h a l f b a k e r yBuy 1/4, get 1/4 free.
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
Please log in.
Before you can vote, you need to register.
Please log in or create an account.
|
Blindfolded, I can't distinguish a mock-up beach with audio equipment, sand and sun lamps from a real beach. You blindfold me and simulate plane flight and realistic delays, and I would think it was real. The trick requires unprecedented attention to detail. But the illusion disappears if you told
me beforehand that it will be a simulation.
Instead of telling me that it will be a simulation, tell me there is a chance that I will go on a real vacation. As a business, you make this offer to a thousand people. You send some of them on actual chartered flights to exotic places and lead them around blindfolded. The rest of them, also blindfolded, are given simulations.
That is, you lead them blindfolded around a large movie studio with the appropriate environmental conditions. The tour guides in both cases complete the experience by handing out objects and making beautiful, powerful descriptions. The blindfolds can be removed in windowless "hotels" for both real and fake vacationers, so that they can wash off the spittle of nature (such as ocean sprays, stalactite drips, ketchup).
Three benefits of Probability Vacations over real travel:
1) For some exotic vacations, the fake one might be cheaper. Many fake vacations would subsidize the few real ones, allowing middle-income people to participate. The idea was initially conceived for trips to the moon, but I forgot how to simulate the absence of gravity. I'm thinking fluids, spinning, or disabling the inner ear.
2) The tour guides can make up a more interesting vacation, since they can get away with fooling you. They could even throw in a plot and a story. If you read a book and find it better than the movie, doesn't that imply that your fake vacation can be better than a real vacation? That is, partial sensory deprivation can be liberating. As for me, my imagination outperforms Hollywood's execution.
3) Safety?
The Prisoner
http://www.youtube....watch?v=HRPDO63rI1E [po, Nov 05 2009]
[link]
|
|
would you like to see my photographs from last year's blindfolded holiday? - yeah, bit blurry aren't they! |
|
|
Here's the one where I walked into a lampost. |
|
|
//I forgot how to simulate the absence of gravity// |
|
|
If you remember, would you mind telling NASA - they were asking. |
|
|
like a lot of ideas here, it may be completely impractical but would make a good plot device in a movie. [+] |
|
|
I like this. + for not calling it Schrödinger's Vac. |
|
|
Would it actually be cheaper to simulate a holiday
than to do the real thing? I'm thinking about the
Truman Show here. In order for it to be
convincing, in the film at least they needed a
dome visible from orbit, and i can believe that. If i
went on a hiking holiday and i walked, say, ten
kilometres from a hostel in each direction, i'd need
to be in a studio twenty kilometres across. |
|
|
I can see it working for a beach holiday where you
sit around and do very little, but safeguards would
have to be in place to stop you from going to the
other side of the island even then. |
|
|
Maybe for time travel and space holidays. In the
former case, the tour guide could warn people not
to do something trivial, somehow force it to
happen, then "bring them back" to an alternate
timeline at the end of the holiday for the shock
value. |
|
|
//but safeguards would have to be in place to stop you from going to the other side of the island // one of those balloon thingys that they had in "the prisoner" |
|
|
The only way I can see this working is that you only offer it to people who are already blind and tricking blind people into virtual vacations is bound to lead you to long expensive court trials. (-) |
|
|
[Mr.QED], I wish I could bun your anno. The thought of fooling blind people into thinking they are on vacation is going to entertain me all day. |
|
|
This is a fantastic idea for a movie called Total Recall. |
|
|
Nice one, [po], and people could pay to be in the
balloons too. |
|
|
Hey listen, the business isn't lying to anyone. You buy a chance for a real vacation. Getting the fake one is the same as losing the lottery; you can't sue anybody. Also, you can't tell that the simulated vacation was fake. |
|
|
" Blindfolded, I can't distinguish a mock-up beach with audio equipment, sand and sun lamps from a real beach" |
|
|
I'll bet you could. Either that or you fool pretty easy. |
|
|
it's like a placebo vacation. Made me laugh, well done. |
|
|
I wonder if the placebo would have the same effect (well yeah, because the blindfold would make the real vacation suck as bad as the placebos) |
|
|
gotta do something about the blindfold, kinda blows the whole thing. |
|
| |