Friday 15 January 2010

Charles Babbage

Steampunk is a hugh phenomenon in Second Life, associated with, amongst others. the British mathematician, industrialist, inventor and scientist, Charles Babbage.

Charles Babbage 1791 - 1871
Charles Babbage was one of the key figures of a great era of British history.
Born as the industrial revolution was getting into its swing, by the time
Babbage died Britain was by far the most industrialized country the world had
ever seen. Babbage played a crucial rôle in the scientific and technical
development of the period.

Although born in London, Babbage came from an old Totnes family, and retained close links with the region all his life. The West Country, with its mining and engineering was particularly important in the early stages of the industrial revolution, and from the extraordinarily wealthy Totnes region, with its port at Dartmouth, came also Newcomen and Savery, pioneers of the steam engine.

Babbage went up to Cambridge in 1810 and with some friends effected the crucial introduction of the Leibnitz notation for the calculus, which transformed mathematics in Cambridge and thus throughout Britain.

In 1814 Babbage married Georgiana Whitmore,from a landowning Shropshire family. Her half brother, Wolryche Whitmore, was the M.P. who rose year after year in the House of Commons to move the repeal of the Corn Laws. He was also a leading member of the Political Economy Club, and played an important part in Babbage's life.

Babbage's greatest achievement was his detailed plans for Calculating Engines, both the table-making Difference Engines and the far more ambitious Analytical Engines, which were flexible and powerful, punched-card controlled general purpose calculaters, embodying many features which later reappeared in the modern stored program computer. These features included: punched card control; separate store and mill; a set of internal registers (the table axes); fast multiplier/divider; a range of peripherals; even array processing.

It has often been asked whether Babbage's Engines would have worked if they had been built. This may not be an entirely meaningful question: much can go wrong during such a project, while on the other hand new solutions may be found to any problems which might appear during construction. However the question can be put slightly differently: would it have been technically feasible for, say, Babbage and Whitworth to construct an Analytical Engine during the 1850s?

Twenty five years ago, after a careful investigation, Anthony Hyman and the late Maurice Trask formed the opinion that construction of Babbage's Engines would have been quite possible. The problems were financial and organizational, but technically the project in itself was perfectly feasible. They proposed a plan. :first construct DE2 (the Second Difference Engine; then, if wished DE1, or a version of DE2with `travelling platforms'; and finally a complete Analytical Engine, probably following plan 28A.

After much work by many people, and particularly by Dr. Allan Bromley, a team at the Science Museum led by Doron Swade built a complete version of DE2. It was a triumphant success, vindicating Babbage's technical work. However, the far more ambitious task of constructing an Analytical Engine remains to be undertaken.

Besides the Calculating Engines Babbage has an extraordinary range of achievements to his cr: he wrote a consumer guide to life assurance; pioneered lighthouse signalling; scattered technical ideas and inventions in magnificent profusion; developed mathematical codebreaking (Prof. Franksen has plausibly suggested that Babbage ran a private Bletchley Park for the British government in the middle of the +19th century).

Babbage was also an important political economist. Where Adam Smith thought agriculture was the foundation of a nation's wealth; where Ricardo's ideas were focused on corn: Babbage for the first time authoritatively placed the factory on centre stage. Babbage gave a highly original discussion of the division of labour, which was followed by John Stuart Mill. Babbage's discussion of the effect of the development of production technology on the size of factories was taken up by Marx, and was fundamental to Marxist theory of capitalist socio-economic development. A case can also be made that Babbage had an influence on William Stanley Jevons, and was thus also a pioneer of marginal value theory. However, the latter remains to be proved.

For twenty five years Charles Babbage was a leading figure in London society, and his glorious Saturday evening soirées, attended by two or three hundred people, were a meeting place for Europe's liberal intelligencia.

So, what is so compelling about a British inventor, dead for almost 160 years, that makes avatars all over Second Life act out Victorian roleplay and replicate his inventions?

Saturday 9 January 2010

I Belong to Glasgow...

Inspired by the 250th anniversary of Robert Burns, Homecoming Scotland 2009 extended an invitation to Scotland's people, at home and abroad to celebrate this great country. Nearly 400 events were held to showcase Scotland's wealth of talent.... including one here in Second Life, at the Stormy Nights Arts Centre. For nine months we displayed a random set of images from artists and friends. The aim was not to promote individual artists but to show, without pomp or circumstance, a selection of homegrown talent.

Homecoming Scotland 2009 may be over but I am not quite ready to pack everything away just yet. The new display at Stormy Nights is a random selction of images, video clips and objects, reminiscent of a Glasgow childhood in the 40s and 50s, with the exception of the "Glasgow Blues" who came much later in the 60s and 70s.

Some of the paintings from the original Homecoming Scotland display have been moved upstairs to the second floor.

If you are a Second Life member and would like to vist-just check my picks for a teleport link. If you are not a Second Life member you are probably wondering what the hell I'm talking about, LOL.

The images displayed are personally owned, open source or source unknown. The objects displayed have been created and collected throughout second life and customised for purpose. If any image creator recognises an open source or unknown source image as their own work and would like it removed, I will be very happy to do so on proof of copyright ownership:)

Tuesday 5 January 2010

Aart On My Sleeve - Pol Arida

Astonished to find myself here, blogging, with the divine Ruby Quality, of all people :) Ruby, thank you for the opportunity; my pile of rejection letters from other publishers is so high I use it to stand on when I change light bulbs.

Having seen lots of blogs I know that the secret to success is to pretend that you are simply talking to yourself (you are) and to either indulge in fond memories or apply a a jolt to the synapses with the shock of the new.


Pol Arida was an SL discovery with a vast RL hinterland. The first in-world experience which made the hairs on the back of my neck put their hands in their wallets ;). As someone who is still makes the effort to attendo live music performances in small venues, I had naturally checked out the SL live scene ... mostly disappointing MOR-AOR-DoDgYcOvErVeRsIoNs, it must be said. There is however a group and a scene known as The ORIGINALS, committed to performing live and, duurr, original music and I was fortunate in being introduced to this by the lovely Jeannine Mathilde, for which I remain ever in her debt.

Pol is an Edinburgh based, Scottish musician with a unique percussive guitar style. He writes challenging lyrics which span the Peter Hammill, Nick Cave, Robert Wyatt spectrum and he's the kind of guy that can get one of my personal Goddesses, Tilda Swinton, to appear in his video so obviously a person I should be sucking up to. Strangely, and as a totally separate and secret quirk, Ruby has a huge thing for Mr Swinton, John Byrne ... we live safe in the knowledge that in the quantum SLuniverse we've shared breakfast with Tilda and John, seperately, jointly and in every combination you can imagine ... we weren't disappointed ;)


Did ya like that?

Here's some more; enjoy. And if you want to catch him live In-World, join his group or keep an eye on his calendar or his website at http://www.cultx.com/

Monday 4 January 2010

Our Right to Reply...


News for everyone who responded to "Our Right to Reply Post". Sasun Steinbeck of Second Life Galleries has removed her posts about us. Job done!
As a mutual gesture of seasonal goodwill I have permanently removed our postings on the topic.
Thanks to everyone who took the time to contribute and good luck with your second life activities. Happy New Year:)