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Technology

Marc Merlin's 2014 Burning Man Report For Tech Geeks 56

marcmerlin writes Haven't been to Burning Man, or missed this year's and would like a summary? Marc Merlin has posted a summary of this year with full GPS map, pictures from the air, and everything neatly categorized, with a track of his 127 miles of biking to visit as many camps as possible. Also, if you plan on going, check out the tips at the bottom of the page.
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Marc Merlin's 2014 Burning Man Report For Tech Geeks

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  • I know lots of people who go, but have no desire to go myself.

    • Amen to that. I want a festival someplace where I don't have to suck alkali dust. And I also want a festival that's about making things, not burning shit down and blowing shit up. The best thing 40,000 people can think of to do with a week is go to the desert and set shit on fire? If one tenth of that effort were spent doing something positive instead of something destructive, what could those people accomplish? How many trees could they plant, or whatever? Instead it's post-post-modern celebration of the d

      • by Applehu Akbar ( 2968043 ) on Saturday September 27, 2014 @09:33AM (#48008859)

        True enough, but the Burning Man environment has one great advantage for nerds: it's an ultimate test of hardware reliability for your project. If the tech product you're about to introduce will survive BM, it will work in any home or business.

      • "There's nothing there but what you make." You hit it right on the head......
      • It's all about extreme art, that's all. There are some very very smart people that go there, and do all sorts of things. Generally if you go there, you are supposed to hate it at times, as well as love it at times. If that happens to you, then you're suspected to have "gotten it". I've never been, but I know a few gay guys that go regularly. These guys are very intelligent, kind, and very active in the local community.
    • I know lots of people who go, but have no desire to go myself.

      The climate is actually mostly ok, but the alkaline dust definitely sucks, I'm not going to say otherwise.

  • someone told me that DARPA types test out their latest mind control E-M gadgetry at Burning Man...

    but to be more on-topic, Burning Man might be a good experience for a "geek"...

    forget all the nonsense 'gift economy' techno-hippie blah blah...it's a bunch of artists, weird academics, ravers, drug experimenters, *rich people* who want to pretend to be those things at a high per-day cost, and of course creepers looking to scam or take advantage of people

    it's camping in the desert with 60,000 people

    now, in my o

  • Thanks for making my computer unresponsive for minutes. Great job in web design.

    • Might I ask what specs/OS you're running? Firefox on Windows 7 on an i5 didn't even hesitate with the page.

    • It only uses 400MB of RAM. I think you need a new computer.

  • nice pics (Score:4, Interesting)

    by globaljustin ( 574257 ) on Saturday September 27, 2014 @03:17AM (#48008023) Journal

    TFA is great...it's what *I* would want to see...i have burner friends and they always show me 200 pictures of their little group in the same areas...nothing that shows a general survey of what is happening

  • Since when are nerds hippies?

  • by Balinares ( 316703 ) on Saturday September 27, 2014 @08:49AM (#48008729)

    Burning Man looks like a tentative near-future where robots work the menial crap for us and as we dip our toes in the waters of Culture-like leisure everyone experiments being a hippie and a DIYer artisan and a stoner and a furry and a badass craftsman all at once, and you know what? I'm glad it exists. Bring along the rabbit ears, I'll bring the swiss army knife, and let's see what we can make work.

"Why should we subsidize intellectual curiosity?" -Ronald Reagan

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