cidviscous

cidviscous

cidviscous's picture

Personal Ideas

My IdeaIdea GroupCategorysort iconDetailsEdit
Star Trek can be a positive model for improving Human SocietyMonetary ReformBelief
Percentage: 
99
Idea Group: 
Idea Category: 
Belief

Yes, I Said Star Trek

TNG More So Than the Old School

I can envision a society where the system of society in which we all participate is tuned to be the most fair and efficient for maximizing the potential of its citizens.  

 

The closest representation I've seen for this so far is that of the Federation in Star Trek: The Next Generation.  The Federation doesn't use money, but people still work--this work is motivated by other factors (curiosity, sense of duty, pride, desire to explore, enjoyment, etc.).   People aren't forced into shitty, pointless jobs for the sake of making ends meet, but are instead matched up to tasks best suited for them, and usually for 'higher' reasons, such as the above motives.  

The elimination of the artificial contrivances imposed by traditional economies such as socialism and capatalism also eliminates much of the waste and improper distributions, instead maximizing people's potential.  Everybody is working toward a common goal of making society better by using their individual skills and resources.  

Kind of like an open source society.   

 

Personal Skills

My SkillSkill GroupCategoryDetailsEdit
Aikido Learning
Skill Category: 
Learning

Aikido

Ai - Harmony - Ki - Energy - Do - The Way

I've been enamored with Martial Arts for as long as I can remember.  There are more philosophies and approaches to this subject than you can shake a stick at, but the one that really stands out at me is Aikido.  

In the grand scheme of things, it is a very recent, modern art, but with roots in traditional schools of combat.  

 

My Interest

I think that the reason I agree with Aikido above other forms is the intelligent elegance that it represents.  It's a well thought out approach to combat/defense.  Very Sun Tzu.  

A lot of it is pretty common sense stuff when you stop and think about it--the best way to keep from taking damage is to not be hit, and I think Morihei Ueshiba grasped that concept very well.  

Aikido is a very flowing, controlled style--beautiful to watch, yet simultaneously functional.  

 

So far...

Like many of the interests in my life, I have so much progess yet to make, but the journey itself can be more important and rewarding than the destination sometimes, so I continue little by little.   

computer programming ComputingLearning
Skill Group: 
Skill Category: 
Learning

Computer Programming

Reasons

There are several reasons I have for wanting to be a Programmer--usefulness, first and foremost.  If a programmer needs a tool that doesn't exist, that need can (simply) be written.  The limitations aren't what exists, but rather what you can dream up and coax out of the hardware.  

There's also the sense of satisfaction in making the machine do exactly what you want it to do.  If you can figure out what to tell the computer to do, it will do exactly what you tell it.  

Additionally, it would create job potential, and come in very useful in certain other jobs which are not directly IT related.  

Lastly, the mental tools and habits gained can be applied to other areas of life.  

Scope

When I say I want to be a Programmer, I mean it in the very broadest, deepest sense of the word.  If you know what the word grok means, then youll understand me when I say that I wish to grok the subject of  programming.  

By some very loose definitions of the word programming, I am already a programmer, as I have successfully written and executed multiple computer programs in my lifetime, but I'm harboring no delusions on the matter--I've still got a very long way to go.  

Languages to Master

-C

-C++

-C#

-Java

-Lisp

-PHP

-Perl

-Bash Shell

-Javascript

-Python 

-SQL

-Ada

-Assembly 

Learning How to Learn Learning: Learn To LearnLearning
Skill Category: 
Learning

Learning How to Learn (Better)

"We can say that Muad'Dib learned rapidly because his first training was in how to learn. And the first lesson of all was the basic trust that he could learn. It is shocking to find how many people do not believe they can learn, and how many more believe learning to be difficult."
— Frank Herbert, Dune

 

By implementing better learning techniques, one can more rapidly and effectively learn new skills and information.  There are a variety of ideas and methods on the subject ranging from diet to drugs, from location to learning-style, from attitude to atmosphere. 

Which ones work the best? 

Well, I'm still figuring all that out, and anyhow, I'd imagine that it'll vary from person to person (and maybe even from subject to subject.  

 

Productivity ProductivityNeed To Learn
Skill Group: 
Skill Category: 
Need To Learn
I wish to make the most of my life, and as such, there are certain needs which must be fulfilled in order to facilitate maximizing my existence.  One of these criteria I need to foster is a method for being more productive, more consistantly. 

Posts

Post TypePost TitleDescriptionUpdatedsort iconRepliesEdit
SkillCSS Cascading Style Sheets, or CSS, is how we control the presentation of web content.2008-08-01 21:580
SkillPharmacology 2008-07-15 01:440
SkillProductivity "Sloth makes all things difficult, but industry, all things easy." —Benjamin Franklin2008-05-22 16:390
IdeaNew Environments We're the proverbial eggs and Earth is the basket in which we are so precious.2008-04-24 17:440
MediumDroplifting Droplifting is the act of inserting one's own (often homemade) media into media distribution facilities (such as retail outlets).2008-04-17 22:120
IdeaNanotechnology Nanotechnology is the manipulation of matter at an atomic/molecular scale.2008-04-08 18:560
Idea8 Circuits of Consciousness 2008-04-05 09:572
IdeaDIY 2008-04-05 04:122
Imagelearn and be free 2008-04-02 18:310
Imageredefine your reality 2008-04-02 13:080
Book pageComputer Technology 2008-03-31 09:280
Book pageJava Applets 2008-03-29 17:530
Book pagePhysical Skills 2008-03-26 07:300
SkillGoalsetting 2008-03-26 06:320
IdeaHack Yourself applying the hacker mentality to affecting change in one's own life2008-03-26 04:350
Book pageAlternative Media 2008-03-13 21:560
SkillProgramming 2008-03-09 22:210
SkillFlash 2008-03-09 21:100
SkillTech Fallback 2008-02-23 21:570
Blog entryi always get so introspective this time of year... 2008-01-01 22:440

My Blog

i always get so introspective this time of year...

Tags:

even though i know that it's just another day, the changing from year to year always seems to bring about this nostalgic, introspective mood. 

i've always hated the idea of new year's resolutions, because they seemed more like a joke than a promise to most poeple, but i just can't help myself from judging the state of my life and thinking about decisions and changes--reassessing my hopes and dreams.  

life has this funny way of looking so much different depending on where you are and how you choose to feel about what you see.   

android and the open handset alliance

Tags:

Google's sure got their fingers in a lot of pies these days. I'm sure you've probably already heard about Android (or at least the rumours of a gPhone) but if you haven't, I'll take a moment to share my thoughts.  

A quick runthrough - for months now, there has been gossip that Google was planning to enter the cellphone/mobile data industry.  Bloggers quickly dubbed the ethereal mystery device gPhone, but that's all there were--rumours.  On Guy Fawkes Day of this year, the Android Platform was announced.  

Basically, google's not making a phone of their own, they're coordinating/leading the new Open Handset Alliance to develop what they call the Android Platform.  Android is an open standard (s'posed to be licenced under Apache v2 if I'm not mistaken, though the members of the Open Handset Alliance apparently signed a Non-fragmentation agreement to keep code from forking in non-interoperable ways) for a mobile telecommunications platform.  

Android uses a Linux kernel, a specialized Java virtual machine, and provides a library (with things like a/v codecs, etc.)--they've already released the first version of the SDK, so if you're a code monkey and you've got time to kill, please hit up http://code.google.com/android and then share your thoughts with us.  The libraries support 3d hardware acceleration if you've got the hardware, and each piece of code is designed to be modular and interoperable.  This means that anything within the software stack will be replaceable.  Good times.  

On the whole, this seems like exactly the kind of thing that mobile computing/communications needs.  Open, modular, ubiquitous.  In other words, it sounds good.  

It just kind of makes me nervous that a consortium of corporate superpowers is in charge of this.  There's definite promise here, but keep your eyes open.  It almost sounds too good to be true.  

Some further reading.....

http://code.google.com/android 

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Android_%28mobile_phone_platform%29

http://www.openhandsetalliance.com/android_overview.html 

http://mobile.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=07/11/13/1348233&from=rss

http://howardforums.com/forumdisplay.php?s=b8452131b1bb436920fc3e988a970...

DocDroppers Needs You!

Tags:

DocDroppers needs your help.  Yes, you. 

Clearly, you've got access to the interwebs or you couldn't be reading this (unless it gets copied to another media) and you've probably got a reasonable open mind (or else you likely wouldn't be reading this site). 

Recently, much of the hacking history and culture has begun to disappear from Wikipedia.  Rather than fight asshat deletionist wikipedians, a call for help came from the BinRev forums to relocate hacker culture articles to DocDroppers.org before it all disappears.  

DD is a repository of hacking related articles/knowledge, hosted by StankDawg and the DDP.  It's running mediawiki (I know, I know--lx, I can almost hear you wretching now), but implementation aside DocDroppers is a valuable resource (and, like pretty much all DDP projects, shares a lot of the same motivations/goals as the Empowerment community).  

Check it out, and if you've got something to add, we can use your help.  

-cid

http://docdroppers.org

http://www.binrev.com/forums/index.php?showtopic=34728 

Good Conversations - Will it post in my blog?

Tags:

Being a Good Conversationalist

There are few skills that will get you further than becoming a good conversationalist.  Knowing how to talk (and possibly more importantly, knowing how to listen) well can open doors to you, teach you things you'd never otherwise know, gain you friends and allies, spread your ideas out into the rest of the world.  

To a lot of people, the word conversationalist brings to mind pictures of talking.  Talk talk talk.  Good speaking voice, mannerisms, witty reparte, clever retorts, engaging anecdotes, and blah blah blah.  

Thing is, this is only half of a conversation.  

People who are truly skilled in the art of verbal communication are not just good talkers, they're good listeners.  Being a good listener might be more important than being a good talker.  Okay, maybe I'm getting a little ahead of myself.  We can actually take a step back and look at this from a bigger picture--we'll break it into three different aspects which make up a conversation...  

Listening

The reason it's so important to be a good listener to be a good conversationalist is very straightforward.  A conversation is a two way street--you have to be able to absorb information from the person you're talking to in order to gauge success, find better ways of dealing with that person, understand their side of things, etc.  You need to be able to receive data as well as send it.  

Another reason to develop your skills as a listener is that of listening as a means of communication.  When you are actively listening to what someone is saying to you, you're feeding them a stream of complements.  It feels good to know that someone appreciates you, and by having eye contact, nodding, repeating their own words (or paraphrases), and other subtle approaches you can not only better understand what the person is trying to say, but you can often steer a conversation just by how you listen, as well as provide them with a sense of importance/well-being/appreciation.  

Bottom line--listening is IMPORTANT.  

Thinking

This one tends to get people into trouble, both by doing it and not doing it (at the appropriate times).  

Everybody (open for debate, I know) knows that it's usually a good thing to think about what you're going to say before you open your mouth.  In spite of this knowledge, we often lose that filter between our brain and our mouth, frequently producing disastrous results. 

The other trouble thinking can get you into involves thinking of what you're going to say (while the other person is talking).  This is bad because it takes your attention away from the listening part.  

Don't be so afraid of missing an opportunity to make a good point that you stop really listening.  This behaviour shows on your face, and that aside, really does affect your ability to soak up the other side of the conversation.  To be successful, you need to learn to balance your participation in the conversation.   

Speaking

Here's where we get to the actual talking part of talking.  This portion of the show is going to depend largely on what goes on with the other two segments. 

Both the content and presentation (cadence, tone, delivery, mannerisms, etc.) comprising the words that come out of your mouth carry depth and dimension of meaning to your listener(s).  The choices a good conversationalist makes on what to say and how to say it should reflect the situation at hand.  

Someone once told me that you can tell anybody in the world anything you want just so long as you figure out the right way to tell them.  

Deciding what to say and what you allow to be conveyed through nonverbal means, can be influenced by lots of things--what you hope to accomplish through the conversation, what you think the other person wants to accomplish or expects, how well you know the other person, your perception of how the conversation is going, and the list goes on. 

Tying it All Together

The real trick is finding the right balance of everything.  A good conversationalist is good at reading people, thoughtful, and knows when to shut up.  Each conversation, each dialogue, will always have a dynamic all its own, and adjustments will have to be made, but all these skills can be practiced, developed. 

Practice with your friends--work on really listening (read: paying attention) the next time you get into a conversation with your friends.  Don't think about what you're going to say while they're still talking.  Don't say anything until you have something to say.  Ask open ended questions ('open ended question' is just a simple way to say questions which can't be answered with a yes or no (or one word)) to draw them out--people will often surprise you with what they might say.  

One of the great things about conversation skills is that there are people all over the place to practice with (whether they realize they're helping you practice or not).  Store attendents, waiters and bartenders, friends, family, strangers, strangers on the phone or in the internet tubes.  All you have to do is be cognizant of what you're doing.  Pay attention when you talk to people.  

Some Further Resources

http://inspiredgrowth.org/conversationskillstracy.htm

http://www.about-personal-growth.com/conversations.html 

http://www.iamnext.com/people/conversation.html

http://www.matilijapress.com/articles/10stepstoconversation.htm

http://www.fusion101.com/guide/make_good_conversation.htm

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conversation

Back

Tags:

Sorry about going silent this past little while.  I may not have exercised my voice here lately, but I've been close by.  I've just been collecting my thoughts (the logout errors were getting pretty bad and I've started a new job) but, rest assured I haven't gone anywhere. 

I see we've had another influx of new names and visitors which is good.  Alex got some more high praise on NewsReal (which I just can't get enough of).  I'm all about the independent/alternative/underground media, so if any of you have some good links, by all means pm me or start a thread or something.  Maybe we'll get some kind of reccomedia stream/thread going strong one of these days.  

-cid 

cidviscous

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cid viscous
Interests
memes, freedom, infinity, entropy, corpolitical, chaos, order, polymaths, the 'hacker ethic', no-mind, truth, knowledge, networking, 'evolution by choice', renaissance, technology, magic, perception, nature, artificial intelligence, turing machines, layers of abstraction, relative vs. absolute, Heisenberg's uncertainty principle, m-theory, cooperation, trust, love, change, adaptation, existentialism, philosophy, linguistics, communications, computer programming, networking, database design, foreign language, amateur radio, self development, social development, extraterrestrial colonization, nanotechnology, quantum mechanics, quantum computing, cryptography, martial arts, literature, independent media, influence of internet on society, robotics, nlp, sociology, psychology, survival, culture, pharmacology, music, history, political science, global scale networking, rapid prototyping, gene therapy, ultra-wideband frequency hopping digital spread spectrum, quantum computers, metamaterials, neural interfaces, cybernetics, robotics, flying cars
Web Site
http://0wnyourself.blogspot.com
About

i'm still confused, but i'm learning....i think

ideas

memes, freedom, infinity, entropy, corpolitical, chaos, order, polymaths, the 'hacker ethic', no-mind, truth, knowledge, networking, 'evolution by choice', renaissance, technology, magic, perception, nature, artificial intelligence, turing machines, layers of abstraction, relative vs. absolute, Heisenberg's uncertainty principle, m-theory, cooperation, trust, love, change, adaptation

 

music

drum'n'bass/jungle, chemical breaks/big beat, trance (various forms) house (various forms), breaks, nrg, happy hardcore, angry hardcore, industrial, classic rock, alternative rock, butt-rock, metal, rap-rock, horrorcore rap, nerdcore rap, gangsta rap (but not all of it), hip-hop, jazz, classical (every once in a while), funk, reggae...more....

 

books

neuromancer, count zero, mona lisa overdrive, burning chrome, catcher in the rye, ender's game, 1984, snowcrash, the dune series, the myst series, the hacker ethic, hackers: heroes of the computer revolution...

 

movies

boondock saints, mallrats, episodes 4, 5, and 6, accepted, enemy of the state, the matrix (and even most of the second flick, too), sneakers, the breakfast club, hackers, many, many bond films...

 

artists

leonardo da vinci, m.c. escher, h.r. giger, many, many, many-many-more...

 

leaders

i can't think of any right now....

 

subjects

existentialism, philosophy, linguistics, communications, computer programming, networking, database design, foreign language, amateur radio, self development, social development, extraterrestrial colonization, nanotechnology, quantum mechanics, quantum computing, cryptography, martial arts, literature, independent media, influence of internet on society, robotics, nlp, sociology, psychology, survival, culture, pharmacology, music, history, political science...and on...and on..

 

technologies

global scale networking, rapid prototyping, gene therapy, ultra-wideband frequency hopping digital spread spectrum, quantum computers, metamaterials, neural interfaces, cybernetics, robotics, flying cars...

 

role models

mom, dad, benjamin franklin, steve wozniak, leonardo da vinci, macgyver...

 

 

 

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