Re: Welcome to extropians-digest

From: henohr@sokrates.mip.ki.se
Date: Thu Dec 09 1999 - 18:43:28 MST


This is perfectly possible, take a look at http://www.speakfreely.org
a small program (560kb) with great sound on crowded lines and conference mode
options. ( also crypto if needed)
I am using this myself to call home from Nashville to some of the other members
of aleph in sweden.

Mvh Henrik Ohrstrom
Included blurb to unconfuse readers:

  Date: Wed, 8 Dec 1999 20:02:47 -0800 (PST)
  From: "Robert J. Bradbury" <bradbury@www.aeiveos.com>
  Subject: Re: millenial madness

  On 8 Dec 1999, Anders Sandberg wrote:

> I hope to be on the internet so I can greet you americans from the
> other side of the millennium, but it seems Robert is planning to be in
> Moscow, so he might get to the future first :-)

  I think Damien and the other down under TH/EIs will beat me by a wide
  margin. If silly Motorola hadn't made the phones so expensive,
  we could have all called each other simultaneously in a rotating
  transition point to wish each other well.

  However, that does raise an *interesting* idea!!!

  I'm sure we could find some international company willing to
  facilitate multi-node real-time conference calls. Now, the real
  trick would be to be able to intermix dial-ins and dial-outs.
  It would be way too expensive to dial-out to dozens of people,
  but if people were willing to bear the dial-in expense I bet
  we could have a lot of fun with it.

  John Grigg is sitting there all excited, screaming into the
  phone "Its starting, the 60 second countdown is starting...,
  59, 58, 57, 56, 55, 54....
    In the background,
      Damien Broderick: Are you folks *still* doing that....
      Robert Bradbury: John, can you speak more softly, I've got
        a wicked headache.
      Anders Sandberg: Would anyone care to come to Sweeden to
        help cleanup party leftovers?
      Kathryn Aegis: Do you folks want omlettes or pancakes?
      Eliezer Yudowsky: You folks are crazy, any sane AI knows that
        the millennial transitation is no different from any other timeslice.

      Greg Burch: I can't talk right now, my next-door-neighbors have let their

        their cows run free over the fields because of some silly passage in

        the Bible saying that the "Upon the resurection, the creatures of the

        earth shall be unchained so that they too may reside with God" and they

        are driving my pets crazy...
      Gina (Nanogirl): John, whats the status of Nanotech research at U. of A.?

      The Canuks in chorus: Ehhh?
      Everyone suspects Max and Natasha are sitting quietly in the
       background watching the world evolve...

  tick tock, tick tock, a small voice in the background says
  "this is fun, are there any Extropians in Hawaii?"

  Seriously though, I think this is doable -- any interest?

  I would generally agree with Anders that the Internet is the best
  way to do it, but this may not be available to many at the moment
  of local-time-zone transition. We need a telephone-to-internet
  bridge (or a pure telephone) interface that utilizes out-of-time-zone
  connection infrastructure. I might feel bad about monopolizing
  a Moscow operator at midnight, but I've got no problem doing it
  to an operator in Sidney or San Francisco at midnight Moscow time.

  Perhaps we could organize a signup sheet for the people that want
  to be included in the calls at specific hours? This would be
  way cool, there might be no other group on the planet doing it...

  Robert

  ------------------------------

-------------------------------------------------------------------
             mvh Henrik
                                   pgpkey available



This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.5 : Fri Nov 01 2002 - 15:06:02 MST