« Posts tagged Twitter

State of the Blog: 8-17-10

So, yeah, that was a bit of a snafu wasn’t it?

For one reason or another the database locked in a loop and tried to add about 5000 of the weekly Twitter Roundups. I’m not entirely sure why as of yet, but it may have to do with the plugins we are using and Twitter’s new authentication system.  Again, I apologize to everyone that saw those post come down their feed.

In other news:

  • Brotherhood of the Hand will be late this week as there is still a lot of fixing that needs to be done to the site
  • Principle photography has wrapped on the Brotherhood of the Hand movie! We’ll drop some pics into the feed here at some point.
  • We’re still looking for folks to contribute to bkI, be it reviews, fiction, poetry, art, music, comics, interesting uses of duct tape, etc.  If you’d like to contribute, drop us a line at slushpile@badkarmaink.com

Again, apologies and thanks for putting up with the problems over the weekend.

Caught a bolt of lightning, cursed the day he let it go…

You can’t unmake an idea.

Humans have tried. Ideas have been forgotten, destroyed by destroying everyone who knows about their existence, and locked away for years, but once you know something, you can’t unknow it. Even if you do away with whomever had the idea in the first place, you know what the idea was to want to get rid of it, and there’s no way around that.

I was speaking with someone a few days ago who stated they’re afraid that digital media will do away with so much face to face human interaction that it will be bad for humanity in general. I’ve actually thought about this in the past, and dismissed the idea.

Human interaction is a generally positive process in which ideas are exchanged. A negative outcome might be reached based on the information exchanged, but the overall interaction itself is one of information building.

For instance, we’ll look at two children on a playground. Tommy tells Billy that his mommy is a ‘fat ho-bag’, which makes Billy cry. Obviously a negative outcome, but Billy still received information he didn’t have before. Receiving information we didn’t have before is a positive process. It always opens up new options for us. In the previous example, Billy might pay a little more attention to what’s going on in his household, decide not to let his life turn out like mommy’s, and go on to be a wicked cool guy. Of course, he might decide to make Tommy eat the mud from under the swingset. If we’re lucky, both might occur.

All the technology we have allows us to interact on levels we didn’t previously interact on. I talk to people on a daily basis, through Facebook and Twitter, that I used to talk to only a few times a year. I’m part of their daily community, and they’re part of mine. We support each other with little messages every day, and let each other know what’s going on.

In the past, this was always done based on geographic boundaries. Your neighbors live close to you, so you can easily interact with them on a daily basis. If you were surrounded by people you didn’t mesh with well, you either moved or got used to being “the weird guy who lives on the corner”.

Now, communities are limited only by the technology present and who we want to interact with. I could be part of a community in Japan, and interact with those people on a daily basis. Video chat such as Skype could allow me to hang out in their living room if we wanted.The hardest part would be the time difference.

However, I believe humans will always choose face to face interaction for things. Even now, if you wish to communicate something important, you do it in person. Our average day to day face to face interactions may be dropping, but I believe it’s because we save those meetings for important things. If we just want to shoot the shit, we send an email, or a text, or a Tweet. As it should be.

Humans have rarely mishandled technology so poorly in the long term that we’ve suffered for it as a race. We’re very good at handling technology poorly in the short term, and causing irreparable harm to portions of our race all at once, but we tend to learn that’s a bad plan. If social media were going to be detrimental to us as a species, I think we’d realize, and stop using it, or at least begin using it in a different way.

Wouldn’t we?

After all, ideas spread far and fast in the Information Age. And you can’t unmake an idea.

Perspective

“You have your way. I have my way. As for the right way, the correct way, and the only way, it does not exist.” – Nietzsche

Everyone has a perspective. We all know what’s said about opinions, and an opinion is really a perspective. Every day changes how we look at life, and every time we open our mouths, tap something out on our keyboards, or place brush to canvas, we are sharing our perspective with the world.

One of the amazing things about perspectives is how memetic they can be. When you pass on you opinion on something, that colors the opinion of the people who heard you. They pass it on to others, and the idea spreads. Others come up with their own opinions, and spread them as well. So it is that our ideas about the world, how to interact with it, and how to interact with each other spread.

The internet, of course, is a fantastic communication tool. It allows perspective to be shared faster than any other medium humans have ever had access to. Twitter is fascinating for this purpose, as the messages are so compact, and you can receive them from so many people at once. Firing up a Twitter feed is like taking what’s inside the heads of a bunch of people and quickly riffling through them and seeing what catches your eye.

Nothing has more quickly conveyed the differences in culture and opinion to large groups of people on a daily basis. Perspectives are being shared, and therefore folded into each other, more than ever. Globalization is taking place on a fantastic scale. Some fear this, stating that it will remove cultures from all of us, leaving one giant melting pot.

I disagree. I think this will lead to a better understanding of foreign cultures and perspectives without sacrificing our own. This may lead to more global cooperation, and hopefully less war overall. Meanwhile we will stay true to our cultural heritage through ritual and story. When people see us celebrating those rituals and hear us telling those stories, they’ll seem familiar to them as well. An understanding will be reached.

Of course, that’s just my perspective.

The Greatest Band You Never Heard: The Virgo Vertigo

Let’s just make this as plain as we can get around here.

You should be listening to The Virgo Vertigo.

Never mind the fact that you may not have heard of the band before.  Considering the current band formed in November of 2009, that is hardly surprising.  Also, never mind the fact that we here at bkI may know members of the band on a personal basis.  Personal allegiances aside, this is a band that warrants some attention.

First, a little background info.  The Virgo Vertigo is the brainchild of Tory World,  currently taking up residence in Madison, WI.   The project started in Seattle, WA as a hobby for Tory, according to the band’s MySpace page, and as a way to perform charity work.  With the move to Madison, the call to arms was made to fill out the band.   And that call was answered by thebluediamand (a former bandmate of Tory’s) on drums, Lexi Steinweg-Woods on bass, and the Thump (yup, you heard me) on guitar.  Tory handles the rest…which includes guitar, vocals, and programming.

Why programming?  Because The Virgo Vertigo is a band ‘heavily influenced by mid 80′s pop and New Wave. But, the sound also borrows from elements of industrial, hard-rock, new pop, hip-hop, dance, and so on.’  So, yeah, gotta have the programming in there.  It’s an eclectic mix of genres and styles, making a unique balance that appeals on many levels.  The musical potpourri is clearly reflected in the group’s new EP The Prelude, available at such fine music establishments as iTunes,  Digstation, and LaLa.

Just in case you are more of a visual person, don’t fret.  We got you covered.  Check out the music video for Better Learn to Swim, released on December 23, 2009 to the world via YouTube.  There is even two different versions….the short version previously linked, or the long version that you can access right here.   Hell, you can also check out the video for Superhuman, for all you zombie lovers out there.

However, if you are truly a visual person, and you happen to be in Madison around the 22nd of January, then you must head over to The Annex at 9 pm and check out The Virgo Vertigo live.  According to Tory, the live show is a performance art presentation, using LCD screens to present images and video in a documentary fashion.  The visual aids help to tell the songs and to give the overall impression of modern society in a dream state.  Also, if, for some reason, you can’t make this Friday’s show, don’t panic!  The Frequency, also in Madison, will have The Virgo Vertigo on February 20th (that’s a Saturday for all those of you playing at home) at 6 pm.   Set aside time now, for it promises to be an entertaining show.

For things relating to The Virgo Vertigo, feel free to check out the following:

Check out the music video or, if you are like me and prefer your music sans visual stimuli, head on over to the MySpace page and give the tracks there a listen.  If the auditory experience is to your liking, then go pick up the EP online or, better yet, come to The Annex this Friday.  Trust me on this one.  It will be worth it.

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.

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