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Below are the 20 most recent journal entries recorded in Diary of a Seasteader's LiveJournal:

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    Tuesday, September 30th, 2008
    10:54 am
    Last chance to register for conference events
    This week is the last chance to RSVP for our upcoming conference and related events.

    First annual conference - Friday, October 10th
    Post-Conference Kayaking! - Saturday, October 11th
    Post-Conference Dinner on Floating Island Restaurant! - Saturday, October 11th

    You are welcome to come to kayaking or the Forbes Island dinner whether or not you attend the conference.

    Current Music: Yeha-Noha - Sacred Spirits
    Wednesday, May 28th, 2008
    10:27 pm
    Snippets through 5/28/2008
    Snippets through 5/28/2008

    And lots of other posts, friend [info]tsi_main_full (full feed) or [info]tsi_main (post summaries) to get them all, as this blog will be discontinued soon. Seems a little strange that the syndicated feeds have a total of 17 friends while this journal has 115...

    Current Music: Nessun Dorma - Vanessa Mae
    Monday, May 19th, 2008
    7:54 pm
    Posts for the week at the new blog
    Weekly Snippets, 5/19/2008
    2008 Conference Date/Location Feedback!
    Call For Volunteers!
    TSI 2008 Strategy
    Reagan's Shining Cities on the High Seas (first guest post from board Chairman Joe Lonsdale)

    Current Music: Chicane Anthology Vol 1 - 2003_www.djriver.com - DJ River
    Monday, May 12th, 2008
    5:26 pm
    Monday, May 5th, 2008
    11:26 am
    Seastead blog posts for the week
    Why Seasteading Matters

    Heading to Offshore Technology Conference next week!

    Name for an agglomeration of seasteads

    This week's snippets were quite short:
    Not a lot of external progress to report this week, as we were focused on our first Board meeting and 2008 strategy. Now that we've done that, expect to see some detailed volunteer project specs and job requisitions coming up. I'm headed to the OTC tonight, and may blog from there.

    Happy Cinco De Mayo!


    Current Music: Homebase - dZihan & Kamien - Cafe Del Mar
    Monday, April 28th, 2008
    10:28 pm
    Weekly Snippets, 4/28/08
    (you can comment on the original post on the new blog)
    • Community
    • Administrative
      • We have a board meeting this week, and will be finalizing 2007 strategy so we can get some job/volunteer reqs and projects posted.
      • We're on track to apply for nonprofit status in a couple weeks.
      • Wayne toured some potential office/workshop/dock space in Redwood City, there's also a conference center on the water there we might snag for our first conference in the fall.
    • Research - natch
    • Engineering - Wayne wrote up a Base Seastead design to serve as a strawman for discussion.  We talked to a helpful offshore structure engineer and got a lot of useful info about how to set up our research program.


    Current Music: Deep Dance 74 Der Summermix 20 - VA
    Tuesday, April 22nd, 2008
    5:05 pm
    new blog posts
    This blog still seems to have a lot more readers than the new one ([info]tsi_main, RSS, HTML), so I'll cross-post a few items here to advertise the new blog, since there's been some (IMNSHO) interesting stuff:
    Wednesday, April 16th, 2008
    11:15 am
    LJ feed of seasteading blog
    [info]tsi_main, press releases (very occasional, major announcements, like yesterday's): [info]tsi_pr

    Current Music: Bruch / Scottish Fantasy: Allegro - Vanessa Mae
    Tuesday, April 15th, 2008
    8:00 pm
    This blog is going inactive
    I will be blogging over at the new Seasteading Institute website. Here's my blog. We'll be adding more specialized blogs over time.

    Bye for now...see you soon!
    7:58 pm
    Introducing The Seasteading Institute


    Mountain View, CA, April 15th, 2008. The Seasteading Institute today announced that it has been established in order to establish permanent, autonomous ocean communities to enable experimentation and innovation with diverse social, political, and legal systems. It will continue and expand on the work of Patri Friedman and Wayne Gramlich, authors of "Seasteading: A Practical Guide to Homesteading the High Seas".

    "The public sector is simultaneously the largest industry in the world and the least innovative, with a barrier to entry and lock-in on its customers that dwarfs any private monopoly", says Patri Friedman, TSI's Executive Director. "The world needs a new model of politics where a diverse ecosystem of providers offers a variety of institutions that evolve to serve their citizens. The open oceans, Earth's last frontier, are the ideal place to nurture this vision of a better world. By making it safe and affordable to settle this frontier, we will give people the freedom to choose the government they want instead of being stuck with the government they get."

    To help launch the organization, entrepreneur and philanthropist Peter Thiel has pledged $500,000 to The Seasteading Institute, saying: “Accelerating innovation is rapidly transforming the world: the Seasteading Institute will help bring more of that innovation to the public sector, where it’s vitally needed. Decades from now, those looking back at the start of the century will understand that Seasteading was an obvious step towards encouraging the development of more efficient, practical public sector models around the world. We’re at a fascinating juncture: the nature of government is about to change at a very fundamental level."

    The Institute will initially focus on three major areas:
    • Community: Building a network of potential residents who are inspired by the possibilities of seasteading and have the skills and resources to establish vibrant new communities.
    • Research: Exploring the core requirements for seasteading to be safe and affordable, such as structure design, political feasibility, and infrastructure (power, heat, food) and advancing key seasteading technologies through independent research and partnerships.
    • Engineering: Proving that the mission is viable by building a safe, cost-effective, gorgeous seastead, based in the San Francisco Bay and able to travel in the open ocean.

    For more information, see the Institute's website, www.seasteading.org.

    Contact:

    The Seasteading Institute
    info@seasteading.org
    http://www.seasteading.org/

    (The Seasteading Institute is a California nonprofit corporation that is in the process of applying for recognition of tax exemption under Section 501(c)3 of the Internal Revenue Code.)

    Original press release can be found here.
    Thursday, April 10th, 2008
    9:39 am
    Forums
    What forums would you most like to see on the (soon to be launched) new website? I think we should have a fairly small number to start, we can expand based on the amount of traffic. Note that we get to group forums into "containers". I'm thinking something like:

    Community
    * Social Chat
    * Feedback for TSI
    * Conference
    * Other New Country Projects

    Engineering
    * Structure
    * Infrastructure
    * TSI Prototypes

    Politics
    * Current Politics
    * Seastead Political Systems

    Misc
    * Seastead Businesses
    * Environmentalism

    Current Music: The Mystic's Dream - Loreena McKennitt
    Tuesday, April 8th, 2008
    1:51 pm
    An octopus's garden...in the shade
    It seems quite likely that our large sea-cities will be free-floating, for various reasons. First, there are not very many seamounts to anchor to in international waters (> 200nm from any place a rock sticks its nose above water). Second, the need for an exit from unhappy nation-neighbors and the dictates of dynamic geography to be modular suggest that we'll get more freedom and safety if we aren't tied down. Just common sense, really.

    One downside to being in the vasty deep is missing out on one of the traditionally neat things about the ocean: its multicolored bounty of fish, ranging from lovely to wonderfully freaky in appearance. But perhaps we can nurture our own artificial reef, hanging below us and carried along with us, in a similar way to how Delaware had been turning old subway cars into fish condominiums:
    Sixteen nautical miles from the Indian River Inlet and about 80 feet underwater, a building boom is under way at the Red Bird Reef.

    One by one, a machine operator has been shoving hundreds of retired New York City subway cars off a barge, continuing the transformation of a barren stretch of ocean floor into a bountiful oasis, carpeted in sea grasses, walled thick with blue mussels and sponges, and teeming with black sea bass and tautog.

    “They’re basically luxury condominiums for fish,” Jeff Tinsman, artificial reef program manager for the Delaware Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control, said as one of 48 of the 19-ton retirees from New York City sank toward the 666 already on the ocean floor.
    I can imagine a seastead doing the same, perhaps with old cargo containers. The main issue I see is nutrients - many parts of the ocean are nutrient poor. The garden might require an associated pump to bring up nutrient-rich water from the seabed...which is going to be tough if the seabed is miles deep. Or perhaps organic waste from the city above will be a sufficient nutrient supply.
    Friday, April 4th, 2008
    10:48 am
    Floating Home 3d Warehouse challenge
    Google's 3D Warehouse for SketchUp models has a weekly challenge. Last week's was to model a floating home.
    Thursday, April 3rd, 2008
    2:53 pm
    Name Poll, part deux
    here
    Wednesday, April 2nd, 2008
    10:55 pm
    Name poll
    There's a poll about what to name the nonprofit up here.

    Current Music: Away - Nightwish
    9:07 pm
    Sealevator
    Wayne had an awesome idea today for a demo device we could build in the Bay, we call it the sea-elevator (sealevator?).

    Here's the motivation. Imagine you have a bunch of really big seasteads floating near each other, and they don't want to actually be directly connected (maybe they are very independent and want to be able to leave at a moment's notice, maybe it's a big storm and that's tough on connections, maybe a consultant tells us you just can't connect these things). But of course, you want a way to get between them without going all the way down to the ocean's surface, or having to deal with waves. And you want a way to get from boats up to the platforms, and back. There will probably be an elevator in the spar on each big seastead, but this is more fun...

    Imagine a "seastead" with a really really long thin pillar (say 200' long), and a little tiny platform on top (10' diameter). It has a propeller below the water's surface (maybe on it's buoyancy, maybe on a floating collar so it's always just below the surface). And you can pump water into the floatation chamber to reduce/increase buoyancy of the sealevator to make it go up or down (this has always been our plan for seasteads).

    So you could get onto it from a big seastead, and it would motor you over to another big seastead. Or you could lower it all the way to the water, get from a boat onto the sealevator platform, and then inflate the buoyancy and zoom! Shoot up to the level of the big seasteads.

    In other words, it's a horizontal and vertical elevator!

    The best part is, we can build one of these in the bay relatively cheaply, because it doesn't have many parts or materials. So you take a boat out to this thing, and you see a little platform floating on the water, and you get on, and zoom! You go up 100' in the air. You get a great 360 view of the bay, maybe you do something crazy like rappelling down (for fun), or jumping off with a hang-glider, or you bring it down to just 30' and dive off into the Bay, I dunno. Wouldn't that be a rad demo? Plus a good test of some of the basic technology.

    Current Music: Away - Nightwish
    Monday, March 31st, 2008
    2:02 pm
    Plausibility of refusing federal funds for FSP in NH?
    One of the things I've been writing up lately is a pitch to libertarians about why they should see seasteading as the most promising road to a libertarian society. Part of this is an analysis of proposed alternatives, such as the Free State Project.

    My basic thoughts on the FSP are that it displays the kind of systems-level thinking that I think is crucial to any practical proposal, but that the idea has serious problems. Briefly: First, it doesn't seem to be attractive to enough people - the current estimated time to 20K is about 6 more years. Second, the FSP, by targeting the state level, is trying to fix what least needs fixing. Most problems are federal - we expect this theoretically (the bigger the government, the worse it works) and it is true empirically if you look at tax burden.

    The most plausible response to this addresses the second point, claiming that much of the federal influence over the states is not enforced coercively (via the supremacy clause), but through the threat of withdrawing federal funds which are directed to the state. Thus New Hampshire could achieve significant autonomy by refusing these funds.

    I know nothing about this subject. Does anyone know if their claim is true? Do the feds control states partly through federal funding? Have states ever tried to follow the route of refusing such funds? More speculatively: would it increase practical autonomy, or just provoke a massive counter-response of legislation?

    (I should note that I still think the FSP is a good idea. I am a big fan of community, and encouraging a community of freedom-oriented people to congregate in a fairly free state seems like a great idea. I'm just skeptical of how much impact it will have beyond the immediate increased freedom for those who move, and the pleasantness of having a community of like-minded individuals.)

    Current Music: Erasure - Where Were You - New Wave 80's -
    Wednesday, March 26th, 2008
    3:56 pm
    New intro to seasteading
    and a short description of the nonprofit foundation I'm working on setting up, here.
    12:57 pm
    Wayne's latest design thoughts

    As the project has been getting more active lately, Wayne & I are going to start meeting more on Wednesday's. We had an interesting design discussion about some of his thoughts on spar construction, Personal Seasteads, and detachable spars. Highlights:

    Read more... )
    Sunday, March 16th, 2008
    11:57 am
    Link aggregation
    One thing I've been thinking about for the website lately is link and news story aggregation. Basically, I want the community (that is, you) to be able to tag and vote on links. These links would be of two types: timely links (new news stories, blog posts) and timeless ones (informational webpages). In both cases, you'd want to be able to get RSS feeds of new additions, and RSS feeds of only highly-rated new additions. In the case of timeless links, it would be nice to have them organized or tagged by other categories.

    It seems like some combination of delicious and digg is the way to go. Although I guess delicious does have some ranking based on how many other people have saved the link, so maybe you don't need digg. But the ranking is key - I don't want to read a feed of everything that has been submitted, only things that have been vetted to some degree by those who contribute by reviewing everything.

    Anyway, for now, I encourage y'all to tag links of interest to seasteading with the "seasteading" delicious tag. Thanks to everyone who is already doing so!

    I made a Yahoo Pipe that takes the most recent 30 seasteading tagged entries, and keeps those w/ at least 10 delicious saves. (note that # of delicious saves is capped at 30 the way that I get them, so entries in the list that say "30" mean "at least 30"). I dunno how to get more than 30 entries before filtering. Or how to use Digg, which seems like a better ranking mechanism - I can't figure out how to get the story id for a given URL. At least it's a start.

    If any of y'all are mashup wizards, feel free to whip something better up :). I can give you the spec for what I have in mind.
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