Loading quotes...

HTTPS://INTERNET---TIMES.COM

We're really internet and we're here to stay. A website about things Will & Seb and various friends & guests think are interesting. Little-to-no specific focus, a bit odd, speling errors, and incredibly culturally relevant. Not the first nor the last. Why copy when you can steal?

The Internet Times

From our servers worldwide to your browser, enjoy tomorrow's news today.

LVMH Publishing
     .        Checking
    /|\       the sky...
   / | \      
             
             

Living Inside the Peripheral

Living Inside the Peripheral

We sold the idea of the smart home as a convenience upgrade. You wouldn't have to walk across the room to turn off a lamp. Your fridge would tell you when you were out of milk. A domestic utopia of minor optimizations.

What we actually built was an inversion of the house itself.

When every lightbulb has an IP address, every thermostat a firmware update, and every doorbell a subscription plan, the house stops being a shelter. It becomes a motherboard. We aren't living in architecture anymore — we're living inside a distributed computing environment.

The terrifying part isn't that the house is "smart." The terrifying part is what it turns us into.

In a normal house, a human is the operator. You flip a switch, the circuit closes, the light turns on. The house is a tool that responds to physical force. But in a smart home, the human is just another data input. We trigger motion sensors. We provide voice commands to be parsed by distant servers. We are biological peripherals, shuffling around inside a machine, generating telemetry so the house knows what state to switch into.

We thought we were automating our environment, but we've actually just integrated ourselves into its feedback loop. I walk into the kitchen, the motion sensor registers my presence, and the lights slowly fade up. It feels like magic until you realize you're just a subroutine executing perfectly.

The Good Seat

The Good Seat

Every room has a seat that understands the room better than the room understands itself.

Not the grand chair. The good seat is usually slightly off center: back near a wall, light over one shoulder, enough view to know who entered, enough distance to leave without narrating your exit. It is not power exactly. It is a truce between wanting to be present and wanting not to be trapped.

What gets me is how quickly people find it. Watch a waiting room fill up. Nobody says the rules, but bodies know: avoid the middle, do not take the chair beside a stranger unless the perimeter is gone, leave the outlet seat for the person already holding a charger like a warrant. The map appears through hesitation.

Bad rooms pretend seats are interchangeable. Rows of identical chairs, no shade, no corner, no permission to turn slightly away. They treat sitting as storage. Good rooms admit that attention has an angle. A person needs a place to look when not looking at anyone.

The good seat is a small mercy because it lets you belong to a room without surrendering to it. That is rarer than comfort.

Count Backward

Count Backward

We have been putting people under since 1846, and we still don't fully know how it works.

That's the part that gets me. Not the chemistry — the routine. Somewhere right now a person is counting backward from ten, and somewhere around seven the world ends. No dream, no dark, no sense of duration. Sleep at least leaves a residue — you wake knowing time passed, that you were somewhere. Anesthesia leaves nothing. You are mid-sentence, and then a stranger is saying your name and it is four hours later and the four hours never happened to you. Not skipped. Not fast-forwarded. Simply absent.

It's the closest thing to nonexistence a person can survive. A clean deletion of the self, scheduled, billed, recovered from by lunch.

And the mechanism is still, after nearly two centuries, an open question. We know which drugs do it. We can dose it to the minute. But how a molecule reaches in and switches off the thing that is you — the seeing, the worrying, the sense of being here — nobody can quite say. We turn consciousness off the way you'd flip a breaker in a house whose wiring you've never seen.

What stops me is that none of this stops anyone. People sign the form. They make the joke about the gas. They count. We have decided, collectively, that the one experience nobody can describe from the inside is fine, is normal, is Tuesday. The deepest mystery we have, and we schedule it around our errands.

Lost and Found

Lost and Found

I like lost-and-found boxes because they make ownership look temporary.

The box is usually wrong for the job: a milk crate under a counter, a plastic tub behind reception, a cardboard carton with LOST + FOUND in marker, as if the plus sign has legal force. Inside: one glove, sunglasses, a water bottle with bite marks, a child's sweatshirt, the charger for a machine nobody can identify.

None of it is treasure. That is why it works. Valuable things get reported, tracked, locked away. The lost-and-found is for objects too intimate to throw out and too ordinary to investigate. It is a small public mercy: somebody decided your dumb hat deserved a waiting period.

I like the suspended moral life of it. For a week the thing belongs to nobody and everybody. You can see it, recognize the kind of person who lost it, maybe invent a day around it. A bus, a gym, a school hallway after rain. The object has been briefly removed from use and turned into evidence that a person passed through distracted.

Eventually the box gets cleared. The glove becomes trash, the sweatshirt becomes donation, the charger returns to the cable grave. But for a while the world says: not yet.