Streaming a no go

I remember when the internet was first becoming a thing.

There was a great Qwest commercial shortly thereafter about the future of society with something like the internet in it. It had a woman (if I remember right) standing at a concierge counter asking what movies were available at the hotel.

The conceit I believe was that this future hotel had the internet so the person at the counter said, โ€œWe have every movie ever made in any language โ€“ ever.โ€

Thatโ€™s the future that very much couldโ€™ve been but that weโ€™ll never get.

In fact due to copyright and greed, weโ€™re likely only to be able to access tiny and uncontroversial parts of our culture in the future.

Note that this is already occurring.

The difference between what couldโ€™ve been and what will occur is so vast itโ€™s almost painful.

I canโ€™t use streaming because 90% of the movies I want to watch just arenโ€™t there. And itโ€™s getting worse, not better.

I had better selection at a crap VHS rental store in a hick town in 1988.

The goal of corporations now is to pillage and pilfer our shared culture and rent it back to us at exorbitant and ever-increasing prices.

And they are doing so with nary a protest from us.

Perhaps in that respect we deserve what we get.

Automation

Here you can see the history of automation, in one graph.

Screen_Shot_2014-09-24_at_11.27.06_AM.0

From here. Notice how recessions cause mail volume to fall, thus mail per employee. Automation in the postal space is only medium difficulty, so itโ€™s a good proxy for the โ€œaverageโ€ job. By this very limited measure, productivity is now a little over three times higher per employee than in 1930.

A novel

[A] novel is the only place in the world where two strangers can meet on terms of absolute intimacy. The reader and the writer make the book together. No other art can do that. No other art can capture the essential inwardness of human life.

Paul Aster

(That said, in the future VR will be able to do that too, but oh how the traditionalists will howl. As they always do.)

Aging

When I was naught but a tiny whippersnapper, I thought that all movies that featured characters at different ages had to use the same actors โ€“ so in my mind if a film showed a character at six years old and then as a 40-year-old, the filmmakers must have waited 34 whole years to complete the movie.

Therefore it was amazing to me as a five-year-old that any movies like this ever got made.

I figured it out not long after, of course.

Deceptive I thought it was to do anything else. I donโ€™t know why.