(2023-08-10) The world we live in: the maxim of Arkham ------------------------------------------------------ First off, there are some good news: nntrac is mainly complete and almost ready to showcase. My next post will be solely dedicated to it. Also, I have found some extra bugs in nne and going to try and fix them as soon as I find the time. But today, there's something else I want to talk about. When researching TRAC history I shared in my previous posts, I also dug a bit more into the topic of Ted Nelson himself and the history of his dream project called Xanadu. I'll get back to what I think about it later, now I want to focus on something else. As stated in a wonderful 1996 article in the Wired magazine, called "The Curse of Xanadu", which is probably the most complete piece of information about the man's biography (and that's why I have saved it locally in the plaintext format and probably will share it somewhere on the Gopherspace), Nelson invented the very idea of hypertext because of his real struggle to remember and structure things in his head. In other words, hypertext was primarily devised by (and for) ADD people. Having realized that, I was amazed how everything else fell into its place: starting with why Xanadu had failed and ending with why the modern bloated Web and mobile touchscreen "apps" flourish. You see, until ca. 1995, computers in general didn't try to be "user-friendly" in the modern understanding of these words (which I have already written about in some of my earlier writeups), thus requiring people to actually think what they are doing and why. This, in turn, required some fair amount of discipline, literacy and overall sanity. But then, businesses in charge decided that smart people are not to be milked that easily, and started dumbing down their products for larger audience to lift those requirements. This process has never stopped to this day, and the consequences are already devastating and promising to be catastrophic in the forseeable future. This process has already reached far beyond computing into other aspects of our daily life, and led to what I call "the maxim of Arkham": Everyone is now forced to live in the world that is specifically tailored for people with mental disorders. What if you don't have any significant mental disorders? Then you're screwed: according to the Newspeak, you are not healthy anyway, you're "neurotypical". You don't have any more influence on the world than anyone else. You have the same right to vote as the illiterate dumbass next door and the psycho-the-rapist across the street. You are the one who will be made guilty if you say anything the mentally weak don't like, including the truth about them. You are the one who all these "codes of conduct" are really turned against. You have to walk on the same roads, visit the same shops, buy the same things and suffer from these things' inferiority to what you had earlier, because earlier those things were designed with mentally healthy people in mind. And one day, you understand that the hardest task as of now is to not go insane yourself when watching this madness surrounding you every day. But why? Because profit. Weak-minded people are easier to trick into paying for thin air and buying trendy "one-time-use" products, to deceive them about their real perspectives and values in life, to promote various political agendas and so on. Compulsive consumption of material and virtual goods is a monetary driver strong enough to wilfully keep everyone insane. And if anyone awakens and realizes what's going on, this army of consumorons will itself stomp on the dissenters without a second thought. Gopherspace seems like one of the few places out there still not taken over by consumorons. This is why I prefer this place as a safe harbor for "neurotypicals" who don't suffer from Attention Deficit and Hypertext Disorder even in 2023. --- Luxferre ---