but all I did was say ‘Look Sean, look how green it is’ and he didn’t even have to take a second look. It’s very noticeable.

We’re transforming the terrain near the Mojave Desert. Slowly and imperceptibly. But in a few generations, maybe long after you and I are gone, this place will be fields of green.


A small list

February 21, 2008

Of things that don’t suck:

…TV screens in the back of airplane seats. Twice-baked potatoes. Dryer sheets. DVRs. The set design on Mad Men. Farmers’ markets. Tap water. Touchscreens. Scissors. Pocketknives. Thumb drives. Kites. Strike-anywhere matches. Doorstops. Run-flat tires. Netflix. Noise-canceling headphones. Casual carpool. Guitar Hero. Salt-and-vinegar potato chips. Bicycles. Kevlar. Velcro. Carbon composite. Dradis. Flip-flops. The first half hour of Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom. Seat belts. Zippo lighters. Spartan Laser. Heated seats. Public libraries. Remote control. Ice cream.

Sarah Silverman, Wired.com


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