The Choosatron Deluxe Adventure Matrix is a Wi-Fi connected Choose Your
Own Adventure®-inspired story printer, blending digital and analogue
storytelling. It is designed to be easily assembled by kids into a small
interactive fiction game box, and encourage social reading, learning,
and play.
And I have one. Now.
Also... I have to admit, it's really weird seeing "256" as an episode number on the Ericast...
You know those "iPad-on-a-stick" robots like the one Sheldon was driving in "The Big Bang Theory"? Ever wonder what it would be like to drive one of those? I did. Here's your show.
This past week has been a really strange blip in the personal and professional schedule. (See "Gus T. Guppy" as an example, though you have to listen to the episode to find out how that's even relevant to anything.)
Note to non-Ericast-fans: The core of the Beam discussion starts at the 8:00 minute mark. If you want to skip the context on who I am and what I think of remote conference attendance, you can jump to that point. But if you can spare eight minutes, I'd suggest listening to the whole thing...
Robocop reboot movie mirror "reveal" moment. Clip below (not for young kids!)
Paparazzi. Now I know exactly how the stars feel, except that I totally don't. Being a Beam driver was a privilege, and I'm not complaining, but it's still distracting to have "fans"
Accessibility. Being dependent on a technology-mediated experience and human "handlers;"
I knew I was being awkward/embarrassing to those around me -- trying to have the experience but also trying to be out of the way.
Cool to encounter people. "Felt" like making connections Malcolm Brown and Veronica Diaz when I saw them in front of me.
Might not be terribly practical, but most F2F stuff isn't.
This is the home of Eric M. Larson's podcasts, from Ericast.com! Here you'll find a mix of philosophy and technology (perhaps "philosophizing about technology"?) with a little talk of religion, current events, and daily living thrown in. Add the occasional RIAA-free song to give you a break from the monotony, and you've got the Ericast.
If (when!) you listen, be sure to e-mail or call and share your thoughts!
I'm just a plain old guy -- a married geek with two daughters. Not into sports, don't watch much television. I've got an M.A. in Human Resource Development, which is a bit more practical than my B.A. in Philosophy. In a pair of words, I "support learning"... but in more pairs of words I also explore solutions, explain reality and battle entropy.