Reflections Series
A conceptual series:
What would it look like if we saw what gets stored, the binary, the bits, the bytes?
I’ve arrived at the point of realizing that it is time to start saying what I’m here to say. And so, I figure, I’ll say it real big and in a way that hasn’t really been done, maybe? Or maybe it has. Not sure.
Anyway, say what you are here to say because you’re here to be, say and do what you’re here to be, say and do. Ignore it all you want, but, at some point, you’re gonna be who your are here to be, so get over it and be it.
And when I started to ruminate on what that might be, I wondered:
— Would people be more likely to read really big words, or something that maybe just looked like some random zeros and ones, that was actually a binary-to-ascii coded message
— If someone recognized that, and decided to go to the trouble to actually decipher the message, what would invoke a smile, a frown, a pondering?
— And, what would be interesting to look at?
What would be the point at which someone had to really consider whether they wanted to take the time, even when they recognized the 8 bits per byte thing going on, to then go to some web translator page for binary to ascii, and sit and type the zeroes and ones into the browser and click the button. Or maybe they’d try some OCR (character recognition) technology or just forget about it.
At any rate, how to say what I’m here to say in a way that finds those that are here to hear what I have to say in my way.
And so, the series.