home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- u
- D A V E ' S R A V E S
-
- WIZARDS AND COMPUTERS
-
-
- The Fellowship of the Rings won't
- be playing in Holly for a few weeks.
- That's OK. I have waited 33 years -- I
- can wait a little longer. But the
- first Harry Potter movie was shown
- these last couple of weekends, and we
- watched it twice.
-
- I [like] the Harry Potter books.
- While some in the Christian community
- see only dangers with any mention of
- witchcraft and wizardry, I happen to
- love stories of magical worlds. J. K.
- Rowling has created a wacky and
- wonderful world that has enticed
- hundreds of thousands of children to
- [read]! But these are not exactly
- children's books. Rowling has included
- a lot of depth and character in her
- tales.
-
- The movie is absolutely [perfect]
- in every way. Chris Columbus must have
- just "ripped the pages from the book
- and shoved them in the camera." That
- expression comes from the venerable
- Ray Bradbury, whose own experience
- with Hollywood was anything but
- fulfilling. Somewhere between buying
- the story from him and getting it on
- the screen, too many "creative" cooks
- spoiled the plot.
-
- And for years, we knew that was
- true. The financial realities of
- filmmaking and distribution, and even
- the essential concept among the
- Hollywood elite of what made a good
- film, conspired to butcher excellent
- prose into mass-marketed pablum!
-
- But two things have changed.
- First, the technology is now available
- to create on the screen [anything]
- imaginable -- and make it work. The
- movement began with "2001 A Space
- Odyssey," made a quantum leap with
- "Star Wars," and zoomed forward with
- "Roger Rabbit" and "Jurassic Park."
-
- The other thing that has changed
- is that the old technicians who tell
- the director what can or cannot be
- done are now Boomers. And when it
- comes to tweaking technology, Boomers
- don't say "can't."
-
- When it comes to tweaking the
- financial side of movie making,
- "can't" doesn't carry the weight it
- used to. For example, the Harry Potter
- set alone cost $125 Million! And this
- for a film with no box office
- blockbuster stars. And The Lord of the
- Rings [Trilogy] was shot all at once
- over a two year period at a cost of
- $275 Million.
-
- Hollywood has never worked that
- way. Never mind that Fellowship of the
- Rings -- the first movie -- generated
- over half of the investment in two
- weeks. Hollywood has always played the
- short odds -- and pulled down big
- bucks.
-
- Anyway, we are seeing more about
- fantasy wizards in believable fantasy
- worlds -- thanks to computers.
-
- Thanks to computers in two ways.
- Obviously, digital imagery offers the
- tools. But moreover, people who know
- and love computers know a thing or two
- about magic!
-
- If magic is the ability to arrange
- certain words and commands in such a
- way to create new wonders, then
- everything about computer programming
- is [magic]. I like to call it
- "sourcery!"
-
- Such "sourcery" created text
- adventures -- a completely new way of
- telling a story. The reader/player
- changes the plot by decisions made
- along the way. This is an incredibly
- new way of thinking about text
- entertainment. Heretofore, the story
- teller devised one and only one path
- along which the characters traveled.
- With interactive fiction, the writer
- must design all the myriad ways a
- reader/player might go.
-
- This concept can play hob with
- religious concepts of One True Way or
- God's Perfect Plan -- and opens new
- vistas of a (ahem) living God who
- interacts with the world.
-
- Another idea that is changing
- how we think is the concept of
- "serial" as opposed to "random"
- access. For 2000 years, the essential
- difference between a scroll and a book
- (called a "codex") never occurred to
- anybody. But many of us remember when
- a datasette was the storage device du
- jour ("du jour" being the time it took
- to load a program). Serial access --
- as with a tape drive or a scroll -- is
- slow and cumbersome. Random access --
- whether disk drive or codex book --
- puts information at one's fingertips.
-
- I am of the opinion that the codex
- book was an essential technological
- development that underwrote the
- birth of Christianity. With a codex,
- Matthew (the gospel writer) could
- easily flip back in his Septuagint
- (The Greek translation of Hebrew
- Scriptures) and copy: "For a virgin
- will bear a son, and his name shall be
- Emmanuel."
-
- Scrolls work more toward story
- telling innovation -- called
- "midrash," where the gist of an
- ancient tale informs a new telling,
- mostly from memory.
-
- And now, some 2000 years later, we
- have entered a new, fantastic world of
- communication and information. We are
- like the old farmer who finally got
- electricity out to his place. At
- sundown, he turned on the electric
- light for a few moments, then turned
- it off again. He reckoned this
- electricity did make it easier to
- light his kerosene lanterns!
-
- One last note -- I am now working
- with the Principal of our Middle
- School to find several young people
- who are bright but under-motivated. I
- want to offer them a chance to become
- "wizards" in their own right. We have
- several C-64's available for loan to
- kids without the cash. And buying a
- C-64 should be within even a kid's
- budget.
-
- "Wizards of Worth" will have
- nothing to do with witchcraft or
- arcane arts -- and everything to do
- with showing kids that [they] can take
- charge of at least a small part of
- their world. I am sure some will turn
- up their noses at a 1 Megahertz
- computer, when 1+ Gigahertz machines
- are now available. I call them fools,
- ("Muggles" comes to mind) patently
- incapable of understanding the wisdom
- of true wizardry.
-
- I will keep you abreast of this
- venture through this year. This might
- be just what your User Group needs to
- do. Or you!
-
- DMM
-
-
-