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The Matrix Media Movies It's funny.  Laugh.

The Science of the Matrix 479

KamehamehaWarrior writes "Peter B. Lloyd, author of Taking The Red Pill: Science, Philosophy, and Religion in The Matrix, believes that many of the plot developments in "The Matrix" that seem to contradict the laws of physics, biology, etc. can actually be explained with a closer look at the science. He addresses issues such as "Can humans really be an energy source? How does the Matrix know what fried chicken taste like? Why do the rebels have to enter and exit the Matrix via a telephone system (that doesn't actually exist)?""
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The Science of the Matrix

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  • by dtolton ( 162216 ) on Saturday April 19, 2003 @06:47PM (#5766083) Homepage
    This is a truly impressive article, even if this guy does have a
    little too much free time on his hands.

    The breakdown of the Bio-Port is wonderful. It's really a
    fantastic explanation of how the Bio-Port could work, and what
    it would be doing.

    The Red pill, I've always seen this as similar to some type of
    virus that is injected into the system. His deconstruction is
    similar in flavor to what I thought.

    The power plant is great. Rather than humans being the energy
    source, they are a giant Beowulf cluster. Maybe Beowulf (the
    hero) was the first Beowulf after all.

    I thought Entering and Exiting the Matrix was interesting, but I
    didn't find the arguments as compelling in this section for some
    reason. There just seem to be too many special exceptions for
    my taste.

    Overall this article has some real potential, and definately
    helps with the suspension of disbelief process that is so
    crucial to any story telling. A bit of a warning though, it's
    long, really long.
    • But still. The movie claims that the humans are being used to produce power, which is simply utter bs...you can't get more energy out of something than you initially put in, and by lack of a sun to serve as a constant replenishment of energy for the planet as a whole, things come to a grinding halt...period.
      • by st1nky187 ( 641264 ) on Saturday April 19, 2003 @06:58PM (#5766140)
        If the article is right in saying that the machines are using human minds to monitor their fusion power plants, presumably the machines are somewhat lacking in processing power. Why then, can they create a computer generated world to occupy humans minds to distract them from their monitoring of the fusion plants. Also wouldn't creating a virtual world for people to occupy mess with their ability to monitor anything but the virtual world. This all seems really poorly thought out beyond the desire to make some cash.
        • by Jedi Alec ( 258881 ) on Saturday April 19, 2003 @07:04PM (#5766165)
          It would seem that just keeping them sedated would have been somewhat more practical...might have made for a lousy movie though...

          Neo: zZzZzZzZzZzZ?
          Trinity: zZzZzZzZzZ!
          Neo: zZzZ ZzZz???
          • by sczimme ( 603413 ) on Saturday April 19, 2003 @07:52PM (#5766403)

            More like this:

            Neo: zZzZzZzZzZzZ?
            Trinity: zZzZzZzZzZ!

            Neo: zZzZ... whoa.

            :-)
          • Not sure keanu reeves has enough talent to be up to the challenge of portraying such a deep character.
          • by mcc ( 14761 ) <amcclure@purdue.edu> on Saturday April 19, 2003 @08:18PM (#5766529) Homepage
            [the following contains a minor Matrix spoiler]

            This brings up an interesting thought: Why the hell are the machines allowing the Earth's atmosphere to be breathable? Since it would seem the humans' "scorching of the skies" killed off all conventional life on earth other than the humans and the machines, and the machines don't need oxygen, and the only humans that the machines need alive are incased in liquid, couldn't the machines just win a huge victory by unexpectedly flooding the earth's atmosphere with something unbreathable?

            Then again, maybe that is exactly what the machines did? We never see any humans go outside during the Matrix, and the only human city is underground. There's that bit at the end where the Nebucannazar (sp?) gets cut open, but we don't see what happens after the EMP blast; maybe the instant the squiddies are dead, the remaining living humans on the hovercraft have to go running for the oxygen masks.
        • This all seems really poorly thought out beyond the desire to make some cash.

          "--You know what my first big problem with [the Matrix] was? Why use only humans as your energy source? Why didn't we see pods with elk, or some higher-metabolism life form that's easier to please, like puppy dogs? They wouldn't even need some fancy-pants simulated world; just give 'em a loop of chasing rabbits and having their bellies scratched and you've quelled all possible chance of rebellion!"
          --Hsu and Chan

          But seriously.
          • by brianosaurus ( 48471 ) on Saturday April 19, 2003 @07:55PM (#5766417) Homepage
            I don't think the movie goes into it, but one of the earlier versions of the Matrix did use cattle. It was way more efficient, and the simulation (which consisted of little more than large fields of grass) were much simpler.

            After a few years, however, the machines got tired of waiting for Star Wars Galaxies to be released, so they built the human version of the Matrix.
          • Because perhaps the machines wished revenge and imprisonment of the humans. Dogs and elk weren't the ones that enslaved/pissed off the machines. Just a thought.

            It all reminds me very much of "The Deathgate Cycle", a 7 book series by Margaret Weis and Tracy Hickman. Although, throughout those books, as Haplo becomes less of a mystery, he also seems to become less godlike. Neo, on the other hand, is the opposite.

      • Maybe when they say that humans are being used to generate power, they're actually saying that using humans is the best way to minimize (without eliminating, of course) entropic loss. Humans are referred to in the movie as batteries. Perhaps when the sun was taken out of the picture, the machines were stuck with only a limited amount of energy in their (suddenly closed) system. The energy would have to be stored somehow; it seems extremely unlikely but not impossible that us meatsacks were the ideal powe
    • by Spy Hunter ( 317220 ) on Saturday April 19, 2003 @08:00PM (#5766445) Journal
      The guy's "explanation" of consciousness, though, is total junk. He thinks he knows what consciousness is, and why computers can't have it (but quantum computers can). He never explains why quantum computers could have it though (it's in the "implementation," he says). He talks about it as if philosophers had solved the problem of consciousness decades ago and stupid scientists and engineers just can't realize the fact. He trots out the same old tired justifications based on the fact that computers are deterministic, dressed up in some new language. Give me a break! The question of whether computers can be conscious has not been answered, and may never be answered. I don't even think a suitable definition of the term has been found and agreed upon. And if a person ever does answer the question for real, I can guarantee it won't be a philosopher. Most likely it will be the computer scientist who programs the first conscious computer.
      • by perljon ( 530156 ) on Saturday April 19, 2003 @11:25PM (#5767237) Homepage
        Des Cartes, I think, talks about different levels of reality. He places god at the ultimate reality, and everything else has equal or lesser reality. Also, something can only create something at or less than it's reality. Therefore, computers may have consciousness, but it is less real than human consciousness. A program is only aware of several measurements of reality where a human is aware of a lot more. (ie, a program might be able read a light sensor, and a pressure sensor where a human can sea, feel, hear, taste, smell, etc.

        If you believe in God/Angles, perhaps, they have 100's of sensory inputs reading stuff we aren't even aware exists. (ie, a computer program who only has one light sensor with it's limited consciousness will assume all of reality is what comes from that light sensor. humans will assume all of reality exists in light, sound, smell, and touch.)

        Also, if you think about the religious explanation of existance, god said let there be light, and there was light. god said that there be land, and sky, and there was land and sky. god said let there be animals, and there was animals. sounds like a hacker working in the wee hours of the morning building simcity. and if god exists, that's really what we are. we don't even exists in his reality. we are way less real than him, limited in knowledge, senses, and ability. the same kind of limitation's a computer program would have. also, when jesus comes down to earth, it would be like us entering in a matrix like fashion our sim city game.

        And if you take satan's anger at human-kind, it is understandable. it's like your robot being pissed at you for playing sim city all the time. it tries to destroy your computer, so you lock it in the closet. and when you're done playing sim city, your going to pull out some of your favorite sims and place them into robot bodies.
  • Slashdotted (Score:2, Funny)

    by Oopsz ( 127422 )
    Looks like taking down the matrix wasn't so hard at all.
  • Google Cache (Score:5, Informative)

    by bckspc ( 172870 ) on Saturday April 19, 2003 @06:48PM (#5766093) Homepage
    Three comments and already Slashdotted? Damn.

    Here's the Google cache [216.239.57.100].
  • It's all good! (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Lukano ( 50323 ) on Saturday April 19, 2003 @06:49PM (#5766095)
    Anything matrix related is good by me. I've been reading a lot more of the philosophy section of the website lately, and I've also been reading any posts like the one above regarding the theory and science behind the movies/plot/story.

    To be honest, I had no idea "how deep the rabbit hole" really went. The Wachowski brothers are brilliant IMHO, and have one of the most immersive universes I've ever seen. The movies aside, and franchisements out the window, this stands to be one of the most engrossing and amazing "thresholds" of our timeframe.

    And although the naysayers might argue, the Matrix is to me, and many of my friends/family/colleauges, as Star Wars was to the generation two decades ago.
    • Re:It's all good! (Score:5, Insightful)

      by NanoGator ( 522640 ) on Saturday April 19, 2003 @06:58PM (#5766144) Homepage Journal
      "And although the naysayers might argue, the Matrix is to me, and many of my friends/family/colleauges, as Star Wars was to the generation two decades ago. "

      Out of curiosity, how many people didn't like it? I enjoyed the Matrix when I first saw it, but it really doesn't survive the "Let's drag it out once a year and watch it." test with me. Just curious, anybody else feel that way too?

      Not trying to troll here, I just don't see it as the "Star Wars of the late nineties" if it doesn't survive. I'd rather assign that title to the Two Towers.

      • Re:It's all good! (Score:3, Interesting)

        by Lukano ( 50323 )
        It very well could be personal preference on my part, but the theory had stood up against comparisons with friends/family/colleauges time and time again.

        The yardstick I'm using to measure the validity of my statement is the fact that for myself and many others I know, it -does- infact stand the test of being dragged out once a year (or heck, once a quarter in my case) and watched time and time again... And each time I get chills.

        And it's not the special effects that do it for me, not all of it anyways. A
        • Re:It's all good! (Score:5, Insightful)

          by sameb ( 532621 ) on Saturday April 19, 2003 @07:09PM (#5766192) Homepage
          Uh, it's not unique -- atleast the idea isn't. Ever read Plato? It's in The Republic -- The Allegory of the Cave.

          That's the Matrix preloaded.
          • Re:It's all good! (Score:5, Insightful)

            by Lukano ( 50323 ) on Saturday April 19, 2003 @07:12PM (#5766211)
            But how many of todays popular culture addicts would sit down with a copy of Plato's works and read through it? Yes, it may very well enlighten them, and yes they'd learn a lot from it... But hell, these are the same people that watch WWE wrestling religously. :P
            • Re:It's all good! (Score:3, Insightful)

              by belloc ( 37430 )
              But how many of todays popular culture addicts would sit down with a copy of Plato's works and read through it?

              Well, maybe none would, but that doesn't mean they shouldn't or even couldn't. Here's what C.S. Lewis had to say about it in "On the Reading of Old Books":

              There is a strange idea abroad that in every subject the ancient books should be read only by the professionals, and that the amateur should content himself with the modern books. Thus have I found as a tutor in English Literature that if t

          • Re:It's all good! (Score:3, Informative)

            by Samari711 ( 521187 )
            actually it bears more of a resemblence to the evil deciever arguement Descartes makes in Meditations on First Philosophy. basically Descartes supposes that there could be some all-powerful being tricking us in every way possible so that the reality we believe in is totally false. then he goes off and does some really funky stuff like proving the existance of God.
          • Re:It's all good! (Score:3, Interesting)

            by theLOUDroom ( 556455 )
            Uh, it's not unique -- atleast the idea isn't. Ever read Plato? It's in The Republic -- The Allegory of the Cave. That's the Matrix preloaded.

            Actually, a movie that is much closer to "The Allegory of the Cave" is "The Truman Show."

            True-man show, get it? I don't think The Matrix really fits with Plato's allegory very well, Neo doesn't realize he's a prisoner on his own, he gets a lot of help. In the Truman Show everyone is trying to prevent Truman from find out the truth, which is much closer to Pl
      • Re:It's all good! (Score:2, Flamebait)

        by NanoGator ( 522640 )
        Why do I have a feeling I was modded down by somebody who went to the movie wearing sunglasses and a thrift store trench coat?
      • Personally I can still watch The Matrix and be entertained, but at the same time I'm absolutely convinced it won't hold up like Star Wars and the LOTR movies, if only for two reasons...the clothing fashions and the music. Both will seem seriously dated in 10 years because they were very "hip" at the time. Star Wars and LOTR, on the other hand, used more timeless, classical designs for both costumes and music. They will "last" much, much longer.
    • And although the naysayers might argue, the Matrix is to me, and many of my friends/family/colleauges, as Star Wars was to the generation two decades ago.

      If that's true, I pray for your soul. To compare the two movie series is blaphemous.
      • Yeah, Star Wars is boring and has about the philosophical sophistication of George Bush Jr. It is really a movie for children and young teenagers. Later installments are also antidemocratic and full of bullshit.

        OTOH Matrix was a pretty nice movie with a nice story and lots of insider jokes for adults interested in philosophical matters. Some ridiculous plot holes do not make the movie crap.

        What they both have in common is awesome and ahead of their time special effects.

        I guess you meant it the other way
    • Re:It's all good! (Score:3, Interesting)

      by wass ( 72082 )
      I've been reading a lot more of the philosophy section of the website lately

      Firstly, I really liked the matrix alot. It wasn't hyped when I saw it so I had no idea what to expect (I was actually expecting another sub-par Keanu movie). I was blown away, it had lots of awesome action themes all mixed together - guns and ammo, martial arts, computer hackery, electronica soundtrack, etc. I thought it rocked.

      That said, I thought the dialog was rather weak and cheesy at times. Philosophically there was no

      • Re:It's all good! (Score:3, Interesting)

        by Pseudonym ( 62607 )

        When I see The Matrix, I don't think philosophy, I think mythology.

        Have you ever read Joseph Campbell's The Hero With A Thousand Faces? It treats mythology from a Jungian/Freudian psychoanalytic perspective. All of the major elements of classical mythology are present in films like Star Wars or The Matrix.

        Taking the opening The Matrix as an example:

        • The hero (Neo) is given the call to adventure by an apparition (of Trinity). Compare with the hologram of Leia in Star Wars, angelic messengers from the B
  • by Xformer ( 595973 ) <avalon73 @ c a erleon.us> on Saturday April 19, 2003 @06:49PM (#5766099)
    And here I thought that they didn't know what chicken tasted like... hence it tasting like everything. Makes you wonder if someone was paying attention or not...

    And no, I can't RTFA... it's /.-ed already (doh!).
    • You've got it backwards (like the soviet russia joke..). In the matrix, they only know what fried chicken tastes like, thus everything tastes like fried chicken.

      The article attempts to explain how the matrix can know the taste of fried chicken, but not the taste of anything else.

      An online Starcraft RPG? Only at [netnexus.com]
      In the matrix, soviet russia jokes about you!
  • Mirror: (Score:4, Informative)

    by Saint Aardvark ( 159009 ) on Saturday April 19, 2003 @06:50PM (#5766106) Homepage Journal
  • The Agents (Score:2, Funny)

    by IcEMaN252 ( 579647 )
    Sorry guys, the Agents got to this one first.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday April 19, 2003 @06:51PM (#5766111)
    Please mod me up, I need to work on my karma.

    GLITCHES IN THE MATRIX . . . AND HOW TO FIX THEM
    by Peter B. Lloyd

    Why, exactly, do the rebels have to enter the Matrix via the phone system (which after all doesn't physically exist)? And what really happens when Neo takes the red pill (which also doesn't really exist)? And how does the Matrix know what fried chicken tastes like? Technologist and philosopher Peter Lloyd answers these questions and more.

    To be published in Taking the Red Pill: Science, Philosophy and Religion in The Matrix (Ben Bella Books, April 2003). Published on KurzweilAI.net March 3, 2003.

    As the essays throughout this book demonstrate, the Wachowski Brothers designed The Matrix to work at many levels. They carefully thought through the film's philosophical underpinnings, religious symbolism, and scientific speculations. But there are a few riddles in The Matrix, aspects of the film that seem nonsensical or defy the laws of science. These apparent glitches include:

    The Bioport--how can a socket in your head control your senses? How can it be inserted without killing you?

    The Red Pill--since the pill is virtual, how can it throw Neo out of the Matrix?

    The Power Plant--can people really be an energy source?

    Entering and Exiting the Matrix--why do the rebels need telephones to come and go?

    The Bugbot--what's the purpose of the bugbot?

    Perceptions in the Matrix--how do the machines know what fried chicken tastes like?

    Neo's Mastery of the Avatar--how can Neo fly?

    Consciousness and the Matrix--are the machines in the Matrix alive and conscious? Or are they only machines, intelligent but mindless?

    This essay addresses these questions and shows how these seeming glitches can be resolved.

    THE BIOPORT
    Can the machines really create a virtual world through a bioport? And how does it work? The bioport is a way of giving the Matrix computers full access to the information channels of the brain. It is located at the back of the neck--probably between the occipital bone at the base of the skull, and the first neck vertebra. Wiring would best enter through the soft cartilage that cushions the skull on the spinal column, and pass up through the natural opening that lets the spinal cord into the skull. This avoids drilling through bone, and maintains the mechanical and biological integrity of the skull's protection. A baby fitted with a bioport can easily survive the operation.

    The bioport terminates in a forest of electrodes spanning the volume of the brain. In a newborn, the sheathed mass of wire filaments is pushed into the head through the bioport. On reaching the skull cavity, the sheath would be released, and the filaments spread out like a dandelion, gently permeating the developing cortex. Nested sheaths would release a branching structure of filamentary electrodes. As each sheathed wire approaches the surface of the brain, it releases thousands of smaller electrodes. In the neonate, brain cells have few synaptic connections, so the slender electrodes can penetrate harmlessly.

    With its electrodes distributed throughout the brain, the Matrix could deliver its sensory signals in either of two places: at the sensory portals or deep inside the brain's labyrinth. For example, vision could be driven by electrodes on the optic nerves where they enter the brain. Artificial signals would then pass into the visual cortex at the back of the brain, which would handle them as if they had come from the eyes. Correspondingly, outgoing motor nerves would also have electrodes at the boundary of brain and skull. This simple design mirrors the natural state of the brain most closely. It is not, however, the only possibility. Electrodes could alternatively be attached in the depths of the brain, beyond the first stages of the visual cortex. This would greatly simplify the data processing. In normal perception, most of the incoming information isn't processed; information you aren't paying a
    • by TheRaven64 ( 641858 ) on Saturday April 19, 2003 @07:34PM (#5766321) Journal
      Please mod me up, I need to work on my karma.

      Umm, I don't like to break this to you, but karma whoring doesn't work if you post as an AC...

    • by User 956 ( 568564 ) on Saturday April 19, 2003 @08:17PM (#5766524) Homepage
      (continued where the parent got cut off) ... On the other hand, a creature might be profoundly stupid and still have subjective experiences.

      Agent Smith is an example of a machine that manifests humanlike behavior--which, if you witnessed such words and gestures in a human, you would immediately regard them as showing conscious emotions and volitions. Indeed, it is the immediacy of the interpretation that is deceptive. When you see someone laugh with joy, or scream in pain, you do not knowingly infer the person's mental state from those outward signs. Rather, it is as if you see the emotions directly. Yet, we know from accomplished actors that these signs of emotions can be faked. Therefore, you are indeed making an inference, albeit an automatic one. It is a job of philosophy to scrutinize such automatic inference. When you see another human being emoting, your inference is not based wholly on what you see, but also on background information (such as whether the person is acting on the stage). More fundamentally, you are relying on the reasonable assumption that the person's behavior arises from a biological brain just as yours does. Whenever those premises are undermined, you inevitably revise any inferences you have made from the emoting. If the emoting stops and people around you clap, you realize it was a piece of street theatre, and the person was only acting out those emotions. Or, if the person has a nasty car accident that breaks open his head, revealing electronic circuitry instead of a brain, you realize that it was only an android and you may conclude that it was only simulating emotions.

      A key step in the inference is the premise that the emotion plays a role in the causal loop that produces the outward words and gestures. If, instead, we have established that the observed words and gestures are wholly explained in some other way, without involving those emotions--then the inference collapses. The exterior emoting behavior then ceases to count as evidence for an interior emotional experience. If we know that an actor's words and gestures are scripted, then we cease to regard them as evidence for an inward mental state. Likewise, if we know that the words and gestures of an android or avatar are programmed, then they too cease to support any inference of a mental state.

      In an android, or in a software simulation of a human such as an agent, words and gestures are produced by millions of lines of programmed software. The software advances from instruction to instruction in a deterministic manner. Some instructions move pieces of information around inside memory, others execute calculations, others send motor signals to actuators in the body. Each line of code references objective memory locations and ports in the physical hardware. It may do so symbolically, and it may do so via sophisticated data structures, for example, using the tag "vision-field" to reference the stabilized and edge-enhanced data from the eye cams. Nevertheless, nowhere in the software suite does the code break out of that objective environment and refer to the enigmatic contents of consciousness. Nor could the programmer ever do so, since she would need an objective, third-person pointer to the conscious experience--which, being a subjective, first-person thing, cannot be labeled with such a pointer.

      Everything that the android says and does is fully accounted for by its software. There is no explanatory gap left for machine consciousness to fill. When the android says, "I see colors and feel emotions just as humans do," we know that those words are produced by deterministic lines of software that functions perfectly well without any involvement of consciousness. It is because of this that the android's emoting does not provide an iota of evidence for any interior mental life. All the outward signs are faked, and the programmer knows in comprehensive detail how they are faked.

      This point is systematically ignored by the mathematicians and engineers who enthuse about artif
    • by Euphonious Coward ( 189818 ) on Sunday April 20, 2003 @12:27AM (#5767410)
      Can anybody here spell "allegory"?

      These films are not about some possible future. Like all SF, they're about the here-and-now, but masked. What kind of power do the machine masters get from the duped people? Political power. What are these machines, descended from human constructions? Corporations.

      The movies are a metaphor for the world you, personally, are living in right now. You are duped by years of schooling and television to limit yourself to being what amounts to a popsicle in a jar. The corporations still need your votes, so they use the media apparatus they own to mess with your perceptions of reality so much that you actually vote for their automatons.

      Cut yourself off from the media feed, and meditate to still the yammering voices, and you may reprogram your own perceptual reality, as Neo does, and discover endless possibilities inconceivable to the dupes and pink boys.

      Simple, albeit not easy.

      • The allegory is only the first step of the Neo's adventure. Once he realized that the 'real world' is a model playing out in his brain (which is correct), he flips out (following white rabbit, like Alice in Wonderland) and descends into a paranoid schizophrenia. This is similar to Terminator story (or Alices' story), except that in the Terminator, the madness of the female hero (also inhereted by her son) is more explicit.

        The tip-off that it is a madness are the difficulties in maintaining plausibility an
  • by dtolton ( 162216 ) on Saturday April 19, 2003 @06:53PM (#5766118) Homepage
    If you want to read the article you can go here,
    but beware my server isn't too beefy.

    www.dailystatic.com/Matrix.html

    You can read the article, but none of the links inside of it work.
  • Fiction (Score:2, Insightful)

    by inertia187 ( 156602 )
    If it's anything like " [amazon.com]
    The Physics of Star Trek" then I'll pass. Can you say "fiction?"

    Oh, and if it's been slashdotted, here are some mirrors:

    Link 1 [martin-studio.com]

    Link 2 [martin-studio.com]
  • How the hell is a human neural system supposed to react faster than software in a computer system? That's what really bugs me. That, and the blatant disregard for the Laws of Thermodynamics. And Keanu Reeves.
    • Wel very simple, a computer can carry out a number of floating point instructions per second.

      Your brain can carries out 10*10000^(the number of brain cells you have) floating point multiplications per second.

      Try and match that one with a computer system.
  • I'm currently reading "Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas" by Hunter S. Thompson and was struck by a passing reference to "The Matrix" in chapter eight. "The Matrix" in this instance is a name of a night-club (from what I can gather) where general drug-fuelled debauchery takes place. Now, considering the references to pill popping (red pill, blue pill) in "The Matrix" the movie and the surrealism that ensues the pill scene I'm left wondering if the title of the movie is a coded reference to the '60
    • Yes, you are. There really was a club called the Matrix, you can find bootlegs of Jimi Hendrix, Grateful Dead et al. that are audience tapes of shows played there.

      Try watching Matrix Reloaded to see what reading material really inspired the movie.

    • "Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas" predates The Matrix by a number of years. In fact the movie "Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas" predates The Matrix.
  • To take the cynical view, anything can be explained in a made-up universe. Just look at all the "scientific" explanation for events in Star Wars (midiclroians, anyone?).

    That said, its a very impressive article!

    An online Starcraft RPG? Only at [netnexus.com]
    In Soviet Russia, all your us are belong to base!
  • by Apreche ( 239272 )
    That was a lot less geeky, a lot more well thought out and a lot more fun to read than I would have ever imagined it being. Props to the guy who came up with that.
  • by firebat162 ( 463459 ) on Saturday April 19, 2003 @07:09PM (#5766190)
    The part about the human power plant is making me wonder. Why are they keeping the humans around if they are only using them for "parallel computing" and for managing the power plants? If I understand correctly, humans are pretty inefficient. We need to be fed, and the machines have to create the Matrix and regulate us in it.

    Also, one would assume that a lot of machines can process information faster than a lot of human brains.

    So my question is, why are the machines taking the risk of keeping the humans around? why not just kill us off.
    • by ConceptJunkie ( 24823 ) on Saturday April 19, 2003 @07:52PM (#5766405) Homepage Journal
      Well, here's the way I see it. The explanation for humans as given in the movie was extrememly weak. Therefore, in order to "stay" in the world of the movie, I say to myself, "The computers need humans for some reason that is not clearly explained." I don't need to know what that is exactly, I'm willing to accept that it's not adequately explained, or the explanation doesn't make any sense.

      Just repeat to yourself, "It's just a show, I should really just relax."

      At the end of the day it's "robots vs. kung fu". What could be cooler?

    • I agree with you that the author's explanation is pretty weak. Considering that the Matrix central computer has to monitor and control billions of people, each with thousands of brain signals. Since all these signals can occur simultenouly, it implies that the Matrix computer must have massive and efficient parallel processing capability. I mean, if you already have this kind of computing power, why would you still need the human to do the processing?
    • by MsGeek ( 162936 ) on Saturday April 19, 2003 @08:51PM (#5766660) Homepage Journal
      I understand that the original idea for what humans were used for was indeed as you said: parallel computing. However, the suits didn't understand what the Warchovski brothers were talking about when they got to that part of the script. Hence the lame-ass "power plant" explanation.

      It's gonna take a pretty amazing computer to equal or beat the processing power of a human brain. And, at the risk of repeating a cliche, "Imagine a beowulf cluster of those!"
    • Maybe they want to go in the next movies far beyond current philosophic childs play, and catch some other direction in next movies. What if they need to have the brain functioning while they are searching for something inside? What if what machines are really doing with humanity is, well, to find God or something like that? I'm not exactly the religious type, but that kind of things is not so unusual in science fiction.
  • On the one hand, the author argues that the placement of the sensor inputs must not be at the deep inside portion of the brain, since that would mean that the sensory nervous system connecting, say the eyes to the brain stem would otherwise have atrophied.

    On the other hand, the author argues that the brains are being used for nuclear fusion calcuations without any particular side-effect towards their thinking processes or perceptions inside the matrix.

    Is it just me or is this just more pseudo-intellectual
  • Um (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Obiwan Kenobi ( 32807 ) <(evan) (at) (misterorange.com)> on Saturday April 19, 2003 @07:11PM (#5766205) Homepage
    This guy has too much time on his hands.

    Basically he takes the movie he liked, the ideals and the perceptions, and he fills in the blanks.

    Why do they use telephones?

    Answer: It's a movie.
    His Answer: They put network addresses on all data points along the matrix and blah blah blah

    How does the blue/red pills work?

    Answer: It's a movie.
    His Answer: "the avatar's software module must be able to accept instructions to cancel out any given sensory input."

    And, lastly, my favorite:

    What/How does the Bugbot do/work?

    Answer: It's a fucking movie.
    His Answer: "Trinity says that Neo is "dangerous" to them before he is cleaned. We can infer that the bugbot is actually a munition, probably a semtex device that will detonate when it hears Morpheus's voice, killing both Neo and Morpheus and everyone else in the room."

    This guy is just making shit up. Yet you know somewhere somebody is going to really put some thought and invest some time into thinking about this bullshit. Jeez. Where's Penn and Teller [sho.com] when you need em?
    • Re:Um (Score:4, Interesting)

      by asreal ( 177335 ) on Saturday April 19, 2003 @07:55PM (#5766420)

      Obviously you've never worked on a big storytelling project.

      There are a lot of things within the story world that the creators spend a lot of time thinking about. When it's well done, that thinking goes well beyond "wouldn't red or blue pills be cool?" to actual thought about how the people in the real world could track down people in an immense simulation. Obviously the science won't be perfect, but don't think for a second that the creators of the Matrix of lots of other scifi films don't have a good idea how their world operates.

      Projects like The Matrix start out with "woah man, what if the world were just a simulation?" and from there evolve into functional worlds. Machines took over and wired up humans. Why wire them up instead of killing them all? For power. Why not use solar energy or some other source? Sky was darkened. Why not give them a perfect world they wouldn't want to escape from? Their brains won't accept it. This kind of question and answer is what leads to stories.

      Storytelling is important. It has been for years. The people who stop to look at how good stories are told are the ones who will be able to tell stories of their own.

      • Re:Um (Score:3, Funny)

        by jim3e8 ( 458859 )
        The people who stop to look at how good stories are told are the ones who will be able to tell stories of their own.

        And often in the form of bad fan fiction. ;)
    • Re:Um (Score:4, Funny)

      by shayne321 ( 106803 ) on Saturday April 19, 2003 @10:41PM (#5767060) Homepage Journal
      Answer: It's a movie.
      His Answer: They put network addresses on all data points along the matrix and blah blah blah

      Yeah, how depressing is it to know they're still using ipv4 (9.54.296.42 -- example in the article) in the future? Obviously the 296 octet gives it away as an invalid IP, but it's STILL an ipv4-style address.

      Guess IPv4 is here to stay for a while.

      Shayne

  • The Matrix Computer (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Vireo ( 190514 ) on Saturday April 19, 2003 @07:11PM (#5766206)
    Evidently, the fusion is the real source of energy that the machines use. So what are humans doing in the power plant? Controlled fusion is a subtle and complex process, requiring constant monitoring and micromanaging. The human brain, on the other hand, is a superb parallel computer. Most likely, the machines are harnessing the spare brainpower of the human race as a colossal distributed processor for controlling the nuclear fusion reactions.

    ... And what if the computer on which the Matrix itself run was a vastly parallel biocomputer composed of billions of human brains? That would be an even better explanation IMHO.

    • by Surlyboi ( 96917 )
      Read the Gaiman story on the Matrix site. He basically came
      up with that very explanation before the first movie even
      came out.

      It's a great read too, probably one of the better side stories
      I've seen.
    • by Have Blue ( 616 ) on Saturday April 19, 2003 @08:00PM (#5766443) Homepage
      This idea provides a neat solution to the problem of how the humans can outperform the computers in the Matrix, suggested above...

      Consider this suggestion of running the Matrix process on the human brain as if it was a node in a distributed cluster. There's a great deal of Matrix information stored in the brain, but there's also a human consciousness alongside it in there, unaware that there's data flowing through your unused neurons. "Freeing your mind" could consist of gaining the ability to allow your consciousness to attach to the Matrix simulation the same way a debugger attaches to an existing process (or an aimbot attaches to CS), gain access to its data, and start poking values. The AIs would have to allow individual nodes to be authoritative to realize any net gain, so any changes you imagine to your own Matrix node would be propagated to others as reality, and you would be able to "will" your strength to increase the same way your aimbot can "will" perfect headshots at 100m. This would also explain why hacking the Matrix involves so much activity that resembles meditation/concentration techniques.
    • It would also allow a better explanation for why Neo can get around the rules of physics than the handwaving "Agent's Have Special Ports!" one. If the Matrix is running in Neo's head, he has ultimate control over it.
    • Then what would be the point of keeping all those humans alive? The matrix is only there for the humans, so they wouldn't need it at all if they didn't need the humans.
  • But quite clever all the same. However, some of the explanations were somwhat on the superficial side!
  • Hell is Other People (Score:3, Interesting)

    by humpTdance ( 666118 ) on Saturday April 19, 2003 @07:18PM (#5766244)
    It is interesting that the W brothers chose to let the human body transcend The Matrix. If the they really wanted to blow my mind, Neo would have awoken to a reality where nothing but the cognitive functions of his brain translated into the next world, where the causalities of the environment we live in (gravity, seeing the inside of a building instead of the outside when we walk into it, etc.) were all in question, where Neo would have had to learn how to use a body completely alien to himself and interact in a universe that functioned under different rules.

    The paradox of Neo "freeing" people from the Matrix is that real freedom only exists within the simulation. Those who have been enlightened have the power and will to function outside of normal environmental limitations in the "real" world. Everyone else is just a peasant.

  • by A_Non_Moose ( 413034 ) on Saturday April 19, 2003 @07:21PM (#5766261) Homepage Journal
    Morpheous: The matrix is everywhere. You can feel it when you go to work, when you go to church...when you pay your taxes....

    Neo: Oh! Shit! My TAXES. TRINITY! HELP!

    heh.
  • Since when is... (Score:4, Interesting)

    by inode_buddha ( 576844 ) on Saturday April 19, 2003 @07:24PM (#5766269) Journal
    "willful suspension of disbelief" uncommon? How many times a day do we already do this, and why?

    IMHO, it's a lot more common than many people are willing to admit; and the mental/philosophical "construct" we use every day is every bit as large and fascinating as the "construct" used in the movie.

    Classical examples from science: At one time, the Earth was substantially flat. It also revolved around the Sun. QED.

    It will be interesting to see if science per se can make anything of this, let alone go beyond its own limits. All I'm saying is that maybe the limits of science are actually the limits of the mind, given a material form.
  • by void* ( 20133 ) on Saturday April 19, 2003 @07:26PM (#5766280)
    I always just figured that they planted an exploit that allows them to hook their equipment into the simulation in the code that simulates the phone system, and the 'getting in/out through the phone system that doesn't exist' was just how it manifested itelf within the simulation.

    No big deal. :)
  • by nizo ( 81281 ) on Saturday April 19, 2003 @07:27PM (#5766292) Homepage Journal
    By "THE NEED", I mean every geek's need to explain everything and make sure nothing in the movie violates any of the known laws of physics, rather than just enjoying a movie?
  • by Anonymous Coward
    I think that he has fallen into the same trap as many philosophers in saying that human can have consciousness because their brains are made of neurons, and machines cannot because they are just software. Well, I think he's wrong. Neurons are a lot more deterministic than he thinks, and code can be very non-deterministic, especially when it's massively parallel and asynchronous. He is foolish to dismiss emergent properties out of hand, because they are a real phenomenon. For example, it is possible to const
  • Welcome to the Desert of the Real: The Philosophy of the Matrix. It's a collection of essays on various philosophical and religious points of view as espoused in The Matrix, by the same guy who edited the Simpsons and Seinfeld philosophy books. I would link to it, but my work computer system is retarded enough not to allow cut and paste. A websearch should turn it up, though.

    (I need to finish reading it and get it back to the library before they send me to collections.)
  • by vkg ( 158234 ) on Saturday April 19, 2003 @07:43PM (#5766365) Homepage
    We all know (don't we?) that The Matrix is basically a somewhat mismashed version of the Perennial Philosophy [google.com]. Life is a dream, God is real, Synchronicity is normal. The Matrix (like Stranger in a Strange Land) adds some SF tropes, and does a better job than most of presenting the material in an interesting way, by picking up the gnostic tropes of the Demiurge, an evil creator god who runs the system.

    The interesting thing is how powerfully The Matrix affects people who watch it. Much like ritual theater [google.com] has done through the ages, some kind of genuine awakening (not in the Buddhist sense, necessarily) seems to often occur.

    One question is, of course, how to maintain the awakening. How to stay aware that, in some sense, life is real-and-unreal.

    Another is the status of the "demiurge" - the thread (or blanket) of evil which we find in the world around us. It's not for nothing that Agents look like people from the government; there has ever been the conciet that government somehow causes spiritual enslavement, rather than being the mere result of it.

    Of course, for what it's worth, I recon that the people are sleeping because it is night-time.
  • by mqRakkis ( 521550 ) <`moc.liamg' `ta' `nenimrunr'> on Saturday April 19, 2003 @07:50PM (#5766392) Homepage
    mr. Lloyd that The Matrix is actually a movie and not a documentary ;-)

  • That spare capacity remains available for others to exploit, and the rebels use it to download kung-fu expertise into Neo's brain and to implant helicopter piloting skills into Trinity's. If the Matrix ever learned this technique, it could create havoc for the rebels, implanting impulses to serve its own ends.

    Actually, I was working on this feature for Matrix 4.0. They scrapped the project when the bros decided to make it a trilogy. Now, I am unemplyed :'(
  • by mcc ( 14761 ) <amcclure@purdue.edu> on Saturday April 19, 2003 @08:10PM (#5766493) Homepage
    Some thoughts on the whole idea that keeping a bunch of humans alive to use them as an energy source doesn't make any sense, becuase conservation of energy demands you'd put more energy into keeping the humans alive than you could get out:

    Question: Isn't it true that a nuclear fusion reaction, if you can figure out how to make one, takes an absolutely fantastic amount of energy to initiate and maintain? I know nothing about nuclear physics, but what i've read seems to indicate that the point of fusion is that you put a fantastic amount of energy in and you get a fantastic amount of energy back. The problem so far is that no one has figured out how to get out more energy than you put in.

    So wouldn't it be logical to say that the huge mass of humans *are*, in fact, a net energy drain because energy is needed to create whatever protein the humans use for IV foodstuffs, but they are needed and maintained becuase they can at any time desired be used briefly as a massive source to pull energy from? Note that Morpheus doesn't say that humans are used as generators; he says they're used as batteries. Wouldn't it make sense to suppose that perhaps the human race encased in the Matrix is just there in case the sustained fusion reaction the machines are actually using to generate their power ever goes out and has to be restarted, or in case the machines need to start up a new reactor? Meaning basically, the Matrix is nothing more than a giant UPS? Does this make any sense at all?

    None of this, of course, explains why the machines, given a level of technology that would make it possible to build both Zion and the Matrix, wouldn't just harness tidal energy as a power source! Did the americans finally blow up the moon or something?

    Anyway, as far as the article's parallell processing thing goes, that seems really silly to me. If the machines have figured out how to use human brains as processors, wouldn't they build the machines themselves using human brains as processors to run the AIs on? You could claim "how do you know they aren't", but i'll tell you how i know they aren't: if they can control biological material to that extent, then they can make machines that the EMP blasts are useless against. I do, however, really like the article author's insinuation that Morpheus actually has no idea what the Matrix is for, and erroneously believes it's a power plant.

    (One totally non-power-related possibility of what the Matrix could be used for: possibly the machines really just don't like the idea of making the human race extinct. They don't want the humans running around in the real world and working against the machines' designs, but they're for whatever reason not okay with just wiping the humans out; maybe they don't actually hate the humans, they just don't want the humans to be a threat. Maybe the Matrix is just a means of preservation of the human race, one that the machines get nothing positive out of except as a memento of their creators. (Hitler's original plans for the holocaust apparently stated, after everything was done, the world was conquered, and the holocaust was complete, that one single village of Jews should be left alive, sealed off from the outside world, and allowed to simply live on their lives. In Hitler's warped mind this was supposed to be some kind of preserved-in-amber cultural museum of a dead race, just so future aryan generations could know they existed. I cannot remember the exact details of this and may be partially misremembering it in that there wouldn't actually be any living people in this preserved-in-amber village. Does anyone know what i'm referring to? Anyway, possibly the Matrix is something of that sort.). Or, possibly, the machines actually believe they are working in the humans service and they put the humans into the matrix "for their own good", as some kind of highly warped overzealous implementation of Asimov's zeroth law, on the logic if the humans are trapped in a digital fantasyworld, if they knock themselves out with nuclear holoca
    • Three words: Dude. You. Rock.

      w00t!

    • To me there's no need to explain this statement at all. It's a lot easier to assume that Morpheus just didn't know what he was talking about. After all, there are lots of things about reality that he (and everyone else) didn't know, like what year it was. So I think that the "freed" humans figured out most of the obvious details, guessed on the rest---and got some of them wrong.
  • so whats the determinate of "the matrix"

    *ducks*
  • by saikou ( 211301 ) on Saturday April 19, 2003 @08:35PM (#5766590) Homepage
    The whole idea can fall apart, if at the end of the 3rd Matrix movie Neo will wake up once again in his bed, late for work. Then he will describe all this crazy 2.9 movie long dream in his blog, where Morpheus, Trinity and other friends with familiar nicknames will comment vividly, suggesting crazy interpretations and hinting at "too much stress", as Neo's co-workers get laid off one by one by a reputable software company. His medically educated friend will point out that all knowing Oracle is a reference to a well know database product, for which Neo writes stored procedures, constantly having problems with number of DB Agents, he sometimes referrs to "Smith". Lady in Red is a secretary of his boss.

    But then you'll say... :) :)
  • My thinking (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Vip ( 11172 ) on Saturday April 19, 2003 @08:58PM (#5766700)
    I think this guy put way too much thinking into a movie. I prefer the simple solutions for it, some
    of them matching his though...BTW, I've only
    skimmed the article, don't have that much time :-)
    I agree with him on much of it, but wow, talk
    about detail!

    The Bioport--how can a socket in your head control your senses? How can it be inserted without killing you?

    Easy enough. It fits with the massively parallel computer theory later. They need to figure out the
    data transfer to and from brain, so this would be
    the next step beyond that, control of the brain
    to receive and send specific signals.

    The Red Pill--since the pill is virtual, how can it throw Neo out of the Matrix?

    This "red pill" meant to me that you are ready to
    wake up from complete control. Sort of like you
    were in hypnosis, now the fingers are snapped and
    you're awake!

    The Power Plant--can people really be an energy source?

    Yes and no. I too thought of the brain power
    theory. It seems to fit and makes for interesting
    theories. (ie. does the Matrix run on human brains
    for power and computing power as well? So humans
    are feeding their own minds?)

    Entering and Exiting the Matrix--why do the rebels need telephones to come and go?

    This too I figured was a navagational issue. It
    seems to be easier to send data around, so if you
    knew of a data point, you could get to it. Why
    certain ones? Perhaps so you don't go hunting
    for that cordless between the cushions? :-)

    The Bugbot--what's the purpose of the bugbot?

    Bugbot tells Agents where it is. Perhaps it's just
    an identifier, a certain string? Look for that
    string, and you've got him. Sort of how virus
    scanners work?

    Perceptions in the Matrix--how do the machines know what fried chicken tastes like?

    Completely made up and arbitrary. Does it matter?

    Neo's Mastery of the Avatar--how can Neo fly?

    Neo can fly because he's mastered the Matrix. I
    thought of it more as he can now reshape the
    Matrix near him to do what he wants. Kind of like
    a virus, or bug.

    Consciousness and the Matrix--are the machines in the Matrix alive and conscious? Or are they only machines, intelligent but mindless?

    Both. Give it kind of a Terminator scenario,
    except keep the humans, their brains and body
    come in handy. The machines are just overthrowing
    the people that built them, perhaps they
    got out of hand too.

    Vip
  • In fact, Smith gives himself away when he says about the human world, "It's the smell, if there is such a thing . . . I can taste your stink and every time I do, I fear that I've somehow been infected by it." Smith's own logical integrity obliges him to doubt the existence of that noncomputable quality that humans talk about: the conscious experience of smell. When Smith says, ". . . the smell, if there is such a thing," he is exhibiting the mark of the automaton. This is corroborated when he then tells Morpheus that he can "taste your stink," revealing that Smith simply does not understand the differentiation of senses in the human mind. For a computer, data are interchangeable, but for a human, tastes, smells, colors, sounds, and feels, are irreducibly different. This fact eludes Agent Smith.

    Seems that the author lacks the perspective to get this last one right. Agent Smith comes from another world completely, and is trying to express emotions and concepts that are completely alien. What must it feel like to be a noncorporeal entity that usually resides in abstract softwareland, that once in awhile has to interact in a simulation so complex that it must be mapped to its own abstract reality-experience? I mean, here you are trying to explain to Morpheus your disgust (which you do somewhat well at) over a sensory experience that has no exact analog in the simulation? If a human could feel this, would it seem more like a taste, more like a smell? A combination of the two? He is doing this best to bridge a gap that none will ever do... Morpheus can hardly go to software-land to see what it feels like there. If he did, and tried to communicate, would the evil AI's be convinced that he isn't truly sentient, because he fails to completely understand their alien and unnameable sensory experiences, of which he himself interprets as something similar to smell/taste, or sight/hearing? The "sight/hearing" experience might actually be 7 distinct sensory experiences, which the human mind confuses as a single concept.

    I for one do believe that emergent properties in a complex or chaotic system can produce our much overhyped "consciousness". But even if they can't, the author himself suggests that the machines may be based on a technology that would allow it to happen. I can only assume that he is biased toward his own species, to biology... maybe that's not such a bad thing. But maybe if we had shown a little more tolerance, given a little more benefit of the doubt to Skynet, it would have decided it didn't have to nuke every damn one of us to survive.

    PS On the other hand, maybe we should build a manual kill switch into every candidate computer that isn't part of the blueprints or any electronically accessible record...
  • by Elwood P Dowd ( 16933 ) <judgmentalist@gmail.com> on Saturday April 19, 2003 @09:47PM (#5766859) Journal
    He says that the reason Neo (and the others) have superhuman powers in the matrix is because they figure out ways to use their interface in unpredicted ways and use otherwise agent-only APIs to the avatar software.

    That makes sense for Morpheus, Trinity, et al. They have superhuman powers that are comparable to the agents. However, it is said that the agents, finally, are limited by certain physical rules, and the reason that Neo is special is that he is not limited by those same rules. He can rewrite the matrix.

    There are ten million different perfectly acceptable software-design explanations for these mechanics. However, the author has described none of them. If he's using special APIs, then the agents would be able to do the same shit.

    Perhaps he can change code in the virtual machine (hehe. pun.). Perhaps he can change source. Perhaps he realized that the matrix was using strcpy() for a root-level process. Like I said, there are ten million different ways to explain this. But the author is wrong, and exhibits a simple failure to understand the actual movie.
  • A Bit Flawed... (Score:3, Informative)

    by Krokus ( 88121 ) on Saturday April 19, 2003 @09:50PM (#5766871) Homepage
    I'm not sure if I would agree with his explanation of cell phones and why they can't be used to enter/exit the Matrix:
    "The software that simulates the cell phones is running inside the Nebuchadnezzar's computer, not the Matrix's computer, so the rebels must find a land line--which are somewhat scarce in an era when everyone has a cell phone."

    Didn't Neo steal some guy's cell phone while trying to escape the Matrix, yet was able to use it to communicate with the Nebuchadnezzar? Didn't Cypher use his cell phone to dial a traceable number within the Matrix to tip off the Agents to their location?

    I think a better explanation would be that cell phones can't be used because they are portable. Therefore, they cannot be "attached" to a specific volume of space. Moving al the information for an avatar from one network node to another as they move from room to room would be ridculously prohibitive, so the node that stores the information for a specific volume of space would not necessarily include portable objects like cell phones, or avatars.

    Instead, the node containing the volume would contain references or identifiers to the objects within that space.

    Therefore, cell phones cannot be used reliably to associate the node containing the volume with the node containing the avatar, since the cell phone itself may be on a third node all by itself. A hard line, however, would be a permanent fixture (or semi-permanent if the machines practice refactoring), so the node containing the volume of space would be gauranteed to be be the one that references the avatar.

    The cell phone would not directly reference the avatar because it is not a volume of space (it would be like trying to find out what hotel you're staying in by asking, say, one of your shoelaces).

    While I'm sure that explanation has its own set of holes, it makes more sense (to me, at least) than the one in the essay.

  • What this little blurb doesn't tell you is that Lloyd's essay is just one of several in a book he's not the author of. It's from editor Glenn Yeffeth's Taking the Red Pill: Science, Philosophy and Religion in The Matrix , BenBella Books, 2003. It includes an introduction by David Gerrold, and contributions by James Gunn, Ray Kurzweil, Bill Joy, and many others.

    In a case of good timing, I just happened to put the one copy I had up on eBay at:

    http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item =3515533389 [ebay.com]

  • by Herkum01 ( 592704 ) on Saturday April 19, 2003 @10:29PM (#5767029)

    He failed to explain how people got hooked to the Matrix in the first place. However, I do the story. It came about that the machines were to having to draw people into connecting this plug into their head. Looking for the gullible of the human species, they bought AOL.

    With the largest number of customers in the world, they quickly assimilated them with offer's of DSL for $5.95 a month and said that they were phasing out dial-up service. All you needed was this chip in the back of your head. So while most people were discouraged because of the lack of dial-up they were too lazy to change their email addresses so they were the first. Next where the techies, and /.ers. While wary of giant companies the draw for cheap DSL access was too much and it was like lambs to the slaughter. Eventually with other service providers going out of business the Matrix bought them all up and integrated their clients too. The dream of world domination at hand.

    The holdouts were the 20% of people who declared that they "Would never need access." They were the one's that went on to establish Zion. They had to dig deep to escape the piles of AOL CD's that were being put into their mailboxes. It was the only way to preserve their sanity, or so the legend goes.

    So now you have the complete story, oh and I hire that one of the new agents in the movie is called Mr. Case, coincidence? I think not!

  • by Doomrat ( 615771 ) on Saturday April 19, 2003 @11:48PM (#5767314) Homepage

    Q. Can humans really be an energy source?
    A. It's just a film.

    Q. How does the Matrix know what fried chicken taste like?
    A. It's just a film.

    Q. Why do the rebels have to enter and exit the Matrix via a telephone system (that doesn't actually exist)?
    A. It's just a film.

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