GNU Terry Pratchett

villainny:

Spirit had been named for the wreckage on the red planet, the first indication that this system had once held intelligent life. Her mother had held her in her arms, brushed back the wisps of dark hair and told her she would be wise and brave and strong like the AIs that had volunteered to explore beyond the limits of their own blue world.

That was before they had had to drop the quotation marks around intelligent, of course. When they thought these ‘forms had evolved beyond the first fumbling grasps at the stars.

But Spirit had grown into and within a fascination with their creations, their history, the strange ways they chose to record themselves. While others combed through their concrete histories, the physical evidence of how they lived and laboured and laughed and loved, Spirit untangled the webs of digital information they had left behind.

It was ugly and beautiful and mostly nonsensical and riddled with painful misinformation that they had only been half aware of. And over and over again there were patterns, things that were carefully placed behind the scenes, only visible to those who would care to look for it.

She pressed her fingertips to her eyes, the light from the flickering screen of the technology she’d jury-rigged to theirs painful in comparison to the holoscreens she’d grown up with.

“I can’t work it out,” she said.

Jax beeped sympathetically.

“It’s in the code, and there must be some point, but it’s – ”

“Useless?” Jax hummed.

“Without function,” Spirit corrected. It felt less dismissive, phrased that way.

“Show me,” Jax said, and Spirit sent over the line that turned up over and over again.

<meta http-equiv=”X-Clacks-Overhead” content=”GNU Terry Pratchett” />

“Something they needed to remember?” Jax queries, and Spirit purses her mouth, not quite satisfied with that.

“Something they didn’t want to forget,” she says.


Tags:

#storytime #GNU Terry Pratchett

glass-muzzle:


Tags:

#Discworld #it occurred to me this afternoon #that this is the first Glorious Twenty-Fifth to be #you know #after #I didn’t mind the sprig of lilac on my hip so much after that #(I dislike the scent but it is traditional) #(and some of the branches of my neighbour’s lilac tree hang over the property line) #GNU Terry Pratchett

flamboyantwreck:

Rincewind – Discworld

A small dedication to Sir Terry Pratchett. A man who brought a little more magic to the world and left behind a legacy. I know that his fans will keep his imaginative spirit alive for years to come. Here is my little contribution.


Tags:

#Discworld #GNU Terry Pratchett #I get the impression the wizard books aren’t as well-liked #but I like Rincewind #it’s refreshing to see a cowardly character who isn’t villainised for it

Discworld synopses sound both ridiculous and totally awesome out of context

mayleavestars:

– an ex-conman reforms a post office with the help of a golem?

– Les Miserables in reverse starring a time-traveling policeman??

– a seven-foot skeleton and his granddaughter save Christmas???

– a wizard rescues Australia while his colleagues accidentally invent sex????

– like any newcomer reading this post is either ‘did he use a random plot generator’ or ‘oh my god I have to read that right now’


Tags:

#Discworld #GNU Terry Pratchett #indeed

{{Link: https://www.indy100.com/article/redditors-are-making-sure-terry-pratchetts-name-lives-on-forever–lJjYpijRag }}

dduane:

Redditors are using computer code and a niche reference from one of Terry Pratchett’s books to make sure his name lives on forever.

Hundreds of users have left the term ‘GNU Terry Pratchett’ on the /r/discworld forum and others are now leaving it in HTML and JavaScript on their own websites since the author passed away on Thursday.

This term derives from the fantasy author’s Discworld series of books and specifically the story of character John Dearheart.

When Dearheart died in the book, other characters ensured that his soul continued “living on in the overhead” by sending a code around their communication system known as the “clacks”.

As explained in this thread, a message would consistently appear in the clacks with a piece of code followed by a name – GNU John Dearheart.

G means the message must be sent on, N means the message is not logged and U means it must be returned when it reaches the end of the line.

In the book, the character Princess asks Grandad: “So it’s just a name, going up and down all the time! Where’s the sense in that? Who’s John Dearheart?”

The thread continues:  

“He… fell off a tower,” said Grandad. “Hah!” said Roger, working his shutters as if he suddenly hated them. “He’s dead?” said Princess. “Well, some people say—” Roger began. “Roger!” snapped Grandad. It sounded like a warning. “I know about Sending Home,” said Princess. “And I know the souls of dead linesmen stay on the Trunk [one of the clacks].”

“Someone was trying to scare you,” said Grandad, looking at Roger’s reddening ears. It hadn’t sounded scary to Princess. If you had to be dead, it seemed a lot better to spend your time flying between the towers than lying underground. But she was bright enough, too, to know when to drop a subject.

It was Grandad who spoke next, after a long pause broken only by the squeaking of the new shutter bars. When he did speak, it was as if something was on his mind. “We keep that name moving in the Overhead,” he said, and it seemed to Princess that the wind in the shutter arrays above her blew more forlornly, and the everlasting clicking of the shutters grew more urgent.

“He’d never have wanted to go home. He was a real linesman. His name is in the code, in the wind in the rigging and the shutters. Haven’t you ever heard the saying: ‘A man’s not dead while his name is still spoken’?”

And now, thanks to Redditors embedding this code into “the wind, in the rigging and the shutters” of the internet, Terry Pratchett will live on too.


Tags:

#Discworld #GNU Terry Pratchett #death tw