QuoteRandonauts are a community of people who are exploring the use of random number generators to find Blind-Spots and experiment with Mind-Matter interactions.
https://medium.com/@TheAndromedus/a-beginners-guide-to-randonauting-1dd505c3c5a9
seen on FB -- Randonauts in seattle discovered a dead body in a suitcase left on the beach
what else is out there, waiting to be discovered?
https://lailasnews.com/international/randonaut-dead-body-dead-body-found-in-suitcase-seattle-video
This is very interesting. I will read up more on this tonight.
I randonauted! It took me to a local cemetery and the locked-up tomb of a colonial governor who died on his way back from India. (Old tombs round here are locked up with iron gates because graverobbers would steal the bodies to sell to the medical school) and another one that was in Latin that neither I nor Google Translate can understand, but some sort of teacher I think.
It was a nice walk. The quantum waffle looks like bunkum but it's easy enough for your brain to play along, like how Magic 8-Balls seem to get things right. A nice exercise in how your mind makes its own reality. I think I'll start doing this for my daily lockdown walk.
Unrelated to this thread i found out about this by weird internet algo - so i already did two spots close to my place. No dead bodies yet.
Although, if i continue this, i am sure i will find volunteers. But the exploration itself was fun...
Didnt use their app yet, been given targets by copy pasting google links somewhat close to me into their bot [https://bot.randonauts.com/]
Yeeeeeah, we don't do this sort of thing in Tucson.
it's like gambling, except nothing is at stake
ETA
Yeah, I remember that podcast, with the fence, red file cabinet- it's farm time :lulz:
I like the idea of going to random locations; even when I'm ostensibly 'exploring' it's very easy to fall into the same old patterns.
However, the two locations the bot recommended were too close to my residence to have any interest; one was in a University agriculture research plot (which I drove by every day, before I started working from home), and the other was next to a boring old shed (also on campus). Not much to see there.
All the "quantum point" nonsense is just stupid.
And if I put on my hat for a moment ( :tinfoilhat: ), what if the locations really aren't random? Get people to go to locations of interest and make reports? Hmm.
Quote from: chaotic neutral observer on June 24, 2020, 01:55:01 PMAnd if I put on my hat for a moment ( :tinfoilhat: ), what if the locations really aren't random? Get people to go to locations of interest and make reports? Hmm.
That'd be cool, if it was open about it. It reminds me of the Usenet Oracle, which would answer any question emailed to it and occasionally demand that you answer a different question in payment. Of course it was just sending users' questions and answers to each other, but in the days when there were non-computery people it was enough to make them wonder how it worked.
I don't think the Randonautica app is doing that, though - it didn't ask me for any feedback about the location, or even to tell it what my "intention" was (which probably makes the psychological effect easier, since you don't have to remember it perfectly and it can still be an Uncanny Match for whatever you find.)
I used the web page, and after it gave me the location, it asked "Did you visit or get close to the point, and would you like to make a trip report?" I didn't click past that point.
I agree it's unlikely they're doing anything nefarious, but part of my brain always asks "What is their profit model for this?", and "What else could this be used for?"
I keep on pressing [start] and nothing happens?
[I'm a Signal guy, I guess []¯\_(ツ)_/¯]
Do I have to take it places before it talks back?
Oh wait, it sent me the terms, I think it's on!
Leave the fucking forum, LuciferX. You have no place here and the only content I care for right now is the content that makes your blood boil. I will gleefully ruin everything here to make your day a tiny bit more miserable.
Go somewhere else and never return. You're as welcome as cholera.
Did you get the app to work? Because that sounds like a fun way of getting off the board for a while?
I just watched the Pool Hopping episode of Steven Universe where Garnet, who normally has the ability to see into the future, started doing random activities to disrupt the deterministic probabilities that they can normally pull up on a whim.
[CLIP] (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PTbX1EpFw8w)
Anyway it's basically all this!
Alright, just got back from my first Randonaut adventure. The app picked a point about 2 miles away from my house, but with no obvious footpath there. The point was on a path inside the Rockerfeller estate. We decided to see how close we could get without doing anything stupid.
It was a difficult climb up a sunny hill with no sidewalk. Not a walk we normally would have taken. We ended up finding a big unused wooden gate, which looked like it hadn't been an official entrance to the sprawling estate for a few decades. I'd never seen it before. We then hiked back to the house, merging onto one of our usual hiking loops, but coming from an unusual side.
We've explored the shit out of this town.. This October, I'll have lived here for 10 years. My fiance grew up here. So it was really cool to spot some new trails, some new little places.
During the quarantine, my fiance and I have been doing a 3-5 mile hike every day. That's such an established rhythm... it was refreshing to approach the hike from a different mindset... an adventure to find the unknown within the known. To see something new. That feeling of curiosity. Will any weird coincidences happen? When you tune your mind to look for them, you're open.
anyway, it was fun - would reccommend
been watching some randonaut youtube
it's all pretty funny.. takes itself very seriously. There's a lot of tiktoks of people freaking out in all caps because they saw a frog. There's a big contingent of "law of attraction" dipshits that are really into showing that coincidences are produced by visualization and intention. (they're both right and wrong, but that's another post)
The app generates a standard random number field and calls that quantum randomness -- that seems to really impress a lot of people.
But all the veneer aside, there really is something to getting a procedurally based adventure created for you... like I said, just the experience of exploring the world with an intention in mind can be a really interesting experience. It cultivates a kind of openness, a "let's try it and find out" mentality. An explorer mentality. And that's good stuff.
No dead bodies. 0/10, worst story ever.
:lulz:
Your boy was the one filming mine, right? With the breaching dolphins, "groom beach," the time-bridge, and all that. Y'all got that, right?
*holds up a spork*
*runs screaming*
ETA
*turns bed frame into gun mount*
[and then]
*pings the zenith transoceanic*
This sounds like it would be useful for finding places to guerilla grow some weed.