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Pynchon: patron saint of Wibos?

Jason Gull writes [my emboldening]:

"First off, I have to agree with those who've already chimed in to say that "less is more." The idea of warchalking seems to have grown in large part from a desire to know (merely by sight, sans gadgets) when one is in the presence of a wifi node. Of course, actually to use the node may require more information than simply the knowledge that "THERE IS WIFI HERE." But the gadgets themselves can figure out this extra information for themselves (for example, as was pointed out by others, by using "any" SSID, or by looking up the node in a database like GAWD, or by gleaning info via wifi from the node itself). Warchalking is fascinating not only for its utility, but also (and perhaps even more so) for its simplicity, its mystery, and its aesthetics.

While it is a meme that has spread across the net faster than a Colorado fire, and bloggers and business have been evangelizing wifi at ever-increasing volume for a couple years, the ommunity of wifi-ers remains quite small -- while the number of access points may have broken a million, the number of folks who actually have used a node other than their own is a far smaller number. It just seems right to have wifi graffiti (I can't decide if the term "wifiti" is just too cute) that is simple and easy to scrawl, with as few alphanumerics as possible. Practical considerations aside (If one is using actually *chalk*, those tiny characters will be awfully hard to read) it lends the necessary degree of mystery to the emerging cult of warchalkers.

Which brings me to my nomination for the Patron Saint of Warchalkers:
Thomas Pynchon. The prescient Mr. Pynchon's "Crying of Lot 49" described similar cryptic scribbles by members of a secret underground postal system, long before the rise of the net. (Published 3 years before the traditional 1969 birthday of the net.) Alas, I'm not sure if the trystero would work for wifiti, but it certainly would add an air mystery (and literary history) to the endeavor."

I'm glad that it sounds like Jason is getting as much out of the poetic/aesthetic potential of chalking up the city as I am. That's why I'm anxious to see some pictures!!!

Posted by matt at June 27, 2002 11:15 PM
Comments

i think what it could take is for folks that are wardriving to remember when they stop to find a wall or sidewalk and mark it off. of course after v 1.0 ;cB

Posted by goopymart at June 27, 2002 11:46 PM

The aesthetics really are key, as are designing a language that is simple enough to remember, but complete enough to be useful.

Posted by vis10n at June 28, 2002 04:40 PM


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