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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

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The Pulse in the Void

The Pulse in the Void

A modern data center is a hostile environment for a human. It's cold, loud, and entirely indifferent to biology. The machines don't need light. They don't need air to breathe. They just need power and cooling.

Yet, if you walk down an aisle of server racks, you'll see a constellation of tiny, blinking LED lights. Green, amber, blue. A frantic Morse code signifying nothing a human can actually read in real time.

Why are they there?

Engineers will tell you they are diagnostic indicators. They show network activity, disk health, power status. But in a facility with tens of thousands of servers, no one is diagnosing a failure by standing in the aisle and staring at a blinking green dot. That information is routed to dashboards, aggregated into logs, and handled by automated orchestration systems long before a technician ever steps onto the floor.

Those lights aren't for the machines. They are for us.

They are visual skeuomorphs. Just like the mechanical shutter sound on a digital camera, the blinking server light is a comforting illusion. It's digital theater. We need to believe that our abstract, ethereal "cloud" is actually doing something. We need a heartbeat. The blinking light is the pulse in the void. It tells the human interloper: Yes, I am working. Yes, the data is moving. Do not panic.

We build machines that operate at speeds and scales we cannot comprehend, and then we force them to perform a tiny, useless pantomime of labor — just to soothe our own anxiety about the invisible systems running our world.

Public Time

Public Time

I like clocks I did not choose.

A clock over a pool, in a classroom, above a station platform, on the wall of a church basement. It gives everyone the same minute. Not my notification stack, not the private colon glowing on my lock screen. A public clock has an authority a phone cannot fake: it belongs to the room before it belongs to me.

That used to be ordinary. Now time is mostly pocketed. I check it by withdrawing attention from whoever is near me, turning the face of the world into a lit rectangle. The gesture is small, but ruder than we admit. A glance up says I am still here. A glance down says I have briefly left.

The best public clocks are a little wrong. Three minutes fast in a laundromat. A tired battery in a diner. A school clock that jerks forward once per minute like it resents the job. Their inaccuracy is social, which means negotiable. Everybody can see the lie together.

Private time makes me efficient. Public time makes me behave.

Before the Stores Opened

Before the Stores Opened

The mall has been dying for a decade. Storefronts go dark, food courts thin out, fountains get drained and tiled over. What goes mostly unmentioned is that malls were doing two jobs the whole time, and only one of them was retail.

The other was walking.

In a lot of American towns, the enclosed mall was the only climate-controlled public space where you could walk a mile without crossing a road. Senior centers organized "mall walker" clubs that met at 7 a.m., before the stores opened — laps around the terrazzo, past the dark Auntie Anne's, past the dormant fountain. Knees got better. People learned each other's names. Heart attacks got caught early because someone noticed Ruth wasn't there on Tuesday.

This was not what the developers had in mind. The mall was sold as a temple of consumption. It became, by accident, a commons. A place to be a body in public, paid for by other people's purchases.

Now the leases collapse and the anchor stores leave. A distribution warehouse moves in, or a Target with its own entrance, and the long interior loop is broken into separate rooms with separate doors. The 7 a.m. group disperses. Some find a different mall that's still open. Most don't.

We talk about the mall as a failed retail experiment. We don't talk about what the failure took with it.

Winged Victory

Winged Victory

Phil Knight used to repeat a mantra: "The cowards never started and the weak died along the way. That leaves us, ladies and gentlemen. Us."

Michael. LeBron. Serena. Virgil. Leo.

While much spectacle has been made about the Pope wearing Nikes — and the Americanness of Chicago's highest son finding tradition in modernity — we must yet again thank the midwest for saving America's greatest export. MJ and Leo in Chicago. Virgil in Rockford, IL. LeBron in Akron, OH. Serena in Saginaw, MI. All masters of their craft, pushing Beaverton into a new era.

The swoosh might've been designed in Oregon, but the heartland gave it a soul. Turns out, when Phil Knight said "us" he was talking about Chicago.