This is topic Big Brother Inside Your Head in forum Open Discussions About Writing at Hatrack River Writers Workshop.


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Posted by Kolona (Member # 1438) on :
 
Read this.

http://www.breitbart.com/news/2005/10/27/D8DGNKD82.html


 


Posted by Kolona (Member # 1438) on :
 
It works. You did what I told you to do.
 
Posted by Ahavah (Member # 2599) on :
 
Not really. I clicked, but I couldn't get past the first 13 lines.

:P
 


Posted by Beth (Member # 2192) on :
 

(I love ahavah. that is all.)


 


Posted by Ahavah (Member # 2599) on :
 
Smootch!


 


Posted by mikemunsil (Member # 2109) on :
 
take it to a motel, guys
 
Posted by Survivor (Member # 213) on :
 
It isn't really any different from the level of control you can get with a conventional VR headset. My guess is that Yuri either isn't very aware of his equilibrium sense or is simply too inclined to think of things in terms of how they can be used to "control" humans.

Possibly both, but I lean towards the latter notion.

There is also the possiblity that the technology is too crude at this point to avoid inducing at least some vertigo (I know, technically, that's exactly what it's supposed to do, but I'm refering to the feeling of having vertigo).
 


Posted by Ahavah (Member # 2599) on :
 
(Mike: I am totally hotel caliber, if not bed-&-breakfast.)
 
Posted by Survivor (Member # 213) on :
 
Okay, that was more than I needed to know.
 
Posted by Kolona (Member # 1438) on :
 
quote:
It sent a very low voltage electric current from the back of my ears through my head _ either from left to right or right to left, depending on which way the joystick on a remote-control was moved.

Is this how a VR headset works? By running electric current through your head?
 
Posted by hoptoad (Member # 2145) on :
 
Sounds like a skit from "Kenny Everett Video Casette"
"Totally undetectable, your friends won't even know your wearing one.'
 
Posted by Survivor (Member # 213) on :
 
I didn't say the mechanism was similar, only that you can "force" a person to change directions with visual cues just as easily as you can by using equilibrial cues.
 
Posted by 'Graff (Member # 2648) on :
 
A few weeks ago I went to a haunted house at a Six Flags amusement park. On the whole I was frightened, screamed like a little girl and all that.

The last room of the house was what caught my interest, though. The room consisted only of a narrow bridge from one end to the other. The room was cylindrical and rotated around the bridge, so that as I walked down the bridge I felt as though the bridge itself were rotating. I kept on leaning to the side.

As advanced as an electric pulse in the ear? No, but a friend told me that he had been to several Haunted houses years ago that had the same premise.

So while it's not as modern, the same type of control has been possible for a long time.

I think the story idea in this helmet-thing is that you could have a circuit installed along the base of the skull, from ear to ear. It would--of course--be controlled remotely.

The story idea arises when you think of the kind of society that would allow this to be installed. Perhaps an intensely hedonistic society would allow such hardware implanted in their brains if it allowed for a more realistic entertainment venue to arise.

Sound familiar?

But it's really only a neat story idea if you take it a step further. After all, the concept of government mind-control has been an SF staple for years.

-----------
Wellington
 




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