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The sick sad history of computer-aided collaboration

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Cake day: June 10th, 2025

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  • The Starlost needs a remake. Great premise, dollar store execution.

    What they wanted:

    Foreseeing the destruction of Earth, humanity builds a multi-generational starship called Earthship Ark, 50 miles (80 km) wide and 200 miles (320 km) long. The ship contains dozens of biospheres, each kilometres across and housing people of different cultures. Their goal is to find and seed a new world of a distant star.

    In 2385, more than 100 years into the voyage, an unexplained accident occurs, and the ship goes into emergency mode in which each biosphere is sealed off from the others.

    Centuries after its original launch, most of the descendants of the original crew and colonists are unaware that they are even aboard a spaceship.

    How it went:

    Unable to sell The Starlost for prime time, [20th Century Fox television producer Robert] Kline decided to pursue a low budget approach and produce it for syndication. By May, Kline had sold the idea to 48 NBC stations and the Canadian CTV network.

    Originally, the show was to be filmed with a special effects camera system developed by Doug Trumbull called Magicam. … The technology did not work reliably, however. In the end, simple blue screen effects were used, which forced static camera shots. … The failure of the Magicam system was a major blow, as the Canadian studio space that had been rented was too small to build the required sets. In the end, partial sets were built, but the lack of space hampered production.

    As the filming went on, [the writer Harlan] Ellison grew disenchanted with the budget cuts, details that were changed, and what he characterized as a progressive dumbing down of the story. … Ellison broke with the project before the airing of its first episode.



  • I doubt they tested for all possible deficiencies. I was multi-deficient the whole time I suspected so, but found out years later when a good doctor ordered a blood test package costing 1,500€. People have random malabsorptions when the gut is slightly unwell. I’ve been healthy for 2 months this year in total. I had forgotten how different I am and feel. Then I ate a wrong food ingredient again and have been mildly depressed for a week now, maxing out dosages and doing everything right again.







  • None of them said we should address the root cause, capitalism and its perverse incentives that push us towards dystopia and extinction. AI is the most powerful technology so far making profit from addiction, dumbing down, and oppression.

    Hinton urged the need to design AI systems that can co-exist with humanity, even as they surpass human intelligence.

    Is there a more profitable way in the short term? If yes, then that will be chosen.

    Instead of talking about what we are afraid of, we should ask ‘what can we do with AI?’, [said Li]

    I’m afraid the capitalism in control doesn’t care what humanity needs. Line must go up.


  • The Starlost needs a remake. Great premise, dollar store execution.

    What they wanted:

    Foreseeing the destruction of Earth, humanity builds a multi-generational starship called Earthship Ark, 50 miles (80 km) wide and 200 miles (320 km) long. The ship contains dozens of biospheres, each kilometres across and housing people of different cultures. Their goal is to find and seed a new world of a distant star.

    In 2385, more than 100 years into the voyage, an unexplained accident occurs, and the ship goes into emergency mode in which each biosphere is sealed off from the others.

    Centuries after its original launch, most of the descendants of the original crew and colonists are unaware that they are even aboard a spaceship.

    How it went:

    Unable to sell The Starlost for prime time, [20th Century Fox television producer Robert] Kline decided to pursue a low budget approach and produce it for syndication. By May, Kline had sold the idea to 48 NBC stations and the Canadian CTV network.

    Originally, the show was to be filmed with a special effects camera system developed by Doug Trumbull called Magicam. … The technology did not work reliably, however. In the end, simple blue screen effects were used, which forced static camera shots. … The failure of the Magicam system was a major blow, as the Canadian studio space that had been rented was too small to build the required sets. In the end, partial sets were built, but the lack of space hampered production.

    As the filming went on, [the writer Harlan] Ellison grew disenchanted with the budget cuts, details that were changed, and what he characterized as a progressive dumbing down of the story. … Ellison broke with the project before the airing of its first episode.