
Here is a blogger who takes a cynical view on time travel, but is clever enough to devise his own theory-prover-thingy.
I'm on the move. Well, I'm studying the move. For my Blogging class, I'm taking a look at travel blogs. I welcome your contributions. Keep on truckin'!







I am a time traveller using this forum to help my home dimension evolve in the best manner possible.
| Blog Name | ||
|---|---|---|
| | The Time Traveller |
Is it him?

Polo!
All this to say... I found a blog written by a real, live time traveler. I kid you not. It is even called "The Time Traveller," in case you had any doubts. Give it a once-over. Start at the bottom. Fascinating. Who knew?

You are an obsession
You're my obsession
Who do you want me to be
To make you sleep with me
You are an obsession
You're my obsession
Who do you want me to be
To make you sleep with me
My fantasy has turned to madness
All my goodness has turned to badness
My need to possess you has consumed
my soul
My life is trembling I have no control

Well, I went to our old friend Wikipedia to read about time travel. Yikes. Technical, technical, technical. I went up to Advanced Physics in my high school Science Honors Program, but still... From wormholes and time dilation to cosmic string and the Roman ring... it all sounds dirty, uh, Greek to me. (By the way, that's a Roman ring with two wormholes over there to the right...)
Don't get me started on the chronology protection conjecture. Don't even get me started. (No, really. I can barely say it.) And can we tawk about Stephen Hawking? This lengthy Wikipedia time travel entry tends to portray the naysayer in him. He seems to downplay the whole idea—the Wikipedians constantly quoting his negative views on time travel—like: if we could, why haven't we met any time travelers? I mean, the man is a brilliant physical theorist, as we all know. I just think it is interesting (and worth paying attention to) that he doesn't have huge amounts of encouraging words about time travel. (And do remember I've done incredibly superficial research about this.)"The most commonly used method of time travel in science fiction is the instantaneous movement from one point in time to another, like using the controls on a CD player to skip to a previous or next song, though in most cases, there is a machine of some sort, and some energy expended in order to make this happen (Like the DeLorean in Back to the Future or the phonebooth and the circuits of time in Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure)."Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure? Who knew? Clearly, I'm missing out on some prime popular culture. Shoot THAT to the top of your Netlflix queue, why dontcha? Push aside both the 1960 and 2002 filmed versions of H.G. Wells' The Time Machine (1895) and chew through some classic Keanu. Excellent!
It is sad that I get stymied by the scientific and buoyed by the popular. I like to think of myself as intellectually curious, looking at the world from out in space, trying to decipher it all. And yet I can't resist including a picture of Papa Smurf in my blog.Artist's impression of a wormhole as seen by an observer crossing the event horizon of a Schwarzschild wormhole, which is similar to a Schwarzschild black hole but with the singularity replaced by an unstable path to a white hole in another universe. The observer originates from the right, and another universe becomes visible in the center of the wormhole shadow once the horizon is crossed. This new region is however unreachable in the case of a Schwarzschild wormhole, as the bridge between the black hole and white hole will always collapse before the observer has time to cross it. See White Holes and Wormholes for a more technical discussion and animation of what an observer sees when falling into a Schwarzschild wormhole.Clear?
That was always the answer to the travel-weary question: How much farther, Papa Smurf?"With Time Machine, you can go back in time, find what you need, then restore everything with a single click. Time Machine finds and restores anything on your system...It can even reunite you with old friends...Your memories are never far away. A quick trip into your system's past and they're back with a click. Time is on your side—with Leopard."While Time Machine only allows us to travel into the past, Apple's recent technological shove into the future is the iPhone—an iPod, a phone and an Internet communicator all-in-one—which "ushers in an era of software power and sophistication never before seen in a mobile device, completely redefining what you can do on a mobile phone."

That is the Doctor and Rose watching the end of the world (our world), which is about to be fried as the sun turns into a red giant five billion years from now. Makes you think. Below is a picture of the last surviving human, just a stretch of skin with eyes and a mouth, in constant need of hydration (that's what the goonies are for) and with her brain floating in a jar beneath. Her physical state is the result of many plastic surgeries, not a result of five billion years of evolution. Her name's Cassandra, by the way.
In order to begin delving into time travel, I watched the entire first season (2005) of Doctor Who which I had recorded from BBC- America. I wanted ideas, perspectives, direction. While thoroughly entertaining (thoroughly!), it didn't give me too much of what I was looking for. I, of course, am studying travel writing. This was pure fantastic time travel. The series is great because it takes the time to allow for small revelations and understandings from the Doctor's new sidekick, Rose, who stumbles upon him—mid-mission—and joins him in his travels. As she slowly wraps her mind around the concept of time travel, we are right there with her. It is a difficult concept for us "linear time" beings to grasp. And, with my project in mind, how do you write about it? You can't really send postcards from the future, now can you? And can you even record your travels? If you visit the past, might that not change the future and, therefore, any entries you might have written about those travels, too? I guess we still have to get out of that timeline frame of mind.
I have found my next and last subject of travel writing and am researching now so I can formulate some stellar new posts. Check back soon.
Politicians travel. We are not in the throes of a major political campaign at this time, but John Edwards has announced his run for president early enough for me to include him in my project (how thoughtful of him). Here is an entry from his own travel blog on his campaign website:Elizabeth and I just finished a great interview with George Stephanopoulos, which you can watch tomorrow morning on ABC. Now I'm about to take off for our town hall in South Carolina.
The crowds and enthusiasm in Iowa and New Hampshire and Nevada were absolutely amazing. We never had crowds in Iowa like the one we just had until a few days before the caucuses in 2004. The crowds in Portsmouth were larger than any crowd I've ever had in New Hampshire - in the 2004 primary or the general election. There were a thousand people outside who couldn't get in so I went outside an stood on a chair to talk to them! And I was told that the crowd in Reno, Nevada - about 2500 - was completely unprecedented.
If you're in South Carolina or here in Chapel Hill, come out today for our town hall and rally - and for everyone, thank you for doing what you have to make this a tremendous kickoff tour - online and on the ground. Elizabeth and I wish you a happy new year.
The political travel blog serves several purposes. First, it provides information. "Here is my travel schedule. Here's where you might hear what I've got to say. Here's where I might kiss your baby. Here's where you might finally be convinced to join my campaign for president of the United States." Second, the use of new technology, as proliferated in the recent midterm elections, not only gives Edwards an edge (I mean a hip edge) but simultaneously allows him to relate to people on a more colloquial, conversational level. The simplicity of his language even in the post above demonstrates an attempt to talk to the people, in their terms. His adjectives are simple. His wide-eyed, "amazed" writing voice sounds humble and just so gosh-darn-flattered at the attention and support that he's left with his mouth agape. Why, he even had to stand on a chair to talk to the SRO audience outside! Amazing!

...with my site don't expect too much on maps, timetables (which the underground never really follows apart from the first and last train!) and pictures of trains (you can find these amongst my links page if you really want them). What you should expect is fun, the latest views about what it's really like to travel on the tube and a good laugh.Today's post is about the irony of her Underground blog headlining the daily paper distributed IN the Underground. While riding the Underground, she read about herself writing about herself riding the Underground.


