In a fog, or a bog, or a field full of wheat

From childhood onward, fog has fascinated me — particles of mist, tiny watery spheres suspended in air, flowing like a river around trees, rocks, hills, mountains, valleys, skyscrapers, roads and lampposts.

Clouds draped across the landscape like sheets of cotton fiber.

The Hound of the Baskervilles howling at midnight.

A detective in 1940s attire — fedora, trenchcoat and full-brogue, wingtip shoes.

A climber on a cliff watching the fog pour down.

A beachcomber watching the fog roll in.

A stranded sailing ship adrift at sea.

Fascination experienced alone has its moment.  But shared is better.

Perhaps here, in this fog, with my friend walking beside me, talking about what we talk about when alone together, best sates the wanton need to be the social creatures we are.

“A storm approaches, my dear.”

She called me dear.  She, the woman of my dreams, or perhaps a woman of whom dreams are made when life is the dream one imagines when the dream wanders away, as dreams often do, on tangents associated with the day’s unfinished business, sorting itself out through REM sleep, rewriting synaptic paths, creating new mazes to meander when one’s thoughts have no goal or purpose in mind.

“Yes, darling, it does.”

Lightning lit the fog like a lighthouse beam passing over two lovers lost on a trek from nowhere to nowhere else.

Or, in this case, us.

“Have you ever been to the GHCC center?”

“The geek center?”

“You know, the Global Hydrology and Climate Center.”

“No, I haven’t.”

“I haven’t, either.”

“But a friend of mine has worked there.”

“Uh-huh.  Do you think they’re tracking this storm?”

“Could be.”

“Will there be storms where we’re going?”

“Most likely not.”

“Not even solar storms?”

“Good question.”

We walked on in silence.  She slid her hand in mine and swung it up and down to a tune she hummed quietly.

I stopped, causing her to spin in her step.  I hooked an arm around her and, without saying a word, we intuitively jumped into a Lindy Hop dance routine we had secretly practiced for several weeks.

Out of breath, we looked together up at an opening in the fog, a night sky revealing the Pleiades, better known as the Seven Sisters: Sterope, Merope, Electra, Maia, Taygeta, Celaeno, and Alcyone.

“Which one are you?”

“Which one do you want me to be?”

“Hmm…mortal or immortal…”

“Love, my dear, is immortal, is it not?”

Lightning flashed again, thunder rumbling through our bodies.

“The storm draws nearer.”

“Yes, darling.  Which sister are you?”

“Well, I am certainly not your sister.”

“There is little doubt in that, although the DNA we carry varies by so very little I would venture a guess an extraterrestrial intelligence trying to separate us by biological means only would simply quantify us according to body type…gender, primarily.”

“‘Simple enough, Holmes.'”

“‘Elementary, Watson.'”

She gave me a shove and then threw an arm over my shoulder.  “Suppose we should find shelter?”

“Here?  In this open field of winter wheat?”

“Is that where we are?”

“Yes.”

“Are you sure?  Weren’t we on a concrete path?”

“And didn’t you want to step off the path into the grass a while back?”

“Yes but…”

“Have you never been here in the daytime?”

“No.”

“The park follows the edge of a working farm.  Some years they’ve grown soybean.  Other years they’ve let native flowers fill the fields, attracting thousands of flutterbyes, bees, moths and other flying insects in late summer.  This year, it’s winter wheat.”

“You come here often, then?”

“At least once a year.  During the workweek, it’s a great place to ride my bike or practice for the annual marathon.”

“Once a year?”

I smiled at her playful sarcasm.  “That’s all the training I need to run a marathon.”

“Su-u-u-re.”

“Well, that combined with all our dancing, of course.”

She threw her other arm over my back and rested her chin on my shoulder.  “We never practice slow dancing.  You ever notice that?”

I swayed a little.  “What’s there to practice?”

She lifted her head and swayed with me to an imaginary waltz.  “When was the last time you trimmed your ear hair?”

“What?”

“Your ear hair.”

She had mumbled into my shoulder.  “Oh, that.  I thought you said something else.”

She leaned back and looked me in the eye, her dominant right eye looking into my dominant left eye.  “And what did I say?”

“I’m not sure.  It sounded like ‘rimmed your air air,’ which made no sense.”

“Uh-huh.”

The lightning flashed again, much brighter, making her eyes shine, as if my face was a beacon reflected in her face.

“How far is it back to the carpark?”

“I dunno.  Fifteen or twenty minutes, if we run.”

“What if we laid down on the wheat?”

“Well, we could do that but it’ll still get pretty muddy.”

“At least we’ll have less chance of getting struck by lightning.”

Lightning struck a nearby hill, causing me to jump.  “Okay, you win.  Let’s lay down here…right now.”

I pushed two rows of wheat toward each other, forming a thin but dirt-free mat on which we sat down and then pressed our backs.

The top of the anvil-shaped thunderstorm blocked the Pleiades.

“You never told me which sister you wanted me to be.”

“You have to answer another question first.  Would you want to be the mother of my child?”

“Rather presumptuous question, isn’t it?”

“Not really.”

“I suppose not.  But, if I bear us a child, that will change my place in the Queue, would it not?”

“We could petition to be the first to carry a child off the planet.”

“That’s definitely more than presumptuous.  More like foolish, I think.”

“Wishful thinking, actually.”

“Indeed.”

“Well…?”

A pregnant pause filled the air, rimmed my air air, as it were.

She placed a hand on my chest.  “And I must answer the first question before you’ll tell me which sister you want me to be?”

“Unless you tell me which sister you want to be, first.”

A few heavy drops of rain landed around.  Lightning flashed past us in a space beyond our field of view, with the thunder seeming to emanate from a spot directly above us.

“You know, dear, we could die out here, making this whole conversation a moot point.”

Through the thin sheets of fog, thick sheets of rain filled the world around us.  The wheat beneath us grew wet and soaked the only dry area left, the small of our backs.

We had turned our heads toward each other to prevent the streams of falling water from filling our mouths and beating our faces.

However, my left ear soon became numb from the cold rain pooling in the canal, my eardrum throbbing with the amplified sound of tinnitus.

We lay like that during the fifteen or twenty minutes that the storm took to pass over us, time we could have spent running back to the carpark.

As the last low scuds of cloud wisps flew past, the starlit sky reappeared.

“Can I bear you an imaginary child?”

“If you wish.  I’m not asking to be a father, just asking if you’re willing to be the mother of my…our child.”

“In that case, yes.  I would bear you a child if…”

“Thank you.”

“If…this was a rhetorical question I had to answer in order to address the second question.”

“Or the first.”

“No, you said I had to answer the second one first so it makes the first question the second one.”

“If you say so.”

“If I say so?  You know, it’s not an easy question to answer.  There are loads of issues involved with calculating the odds that our future, the one we’ve planned these long months…”

“Long months?  They feel like they’ve flown by to me.”

“Well, they would.  It’s easier for a guy, even in these so-called modern times.  Anyway, as I was saying, to even think, for a moment, that I could take time away from our hard work to not only conceive and carry a foetus for eight or nine months…”

“Or ten.”

“Certainly not!  Nine’s enough, as it is.”

“I could find nine months for us in the schedule, easily.  Ten, not much harder.”

“Well, sure, if it’s just looking at a work breakdown schedule and deciding whether a task is a task or a bottleneck or a deadline that can be slipped without noticing…but we’re talking about a living being here, one that requires more than just nine months on a schedule.”

“I love the way you say ‘shed-yule.'”

“Oh, dear, as far up the career ladder as you and I are, sometimes you can come up with the silliest childlike observations.”

“Still, it’s neat the way you say that word.”

“You’re trying to change the subject, aren’t you?”

A cool breeze followed the storm like a stray dog looking for a meal.  I shivered.  “I suppose so, yes.  I’m getting rather cold, here on this wet, muddy wheat.”

“I thought you were used to cold conditions.  Hadn’t we practiced traveling in cold space conditions enough to immunise you against the need for warmth?”

“Of course.  But we hadn’t practiced it in wet clothes and on damp ground.”

“Good point, dear.”

I turned, folded my knees under me and jumped up, reaching out a hand.

She grabbed my hand and lifted herself up.

“So, where were we?”

“Either getting back to the carpark, deciding whether to have a kid and impact our plans, or merely saying which of the Seven Sisters you’d like to be, hypothetically speaking.”

She shrugged her shoulders and inclined her head toward the carpark.

Between the shine of the stars, the Milky Way brilliantly alive, and the occasional flashes of lightning growing more distant, we sloshed our way back to the strip of grass and onto the concrete path.

Because it was dark and no one could see us, we both took off our clothes and rung out the excess water.

“You know, up there one day, as we’re looking down at this part of the planet, we’ll remember this moment.”

I nodded.

“Dear, will we call this a romantic moment?”

I reached out my hand, grabbing hers, and spun her around.  She circled on her toes like a fairy with wings, a nymph fallen from heaven for one brief dance in the night, a symbol or sign portending good fortune, I thought.

“Romance barely describes what I see right now, but it will suffice.”

“I, then, am Maia, mother of Hermes, messenger of the gods, protector of literature, sports, commerce and intrigue.  Your favourite subjects.”

“Hermes is our son?”

“Yes.”

“Then we are safely ensconced in the history already written about us.”

“But we already know that.  The records, the computations, the calculations, the error reports and the sample sizes, they all point to our predetermined past AND future.”

I kissed her hand and bowed.  She curtsied, let go of my hand, and began to dress.

Another line of fog spread from the river.

I picked up my clothes.  “Race you to the carpark!”

Learning Methods

Not found in a catalogue, encyclopedia, handbook, guide or dictionary are learning methods established 1000 years from now.

We, or those of you who were alive in the early 21st century, can remember hints of the push/pull technology that enabled us to grow as one.

In your time, it was the concept of re/search, often coined as SEO or search engine optimisation, reducing the time between an entity’s desire to fill a gap in learning by maximising the profit and minimising the cost to push the desired information to the entity.

It took a while to place a value on the quality of the information by paying attention to how much the entity kept looking before feeling satisfied and moving on to other tasks.

Of course, patternmatching was used to anticipate the entity’s next desire or gap in learning and queue the information ahead of time, pushing without shoving the data into the entity’s inner circle of influence.

The corporations that thrived during this period of our species’ growth were the ones that best applied the various learning methods to entities.

First, by trial and error.

Finally, by evaluating the quality of data and the level of data retention per entity.

How, you might ask?

Well, it took quite a bit of work.  We had to subliminally convince Web page designers to incorporate test questions associated with the Cattell-Horn-Carroll theory.  Then we had to create a virtual maze that gave people the sense they were discovering new ideas on their own but were slowly being channeled toward the Web pages we wanted them to view.

As the people…entities, I mean, were answering the questions subconsciously, we determined their cognitive abilities, plus how those abilities changed over time and through the random experiences over which we had no control (in other words, our fully meshed supercomputer network, including the entities (you), had not been finished by the end of the first decade of the 21st century, and thus we could not anticipate every movement and interaction the entities and their environment made (although we did expand our algorithms that estimated the probability of future events)).

That’s why it was so important to reach critical mass with the intersection of the majority of entities in our species to an electronic social media device (mobile phones, computers, etc.).

We no longer were satisfied with the passive interface between entities and one-way devices like radios and televisions.

We needed more predictability to ensure our crowdsourced, one-species plans would move forward as easily as we hoped.

We wanted both those with cast-in-stone beliefs and those whose beliefs changed with the flowing breeze of social change.

We wanted those in opposition to one another and those who cooperated with one another without question.

All of this we needed to make Earth the birthplace of a new species destined to explore the solar system, which in turn led to new entities, outside the definition of species, exploring our galaxy.

Some of you were more closely aligned with this idea than others.

Some never knew they were contributing to the idea and they wouldn’t have cared if they knew.

Some fought, kicking and screaming, in the moment and into the future where the whole species was under control of itself.

Concepts like freedom, democracy, communism, capitalism, religion, sports, fashion, business, and technology became less and less distinguishable as they merged for the purpose of establishing a stable base from which our species jumped off Earth, forming new colonies and new rules for survival in what began as hostile environments.

Entities — sets of states of energy to us — still considered themselves individual people for many decades, reinforcing their reasoning that their beliefs, wants, wishes and desires were theirs and theirs alone, no two people exactly alike.

And that’s what we wanted them — you, me, us — to believe.

It took a long time, probably close to 100 years, before most of us saw ourselves not as individuals but as nodes in a web, the web the true “person” or superentity that was self-aware and self-consciously spreading tentacles/threads outward from the gravitational pull of Earth and its closest star.

One thousand years later, it seems that these changes were so quick and made so easily that I can hardly believe they were recorded for historical research.

To you, of course, it was a turbulent time as individuality became a quaint notion while the former method of alpha males/females leading the species gave way to crowd-based thought patterns.  You often joked that you couldn’t tell if the head or the tail was wagging the dog during those years.

The few yoctoseconds I spent (and as you can guess, “I” is a construct for your reading convenience but we can get to that later) to fill a previously missing gap in a centillion-sized matrix built to compute the next 1000 years of development in this part of the outer solar system helped me write this explanation, or blog entry, of language changes needed to estimate the symbol set that will be used 1000 years from now.

I’m done now.  On to the next task assigned to me, this node, decades ago.

The downside of profiling

Enter two data points that are scary in and of themselves:

Mix them together and what do you get?  Answer: the next generation of “death by suspected terrorist” suicide seekers, upping the former lower level of “death by cop” prevalent among the truly despondent too afraid to kill themselves.

Pebbles in a pond, waves flowing out and causing the Law of Unintended Consequences to create quantum effects one cannot easily compute with the archaic devices we currently call supercomputers.

I wish life was just happiness and bellies full of good food but it doesn’t always turn out that way…sigh…

Is currency exchange rate management the problem or one of many solutions??

Long after we solved the riddle of DNA restructuring, creating enzyme processes that helped manufacture biological nanobots that currently form the entity you would think of as an advanced version of your own body in “our” species (note to self: spend future blog entry defining or redefining the concept of species), we ended up here — autonomous “cells” that can communicate faster with each other than the former central nervous system and blood vessel network with which you’re intimately familiar.

I am doing my best to translate our communication symbol set into one of your common languages so that others who come after me can more readily study the moving boxcar average of changes from one communication method to another in 1000 year increments.

We do not use terms like nanobots or cells to describe the building blocks which morph from one in/organic entity to another as needed to accomplish a task here in the outer limits of the solar system where we gather and harvest comets in the Oort Cloud region, some of us in the Hills Cloud region as needed to support inner solar system operations.

We also solved the problem of our species’ former tribal habit of dividing into altruistic and self-serving individuals by allowing the formation of what you would call organs to carry out the self-serving function within a single body (the body’s current morphed shape, that is), developing an automatic method for all individuals to display primarily altruistic functions through their desire to find a useful niche and perform duties at maximum, optimal rates without jeopardising the nanobots or cells within the current morphed version of a self in operation.

The ability to search the network and “find one’s place,” as you say, has given freedom a whole new meaning.

Self-governance has removed the inefficient method of hoarding that our species once displayed, from crowding living quarters with loads of unusual objects to filling electronic banking records with billions of underused investment/labour credits, which led to the uniting of citizens, police and military units around the world to overthrow despotic dictatorial totalitarians and overpriced capitalists (as well as their overvalued offspring).

During this time, scientists, rarely interested in politics unless it interferes with their publicly-funded pure research facilities, accelerated their development of autonomous nanobots that form networks of interconnected beings which, as many of you can read now, became completely reconfigurable entities that resemble you and think like you but are nothing like you at all.

It was an exciting but chaotic time in our history.

Every individual, no matter how seemingly isolated from others of our kind, contributes to significant changes in our local part of the universe.

Of course, I could bother you with details of the ebb and flow of violent reactions by entrenched leaders interested in maintaining the status quo.  However, let’s save that for a day when news is slow and you want to take a leisurely detour down the backroads of unimportant historic changes since, here in our time, the unnecessarily disruptive behaviour associated with war, social strife and governmental upheavals is no longer considered worth studying.

Now, the fully-meshed network of interconnected nanobots changes to meet the wants/needs at the network, subnetwork and node (that’s you/me) level on a nanosecond scale, readily moving resources to areas where they’re needed most, thus eliminating the “survivalist” hoarding behaviour that dogged our species for millennia.

Those of you whose descendants chose to become plants will want to find out how that branch of science turned out, I’m sure.  They certainly changed our perception of consciousness.

But we can talk about that later.  It’s a beautiful “day” out here.  As I corral some comets using my trusty sidekicks, E-stache and E-crab, to herd the comets together, I’ll spend a few yoctocycles to translate more of our history into this language and record it later in a format you call a blog entry.

Pic of the day

Across the street from me, workers walk the roof beams of a new house under construction.  If I hold my fingers up and sight a worker between them, the worker is about ant-sized from here.

The house wasn’t there a week ago — the walls and roof are going up quicker than seeds in the former farm field took root.

Years have passed since the last time I heard an AgCat swoop in and out, spraying the fields full of soybean, corn or cotton.

Instead, row after row after row of suburban tracts spread east of here.

When, 1000 years from now, while we’re sitting here discussing this blog entry, will we understand the concept of suburban living?

Will we perceive a period of growth of our species when two-dimensional plans for living space were a common norm?

When did it become an uncommon norm?

Tiny bricks-and-sticks castles members of our species once called home.

I stapled sheets of galvanised metal mesh over holes under the eaves of our house to limit attic access by raccoons.

Although I didn’t mind watching the raccoons come and go, my wife couldn’t sleep at night when the baby raccoons bounced and chased each other above the roof over our bed.

Silence fills the space where the raccoons once played.

I’m sure the broad-headed skinks and bats will return to the attic and chimney, much quieter occupants that my wife will not know about — out of sight (and sound), out of mind, as they say.

When did people think grassy spaces were the preferred method of landscaping around one’s domicile that was most acceptable?

Sitting here on a celestial body devoid of ants, spiders, moles, trees, snakes, algae, fungus, ferns and mold, I wish I could explain why my ancestors let their yards grow wild.

You don’t appreciate what you had until it’s gone.

Sure, some of my workmates have found ways to play games once popular on Earth — golf, tennis, futball and such — but the dust they kick up tells the story, doesn’t it?  Nothing living that disturbs which we destroy to accommodate our leisure gamespace.

That’s the thing about living here.  No competitition against other species to keep us busy.  No insect/rodent exterminators, no crop insecticides, no preservatives or other means of fighting back nature’s way of seeking equilibrium, inertial or otherwise.

We’re not completely sterile, of course.

We’re so integrated with each other, though, that we detect the start of pathological infectious disease infestation in one of us so quickly that we can redirect resources, both internal and external, with the tiniest of thoughts, repairing and adding telomeres as long as we want to stay alive.

At 503 years of age, I’m older than most here on this colony but still younger than some lifeforms on Earth, both mobile and stationary.

Am I wiser?  I don’t think so.  Ubiquity of information makes all of us as wise as another.

Well, it’s time I revert back to your chronological space and share my mortal self with you, observing your ignorance and suppressing a smile at how antiquated everything you do seems to me and others 1000 years in the future.

Don’t think of this as time travel.  Think of it as me immersing myself in your historical records, becoming one of you virtually while parallel thought processes of mine live in my time, too, “earning” my place in our mesh-network society.

Word

So we “cancel” Greek debt with no hope the Greek government/private sectors will ever pay back what they owed?

Hmm…

What does that tell us about the rest of the EU/world?

Warren Buffett can play guitar, for beginners (or is that starters?).

Telling us we’re all just regular people in one way or another.

Okay…

I agree.

However [scratching head while two cats warm my knees and crawl space crickets sprout after a midwinter rain], it’s not us creditors I mull over.

Which reminds me.  Ever wonder why you can buy cold beer and hot chocolate at an outdoor sports event but not hot fermented beverages?  What about warm, spiced beer at the next football or hockey game, huh?

Anyway, debt is the word.

The question.

The answer.

Cyclical crises are perennial and require perennial solutions, don’t they?

Or do they?

Is Bloomberg still taking programming lessons?

Does the Panic of [1819/1837/1873/1893/1907] have any relevance today, despite nomenclature games that this one has to be different because we’re so much more modern in our economic understanding, etc.?

Change is change even when you end up with no pocket change to speak of.

Next, we’ll go from an anonymous Netizen Manifesto to a Netizen Bill of Rights to a group of people declaring themselves members of no country except the virtual/online one in which they elect their nongeographical solar system representatives.

So, yes, let’s cancel Greek debt but at the same time declare Greece is no longer a real country in the old sense.

A tourist attraction, perhaps.

Other than that, its people are free to join the new Netizenry, subject to crowdsourced laws and regulations, few as they are (governed mainly by gravity and other natural laws).

The cats say it’s time for bed and sleep.

I agree.

G’night.

A Project I Chose to Support Financially…

from email:

Project Update #4: Touch Pen Progress

Posted by Scott Wilson + MINIMAL Like

Happy New Year!  We hope everyone had a great end of the year and holidays spent with friends and family.  We are officially just past the halfway point of our 60-day campaign and wanted to give everyone an update on how things were progressing.

Obviously we passed out goal in the first few days and are currently just over $200K and 270% of our goal.  Observing this we are excited to accelerate development of the pens prior to the end of the Kickstarter project.  We are also making sure that we are diligent in our efforts to ensure that we meet your expectations above all else in delivering quality products.  Quality that meets the standard established with our category-defining TikTok+LunaTik multi-touch watch kits.

We knew when we started designing, engineering and sourcing the Touch Pen that although it was a simple idea there were inherent challenges both anticipated and unforeseen.  We have been busy non-stop going through the process of refinement and development of these challenges.

THE CLICK, THE CLIP AND THE TIP

•   Click Mechanism:  This is by far the most challenging part of the product and where we are spending most of our time.  Since these mechanisms have very precise and sensitive mechanical relationships, they are very difficult to prototype and have them represent production performance.  After several rounds of prototypes which are progressively getting better we have gotten to the point where the only way to truly progress is to gamble and release for “soft tooling”.  Soft tooling will allow us to mold the precision parts we need to assess the mechanism performance before committing to mass production.  This will essentially nearly double our development and tooling investment but it will give us the confidence and quality we need in the long run.  We hope to have these soft tool parts before or right after Chinese New Year.

•   The Clip:  Many would not expect that the iconic clip on the design of the Alloy Touch Pen would be that challenging.  We have to admit that neither did we.  It has been a challenging material and process decision since the beginning.  We love the light and thin appearance as well as the way it is integrated into the top of the push button.  This design however requires specific materials and processes to achieve.  Originally we desired to have this in aluminum but aluminum was failing under certain stresses in the field and not recovering if bent past a certain point.  After performing FEA (Finite Element Analysis) on the part and discussing it with our manufacturing partners we decided the best solution was either to use die-casting or MIM (Metal Injection Molding).  MIM is extremely expensive but also a very precise, almost magical process.  We have decide to pursue MIM with a PVD coating, also another very expensive finishing process that you see on very high end watches like Bell&Ross, etc.  The logo will then be laser etched into the PVD coating.

• The Tip:  Before we even posted the Touch Pen project on Kickstarter, we had prototyped several different stylus tip geometries to optimize touch screen performance and tactile feel.  We had a tip that we liked before we made the project public, but now we are exploring the subtleties of this part.  We have experimented with different materials and durometers of material as well as different surface treatments and coatings to provide the right glide across the glass.  We think we’ve nailed this and are very happy with how the tip feels and performs.  Next up, we are working with our manufacturing partners to develop testing processes so we will know with confidence that the tip will stand up to heavy use and if we need to make any adjustments to the part to minimize performance degradation over time.

THE CHALLENGES OF CHOICE

• Metal AND Plastic.  One of the things we learned with TikTok+LunaTik was to offer choice at different price points and in different style and use models.  We have been pretty efficient in sharing many components to ensure quality consistency internally while offering value differentiation externally with premium metal materials and construction.  And we wanted to offer the plastic Touch Pen because it allowed us to mold the pen in multiple colors and make the design accessible to more people.  Plastic parts are manufactured entirely differently than CNC’d metal parts though, so we have been developing both versions in parallel to accommodate the constraints that come with each material and process.  That said there are inherent challenges with model (SKU) management within the factory and our fulfillment facility with additional versions.  Luckily we set up systems in our previous project to help manage these scenarios.

SOURCING

• With most new products comes a collection of new suppliers and sub- suppliers.  Along with this comes a learning curve to get everybody on the same page as far as expectations on quality, performance, cost, schedule, risk, etc.  We have been going through this process since before the project launched and believe we are getting to where everyone is on the same page.

CHINESE NEW YEAR

• Many don’t realize that most of the manufacturing world works around a particularly disruptive time of year known as Chinese New Year at the end of January.  This is when the factories shut down and employees return to their home all over China.  Typically not much happens the week before or the week after Chinese New Year week. Because of this we are trying to get as much done prior to this as possible.

PACKAGING

• We have spent the last several weeks designing many variations of packaging that were simple, cost effective, solved for retail constraints as well as helped communicate the unique dual modality of the Touch Pen.  While we will of course be shipping the first products to our Kickstarter backers, we felt it wise to design the packaging for retail placement in the hopes that you’ll someday be able to buy Touch Pens in a nearby store.  We’re happy to say we have a design that fulfills all of our requirements, looks great, and makes the Touch Pen look fantastic on a shelf.  We can’t wait to show you this in a future update.

CES 2012 – Las Vegas

Lastly, a few of us made the trek to the annual Consumer Electronics Show in Vegas this past week and were proudly showing off early prototypes of the LunaTik Touch Pen.  Many of our existing TikTok+LunaTik retail partners are excited to carry the Touch Pen but we told them they’ll have to wait until we are finished developing the design to our standards as well as gotten them in the hands of our most important customers, the Kickstarter Backers.

This is just a sample of what we’ve been up to during the first half of our funding period.  So much is involved in launching even a “simple” product that the amount of work seems overwhelming at times.  But that is the life of a design entrepreneur, and we won’t stop until we have something that we love and that you will too.  It doesn’t stop with the way the product looks or feels, most of the effort is in the execution and bringing it to market.

Thanks for your comments, encouragement, and even criticism.  We always make time to read your feedback and welcome your comments.

Sincerely,

Scott Wilson and the MINIMAL team

By the way, last chance to check out another cool project:

My friend and former colleague at Motorola is taking on an ambitious and challenging project on Kickstarter and has less than 48 hours left.  Check out his Hidden Radio project. We are excited to get ours and try it out someday soon.

To think, Old MacDonald Had a Farm, GI, GI Joe

The 1% of 1%, we don’t see the world in geographic political boundaries.

Of course, as you know, we pretend the boundaries exist, telling you stuff like “Look out for that country over there — it’s against us this year,” and “Our strategic partnership with these countries is the only thing keeping your economic livelihood stable.”

Now that more than 50% of our species lives in sub/urban areas, “free” of the bind to land-based [subsistence] living, you are all our virtual slaves, depending on our virtual chess game results to tell you what to do next.

Two steps forward, one step to the left/right, please.

And then, as previous chapters have told you, there is the Committee, which also manages the lives of the 1% of the 1%.

Finally, there is the universe itself, spinning off little eddies of atoms and molecules that collect and replicate their patterns.

You should have in your thought patterns by now the full understanding that the universe as we know it is simply revealed by a 360-degree searchlight from the point of our planet/solar system, reaching a finite boundary and creating the illusion of a symmetrical sphere in which we are the center.

Feel free to comprehend our ignorance, vast as it is and will continue to be, ad infinitum.

There is just so much that I, the individual, can bother to talk about here while supervising the construction of the interwebs of interwebs tying you to your personal supercomputers tied to everyone else’s supercomputers tied, as if all of that is a single node, to the Internet of the Next Big Things to Come.

So, to me, all military actions, no matter how we label them in nationalistic or terror group or lone wolf terms, are all one.

For instance, I don’t see an Iranian nuclear scientist killed by the CIA or Mossad.  I see us managing to control ourselves by killing ourselves.

Same for sports and other categories of diverting ourselves from our primary tasks of eating and breathing.

Let us move on to more important matters.

Details in the next chapter of the story of our lives seen from the vantage point of 1000 years from now.

Happiness and humour — share them endlessly.