Benjamin Scott <dragonh...@gmail.com> writes: > > On Wed, Nov 24, 2010 at 4:31 PM, Kevin D. Clark > <kevin_d_cl...@comcast.net> wrote: > > > I barely trust people to drive in two dimensions, let alone three! > > > > My commute takes me a little while, so I have to drive in four. > > You may travel in four, but your direction and rate of movement > along one dimension is fixed. You're not driving for that; you're > just along for the ride. And you have limited influence over another > dimension. So *driving*, it is more like 2.5 dimensions. Like the > original Doom! No respawn or save games, though. Bummer.
Yeah, jeez--I recently took a 4k-mile road-trip with my family, and about .7k miles in..., someone slammed into my (parked) car. I really wished I'd had some sort of revision-control, there-- it would have been great to just revert that whole `parking' series and re-do it with my car parked one more space to the right. Though, to be fair..., one *does* at least get some amount of control over *how fast* one moves forward through time (e.g.: the pot of coffee that I just brewed for my wife...). Coincidentally, I just caught the last half-hour of `The Exchange' on NHPR, where Laura Knoy was doing a call-in+interview with Howard Mansfield about his book... on time: http://www.nhpr.org/howard-mansfield-time-and-place There were, at least, a few interesting remarks from Mansfield in the last few minutes--something about the Amish having chosen to maintain control over `the clock' and choosing which technologies to accept or reject as a means to that end. I'm considering becoming techno-Amish (keeping my computers... and my flying car...). -- "Don't be afraid to ask (λf.((λx.xx) (λr.f(rr))))." _______________________________________________ gnhlug-discuss mailing list gnhlug-discuss@mail.gnhlug.org http://mail.gnhlug.org/mailman/listinfo/gnhlug-discuss/