« Posts tagged Technology

Fetch the Pig Bladders!

First, I thank you all for bearing with my horribleness since my return from the Yule break. Homework and life issues are slapping me about on the weekends, so I’m moving Broadcast Domain to Tuesdays for the foreseeable future. If you don’t like it, feel free to send me an email. Feedback could even prompt me to change it back. Maybe.

So, how is it that Hugo Chavez knows that we have an earthquake machine and I don’t?

I refer, of course, to this.

Now, it’s not that I don’t think a weapon that could cause an earthquake could not exist. After all, Nikolai Tesla imagined it could, and that was before we even had computers.  We may very well have such a device. China might have such a device. For all we know, all the world powers have them, and only a tense agreement not to fuck each other up big time keeps us from shaking the entire earth’s crust apart.

Why would we use it on Haiti?

I’m not saying Haiti has no interest for us as a country. It would not surprise me at all to find that we basically occupy the country in an effort to assist in rebuilding, and end up making Haiti a close economic ally. But I cannot imagine we would be so crass as to test a weapon on a country filled with innocent bystanders.

Still, one person thinks that of us, and the internet delivers that knowledge unto us. It allows us to pull it apart, research it, discuss it, brainstorm on it, and (eventually) determine its validity (or lack thereof, in this case).

That’s the power of the internet. Even the silliest stories can get talked about as if they were actual valid news. I love this thing.

2010: The Year We Make Trouble

Woot!  It’s our month-aversery, and I think we’re doing pretty well for ourselves. We have regular readers, a small but growing Twitter and Facebook following, and thirty some-odd posts, so we are averaging on a day. When you consider we normally don’t post on the weekends and had 2 weeks in holidays, I’d say that’s a good job.

This beg’s the question: What’s next?

Well, here is the plan:

Columns

Mondays: Benjamin Kenneally’s Broadcast Domain – a techie’s take on storytelling.

Tuesdays: Pat’s Rants – There is always something pissing him off, and he’s going to tell you why.

Wednesdays: Tony Smith’s Harmonic Vicissitude – Band nerds get revenge with Tony in charge of our music column.

Daily Themes

Mondays: Tech – Good tech, crap tech, useful tech, story tech.

Tuesdays: Film and TV – bkI is taking on Hollywood, baby!!!

Wednesdays: Music – Get your soundtrack on.

Thursday: Wildcard – We’ll burn that bridge when we come to it.

Fridays: Fiction – Original fiction and where to find the best free fiction on the net.

Coming Soon…

More Original Fiction – More fiction from our group of irregulars and some folks you haven’t heard from, yet.

More Reviews – Movies, music, books, you name it, we’ll review it.

Serials – Continuing stories, some written specially for bkI, not to mention the fact that we are unleashing Texas Noir on the world with the serialization of The Brotherhood of the Hand by Pat Humphreys and Chris Helton.

2010 is going to be a good year, boy’s and girls. Be sure to stick around.

Broadcast Domain

Changing our views has always been hard for us, as humans. It is my belief that it’s one of the greatest, most important things we learn how to do. We have found that our adaptability makes us the most incredible animal on the planet. Technology allows us to better adapt to our environment, which allows us to live anywhere, anytime.

Now (as always) technology is changing our culture, and we seem to be having trouble adapting to it. Information is available to us in so many ways, but our love for tradition is tripping us up once again.

A majority of educators believe that the prevalence of technology, especially the internet, is reducing the amount of time that children spend reading books. This concerns them greatly, as children reading books has always been the benchmark for reading in the past. The internet is a bunch of pictures and videogames! They’re probably downloading porn, or something!

I’m fairly certain we know better. »Read More

Welcome to baD kARmA INk

It’s finally launch day! W00t!!!

Sorry about the lack of fanfare and hype, but were hoping the topics, articles, and features will be the draw. Besides, shameless self promotion is coming, we just need stuff to promote first.

Speaking of which, introductions are in order.

My name is Pat and I’m the defacto Content Wrangler here at baD kARmA INk. The site itself started as part of a larger project, namely a different take on publishing. Earlier this year, an old friend of mine, Chris Helton (you’ll see something from him on Friday), approached me with an idea that went something like this: »Read More

Preview Post: Get To The Point

The more I think about it, the more I start to believe that the whole of human culture is based on one thing: Beer.

But under that, there is something older, something simultaneously more primal and sophisticated: Story.

Storytelling is our second oldest art form, but it’s more than just art. For thousands of years, it was how we passed on information, be it the old shaman at the campfire, or the hunter teaching his son the proper way to fell a mammoth, the whole of human collective knowledge owes it’s success to being able to tell a story.

In this day and age, the skills of storytelling have mutated and changed, often becoming specialized within the artist’s medium of choice. Not that this is a bad thing, in fact it’s a very, very good thing, but rarely will you find a storytelling generalist competent to move through all the mediums.

For example, you rarely find anyone who has successfully managed to become a Writer/Director/Musician/Painter/Scuplter/Public Speaker.  In fact, it’s this divergent story telling specialties that give us the glorious storytelling culture as it is today.

Now, I know what you are thinking. “What do you mean painter? That’s not story telling.” Well, there is a simple answer to that: Bullshit.

All art tells a story. Art, be it music, paintings, comics/graphic novels, etc., they are made to convey an idea or emotion and to illicit a response, e.g. telling a story. Take this for example.
GlassArt

Pic courtesy of Robyn Glass

In this picture you can see not only the woman as she is now, but the woman she was when she was young. Her beauty shows through the pain of the wound, and, I don’t know about you, but it gets my mind wondering what happened, what could mar the beauty of this woman? Was it an accident? A moment of passion? Crime? Vampire? Or, god forbid, something more hideous?

Yet her beauty shines through whatever tragedy that caused this pain and, in the end, leaves me with a sense of hope. That is the mark of good storytelling. So what if Robyn’s medium is pencil and ink and paint? In this single picture, she’s told a story of such depth that would take me several thousand words to convey with the same intensity.

So yeah, it’s all story telling, and, when you think about it even more, so are technical manuals, corporate training, teaching, campaigning, sales, customer service…

I can go on, but I think I’ve given enough background. Now, time for the point.

Point is, for thousand of years, story telling itself has changed and changed the way we live. Now, in the 21st Century, technology is making the arts of storytelling easier and more accessible.

baD kARmA INk is dedicated to discussing, developing, deconstructing and disseminating storytelling for a new era.  We are dedicated to providing essays, reviews, and yes, stories in all their forms, to the masses. For we, as a people, are the sum of our knowledge, the sum of our emotions, and the sum of thousands of years of refining our second oldest art form, and it is our duty to add to the Commons of Man.  baD kARmA INk is our little way of doing it.

We are also looking for contributors, both regular and guest, interviewers and interviewees, writers and critics, and people who just want to discuss the stories that they like. If this sounds like you, feel free to submit something or contact us.

Want to become part of the conversation?  Tweet about it, become a fan on Facebook, comment on the articles, call us fools, whatever works for you.  One of the little secrets about storytelling is that, in the end, without other people, storytelling is pointless, so without you, we’re just talking to ourselves, and the doctor that brings the meds thinks that’s a step in the wrong direction.
Official launch date is 12/1. Check back for new and interesting things starting then.

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