The Lord is My Light
The Lord is My Light by Christopher Walker. This is a very good version without all the over-production – just some great voices.
The Lord is My Light by Christopher Walker. This is a very good version without all the over-production – just some great voices.
Pliny the Younger was a Roman governor in the area of modern Turkey and we have a good collection of his letters and writing. Among the many letters, he wrote a letter to Emperor Trajan around 112 AD and asked for counsel on dealing with early Christians.
You can read the letter here Epistulae (letters) Book 10, letter 96 in English or Latin.
Noteworthy:
Book 10, Letter 96:
It is my custom, Sir, to refer to you in all cases where I do not feel sure, for who can better direct my doubts or inform my ignorance? I have never been present at any legal examination of the Christians, and I do not know, therefore, what are the usual penalties passed upon them, or the limits of those penalties, or how searching an inquiry should be made. I have hesitated a great deal in considering whether any distinctions should be drawn according to the ages of the accused; whether the weak should be punished as severely as the more robust; whether if they renounce their faith they should be pardoned, or whether the man who has once been a Christian should gain nothing by recanting; whether the name itself, even though otherwise innocent of crime, should be punished, or only the crimes that gather round it.
In the meantime, this is the plan which I have adopted in the case of those Christians who have been brought before me. I ask them whether they are Christians; if they say yes, then I repeat the question a second and a third time, warning them of the penalties it entails, and if they still persist, I order them to be taken away to prison. For I do not doubt that, whatever the character of the crime may be which they confess, their pertinacity and inflexible obstinacy certainly ought to be punished. * There were others who showed similar mad folly whom I reserved to be sent to Rome, as they were Roman citizens. ** Subsequently, as is usually the way, the very fact of my taking up this question led to a great increase of accusations, and a variety of cases were brought before me. A pamphlet was issued anonymously, containing the names of a number of people. Those who denied that they were or had been Christians and called upon the gods in the usual formula, reciting the words after me, those who offered incense and wine before your image, which I had given orders to be brought forward for this purpose, together with the statues of the deities – all such I considered should be discharged, especially as they cursed the name of Christ, which, it is said, those who are really Christians cannot be induced to do. Others, whose names were given me by an informer, first said that they were Christians and afterwards denied it, declaring that they had been but were so no longer, some of them having recanted many years before, and more than one so long as twenty years back. They all worshipped your image and the statues of the deities, and cursed the name of Christ. But they declared that the sum of their guilt or their error only amounted to this, that on a stated day they had been accustomed to meet before daybreak and to recite a hymn among themselves to Christ, as though he were a god, and that so far from binding themselves by oath to commit any crime, their oath was to abstain from theft, robbery, adultery, and from breach of faith, and not to deny trust money placed in their keeping when called upon to deliver it. When this ceremony was concluded, it had been their custom to depart and meet again to take food, but it was of no special character and quite harmless, and they had ceased this practice after the edict in which, in accordance with your orders, I had forbidden all secret societies. † I thought it the more necessary, therefore, to find out what truth there was in these statements by submitting two women, who were called deaconesses, to the torture, but I found nothing but a debased superstition carried to great lengths. So I postponed my examination, and immediately consulted you. The matter seems to me worthy of your consideration, especially as there are so many people involved in the danger. Many persons of all ages, and of both sexes alike, are being brought into peril of their lives by their accusers, and the process will go on. For the contagion of this superstition has spread not only through the free cities, but into the villages and the rural districts, and yet it seems to me that it can be checked and set right. It is beyond doubt that the temples, which have been almost deserted, are beginning again to be thronged with worshippers, that the sacred rites which have for a long time been allowed to lapse are now being renewed, and that the food for the sacrificial victims is once more finding a sale, whereas, up to recently, a buyer was hardly to be found. From this it is easy to infer what vast numbers of people might be reclaimed, if only they were given an opportunity of repentance.
(*) Pliny leaves it unclear whether the Christians were accused of a specific crime; it seems that to confess to being Christian was considered sufficient proof of guilt.
(**) Except by special delegation of the Emperor’s own legal powers, no provincial governor had power to inflict the death penalty on a Roman citizen, but must allow him to take his trial at Rome.
Book 10, Letter 97 – Trajan to Pliny:
You have adopted the proper course, my dear Pliny, in examining into the cases of those who have been denounced to you as Christians, for no hard and fast rule can be laid down to meet a question of such wide extent. The Christians are not to be hunted out ; if they are brought before you and the offence is proved, they are to be punished, but with this reservation – that if any one denies that he is a Christian and makes it clear that he is not, by offering prayers to our deities, then he is to be pardoned because of his recantation, however suspicious his past conduct may have been. *
But pamphlets published anonymously must not carry any weight whatever, no matter what the charge may be, for they are not only a precedent of the very worst type, but they are not in consonance with the spirit of our age.
(*)
For an early Christian reaction to Trajan’s decision, see Tertullian’s ‘Apology’, chapter 2 (written in about 197 A.D.).
KiraTV does an excellent investigation into one of the most popular and hyped games called ‘The Day Before’. Hounded by continual delays, strange announcements, and then final removal from Steam – Kira jumps in and finds that the reality behind the game and it’s studio founders is even MORE bizarre than you could imagine.
Besides documenting the bizarre development of the game itself, he finds a lot of interesting things about the even more bizarre Fntastic game studio. This includes the almost cult-like studio heads and their idea of ‘volunteering‘ – which appears to be unpaid work wrapped in lots of creepy grooming.
This is absolutely something I see on the rise in startup and game culture. I see institutions that create cult-like atmospheres around founders and a culture that gaslight new or naïve employees using words like ‘passion’. Meanwhile, the reality is they provide inadequate/non-existent pay, long hours, and dangerous levels of emotional manipulation for anyone who questions, disagrees, or tries to threaten their control.
As a movie lover, I’ve been unhappy with lots of modern movies. I’ve had a hard time putting my finger on it. But one of the things I’ve noticed since going back to watch some of my older favorites is how ‘clean’ and clear the action is. We can talk about the horrors of shakycam and increasingly schizophrenic cut lengths, but the poor quality of modern blocking and staging appears to be one of the major reasons things are less clear.
When you go back and look at Spielberg’s handling of framing, you start realizing why a lot of modern framing and blocking creates more confusion rather than helping be part of the exposition itself. CinemaStix does a great job showing how expertly Spielberg accomplishes this – and why he’s probably the greatest master of these techniques. He even mentions the Steven Soderbergh re-work of Raiders of the Lost Ark with different music/etc.
What’s the state of using VR/AR goggles as a replacement for your desktop? Here are two takes.
First is Alan Truly who used the Meta Quest 3. He notes there have been some big improvements in web browsing and web apps that he uses daily. There’s still a number of tasks that it isn’t suited well for – such as picture editing. He also tried various software solutions such as Horizon Workrooms, Immersed, remote desktop, and a variety of other apps. He also tried a mixed version in which he used his keyboard and mouse for input. His conclusion is that besides concerns of comfort wearing a 1lb device all day, he says VR is ready for desktop work – but might not be best suited for the type of work you’re doing.
Hallden tried using his 3d goggles as virtual monitors for a week in a variety of situations. He uses the Meta Quest Pro because he noted that Apple has to solved issues with using them in unstable/moving environments (Update: They have not).
How well do they work in general? Watch the video and find out
Spoilers: He finds that the weight and video quality weren’t really an issue – but the lag and connectivity were. He seems to mimic what others are saying: AR is more likely the future instead of VR.
The $3499 price tag for Apple’s Vision Pro device was received with an audible groan and is being panned by even staunch technologists.
Now everyone is speculating over much less visually invasive eye-glass format. Both Apple and Google are experimenting with it via Apple glasses or Google Iris (Though Google just pulled the plug on Iris).
But stand aside hipsters, there’s a new player in town. What about a AR powered monocle?
Brilliant Labs‘ augmented reality wearable monocle popped on the scene for only $349 and weighs only 15 grams. Processing happens on the OpenAI server then transmitted via Bluetooth from the users phone to the device’s display. It comes with five different processors, including a hackable field-programmable gate array (FPGA) accelerator chip that handles the data coming in from the device’s camera, microphone and capacitive touch sensor.
The project already has attracted a dedicated following of developers, hackers, hobbyists, and researches in the open-source community. While far too clunky right now, I think this is the right way to go about things; though the idea that these will help you come off as a smooth operator in awkward dinner conversations is highly unlikely:
See the fun video of cheating on an interview here:
pic.twitter.com/HycQGGXT6N
Emacs takes a lifetime to learn. So the sooner you start, the longer it will take.
The FTC vs Microsoft trial has caused spilling the beans on a lot of corporate secrets and dirty laundry. Such gems as Microsoft admitting Xbox lost the console wars – all to persuade the courts their acquisition of Activision won’t create a gaming monopoly.
What’s the most recent leak? Sony’s revenue on key titles – all because someone did a bad job with a sharpie/redaction.
What was revealed?
This indicates that the average game dev employee cost $146,666 for each of the 2 titles – that’s without spending a dime on anything else (computers, studio equipment, licenses for 3rd party art/components, benefits etc). This means the average Sony game dev almost certainly made less (or a lot less) than $100,000/year range if you assume a very generously low 30% overhead cost per employee.
This seems less than the $115,000 average – though averages are bad indicators in game development because programmers and directors make substantially more than artists and content generators. You could also go to Glassdoor and get this info too.
The Clue movie documentary seemed to make good headway, then seemed to stalled, only to seemingly pick up again.
Perhaps inspired by the documentary, these two guys are walking through the Clue movie and add commentary as they go. It’s definitely not a definitive or official source, but an interesting .
Have you heard of the Dead Internet Theory? In 2021, IlluminatiPirate wrote the theory in which they claimed that already, or very soon, the majority of the internet will be just bots and autogenerated content. They claimed this was done by a few illuminati type mustache twirlers bent on controlling opinions, grooming political/society’s opinions, as well as generating customers for particular products.
While the latter part of the theory is pretty implausible and tinfoil hat, ColdFusion does some interesting investigation into the claims by looking at the actual data – and shows how quickly we are actually approaching many of these Black Mirror like claims. Many of which I have written about before.
He investigates current bot usage compared to actual users. While many people rolled their eyes when Elon Musk made these claims about Twitter, we’re increasingly seeing social media companies failing during fiduciary scrutiny when they go to sell themselves. It turns out many have massive amounts of fake users. A major unicorn app was outed for having 95% bots just this week. Facebook took down 5.4 billion fake accounts in 2019 alone – more than twice the number of REAL accounts.
He follows an experiment in which a experimenter uses off the shelf tools to create a fake influencer who posts AI generated social media posts, AI generated pictures of a completely AI generated photorealistic person, and starts picking up follows – many of which were bots themselves. Caren Marjorie created an GPT4 AI version of herself that would be your girlfriend.
The Atlantic did a research project on tweets that all contained repeated text by countless accounts while similar profile pictures with huge engagement levels above their normal levels of those account types. By 2025-2030, 90-95% of the content on the internet may be generated by bots if we continue at the current rates.
Jubilee put 6 humans and 1 AI into a chat room and they had to pick out the bot just by the answers to questions given to them all to answer. It took a lot of rounds before they all guess the AI correctly.
Maybe you’d like to try the famous Turing Test yourself and see if you can spot the bot? Google has a bot that has successfully passed the Turning test, and ChatGPT was the second.
Want to see how fast AI is progressing? Did you know chatGPT 4 is able to get 90th percentile on the Bar exam, solve complex logic problems, build complex apps and games, write books, or make money by founding and running a company for you? He doesn’t even capture all the things AI has been doing.
This is worth a watch if you want to see a smattering of what AI is already doing in 2023