Julia

(borretti.me)

117 points | by ashergill 11 hours ago ago

17 comments

  • canjobear 7 hours ago ago

    I read a good way down thinking this was some kind of highly metaphorical blog post about the programming language Julia

    • cwnyth 7 hours ago ago

      I clicked on it because I thought it was about the programming language Julia. I'm still not fully sure what Julia here actually is.

  • pvillano 2 hours ago ago

    My [interpretation? fanfic?] is that Julia is like a carnivore, and humanity is not it's first prey. Every creature that eats, eats to steal the disentropy of it's meal. Plants can steal order from sunlight, and certain microbes can steal order from thermal vents, but carnivores, herbivores, and decomposers steal order from the work of other organisms. The improbability of living is sustained by arranging stolen amino acids into one's own proteins, powered by the toppleing of sugar towers back into a jumbled mess.

    Julia does not reassemble amino acids like earth life does. But it does absorb disentropy from it's prey. The extreme specificity of an interstellar spacecraft, it's contents and occupants, is absorbed by Julia, so that it can move, grow, and attract more prey.

  • sevensor 7 hours ago ago

    I have a recording of le temps des cerises by Charles Trenet, which I picked up after hearing his music on a movie soundtrack. Anyway, this is a song one could imagine playing in the void, echoing the end of everything. A little melancholy, a little sweet. Pairs will with fractals.

  • slwvx 8 hours ago ago

    I assume this is a sort of poem about the programming language Julia...

    ;-)

  • leodavi 7 hours ago ago

    The narrative style reminds me of the novel-game Caves of Qud. Very well done.

  • yolkedgeek 3 hours ago ago

    Am I too dumb? I literally understand none of this.

    • Edd314159 an hour ago ago

      Right there with you. Everyone else on HN is a genius so will love it, but for me this is just incoherent words.

      • dannyobrien 28 minutes ago ago

        What parts of it were confusing? I think science fiction can be confusing if you haven’t read a lot of it, because part of its art is to try and set the scene in as compact way as possible, with a combination of cues that you can work out from their context or by reference (like “laminate” and “squarely” — yes, I had to look it up), and some are the puzzles that the rest of the story will resolve (who/what is Julia? What do they want?)

        It’s ok if it’s not your thing. It’s like an emotional crossword puzzle.

  • jrave 8 hours ago ago

    this completely sucked me in after skimming half a paragraph while unsure what to expect. very golden age, thanks for the link!

  • groovy2shoes 8 hours ago ago

    i liked this a lot. real Gene Wolfe vibes.

  • NuclearPM 8 hours ago ago

    Needs a twist or a reason to care about the characters.

    • khafra 3 hours ago ago

      They're the last living humans, and the last human-derived mind?

      I like Cordwainer Smith and Peter Watts; so I really liked this blend of their styles and subjects.