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Conference hydra::dejavu

Title:Psychic Phenomena
Notice:Please read note 1.0-1.* before writing
Moderator:JARETH::PAINTER
Created:Wed Jan 22 1986
Last Modified:Tue May 27 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:2143
Total number of notes:41773

480.0. "The Dreaded Computer Syndrome" by DICKNS::KLAES (The Universe is safe.) Thu Sep 10 1987 09:27

     Something to ponder while you're sitting at the terminal...  :^)

VNS MAIN NEWS:                            [Richard De Morgan, Chief Editor, VNS]
==============                            [Basingstoke, England                ]

    Science, Technology, Medicine, and Nature
    -----------------------------------------

    A Danish teenager has been diagnosed from suffering from "computer
    syndrome".  From the age of 10 he spent up to 16 hours a day at his VDU,
    and imbued his computer with supernatural qualities.

  <><><><><><><>   VNS Edition : 1399    Thursday 10-Sep-1987   <><><><><><><>

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480.1Ectoprocessing?ERASER::KALLISRaise Hallowe&#039;en awareness.Thu Sep 10 1987 09:456
    
    >and imbued his computer with supernatural qualities.
    
    I think this is a psychic first. :-)
    
    Steve Kallis, Jr.
480.2No socialization...NEXUS::MORGANWelcome to the Age of FlowersThu Sep 10 1987 23:0311
    I heard this story on NPR. Apparently the boy lost the means to
    communicate with others ina coherent fashion. In his speach he emulated
    a basic program, that is.. "Line 10 "Hello, Line 20 My name is XXXX,
    Line 30 Would you like, Line 40 to go up to my place, Line 50 and
    compare files? End"
                              
    His doctor said he wouldn't have been so bad, if not sick at all,
    were it not for his computer.                                    
    
    My impression was that the boy was not socialized, by being with
    his peers, having spent too much time in front of a CRT.
480.3That explains it!!!CHUCKL::SSMITHFri Sep 11 1987 11:504
    And all this time I thought my files were being ACCIDENTLY deleted.
    
    
    Steve
480.4It's what you do with what you've got ... :-)ERASER::KALLISRaise Hallowe&#039;en awareness.Fri Sep 11 1987 12:1612
    Re .2:
    
    > . . .                                  In his speach he emulated
    >a basic program, that is.. "Line 10 "Hello, Line 20 My name is XXXX,
    >Line 30 Would you like, Line 40 to go up to my place, Line 50 and
    >compare files? End"
    
    Obviously, if the doctor had a little programming expertise, he
    could have cured the kid by looking him squarely in the eyes and
    saying, "RUN/NO_HEAD."
    
    Steve Kallis, Jr.                           
480.5USAT02::CARLSONset person/positiveFri Sep 11 1987 12:273
    sounds he's out of configuration or offline...;^)
    
    t.
480.6So where's the supernatural?DICKNS::KLAESThe Universe is safe.Fri Sep 11 1987 13:4417
    	So what about the "supernatural" bit mentioned in the base 
    note article?  What does this have to do with what seems to be a 
    psychological phenomenon?  Did anyone hear about this?
    
    	RE 480.4 -
    
    	Steve, I must be doing computers too much - I laughed at 
    that one for five minutes, just trying to imagine the scenario!  :^)

        You know, seriously, all this might bring further insights into the 
    workings of the human brain, for since his mind became like a 
    computer, perhaps if we study him (then cure him, of course), we could 
    map out the brain like a computer process, perhaps learning how to 
    build an intelligent computer as well.
    
    	Larry
                                                           
480.7VINO::EVANSFri Sep 11 1987 13:517
    The first step to a *real* Max Headroom, eh?
    
    :-)
    
    Dawn
    
    
480.8Watch for sudden sharp power buildupFDCV13::PAINTERFri Sep 11 1987 18:403
    
    Could you imagine what would happen if he managed to stumble upon
    a recursive loop...recursive loop...recursive loop...recursive loop...
480.10Three liters of Coca-Cola a day???!!!DICKNS::KLAESAngels in the Architecture.Fri Oct 02 1987 15:2047
United Press International [4 Sep 87]
 
COPENHAGEN, Denmark -- A young man became so mesmerized by his
computer that he was hospitalized with a "computer syndrome" that made
him unable to distinguish between the real world and computer
programs, a Denmark medical journal said. 
 
    The journal said the unidentified 18-year-old contracted the new
form of psychosis, called computer syndrome by three doctors at
Copenhagen's Nordvang Hospital, after spending 12 to 16 hours a day in
front of his computer. 
 
    The doctors said the young man began to think in programming
language, waking up in the middle of the night thinking, "Line 10, go
to the bathroom; Line 11 next." 
 
    The patient told the doctors he "discovered that man is only a
machine. There is no difference between the computer and man." 
 
    In WEEKLY FOR PHYSICIANS, psychologist Bent Brok and psychiatrists
Eva Jensen and Erik Simonsen said, "He merged with the computer and
afforded it supernatural qualities." 
 
    In the end, he suffered from insomnia and anxiety and had to be
hospitalized.  The article did not indicate his present condition. 
 
    The young man's preoccupation with computers is not unique, but
his psychotic condition is unusual, Tuesday's report said, warning
against "many young people's excessive preoccupation with computers." 
 
    The three doctors said that the computer is used by youths as a
substitute for human contact because it always responds in a rational
manner but that the stress on logic can lead to immaturity and
emotional limitations. 
 
    The computer trade itself also seems to be aware of the problem.
 
    "A large group of young people -- about 95 percent of them boys --
are computer freaks who live for nothing but the machine," said Lars
Knudsen, 32, manager of a Copenhagen computer firm, Professional
Datainformation. 
 
    "The typical computer freak is between 14 and 16," said Knudsen, a
former freak himself.  "He gets up at 2 in the afternoon and sits in
front of the screen until 4 in the morning.  He drinks 3 liters of
Coke and has no girlfriend." 
  
480.11No girlfriend? Maybe he's married ;-)INK::KALLISA pumpkin&#039;s a terrible thing to waste.Fri Oct 02 1987 15:308
    re .10:
    
> He drinks 3 liters of Coke and has no girlfriend.
    
    Well, with all the caffien in Coke, no wonder he has insomnia! :-D
    
    Steve Kallis, Jr. 
    
480.12Taker me to your liter?TOPDOC::SLOANEBruce is on the looseFri Oct 02 1987 16:553
    And no wonder he repeats Line 10 ("Go to the bathroom.")
    
    -bs
480.13CIMNET::KOLKERConan the LibrarianMon Oct 05 1987 16:2310
    re priors
    
    My advice to male computer freaks is :
    
    1. Get a girlfriend
    
    2. Have girlfriend show you what a Balans chair is *really* for.
    
    Happy computing.
    
480.14A famous early victim of CSDICKNS::KLAESThe President of what?Tue Feb 09 1988 16:21139
VNS TECHNOLOGY WATCH:                           [Mike Taylor, VNS Correspondent]
=====================                           [Nashua, NH, USA               ]

                  ZORCHED OUT: A COMPUTER HACKER'S TALE
                     by Alex Beam, Boston Globe staff

           Richard Greenblatt:  Single-minded, unkempt, prolific, and
           canonical MIT hacker who went into night phase so often
           that he zorche his academic career.  The hacker's hacker.

                         - HACKERS by Steven Levy.

       CAMBRIDGE -- "Lights On!"  Greenblatt yells, pushing through the
       door of MIT's Model Railroad Club.  "That's just in case
       anybody's sleeping under the layout."  He explains to a visitor.
       "They might pick up a shock or something."

       Happily, no one is sleeping underneath the thousand feet of
       handmade track that may be the world's most sophisticated model
       railway.  The last person to fall asleep under the layout was
       probably Greenblatt, who spent so much tinkering - "hacking" -
       with the railroad's switching system, and with his other
       favorite toy, computers, that he flunked out of MIT in his
       sophomore year.

       Greenblatt, now 44, has gone on to bigger things.  After a long 
       career as senior researcher at MIT's Artificial Intelligence Lab,
       he helped found Lisp Machine Inc., one of the first artificial
       intelligence startups.  Now he is president of Cambridge-based
       GigaMOS, which purchased LMI's assets after it went broke last
       year.

       But scratching the surface of Richard Greenblatt, AI entrepreneur,
       one quickly finds traces of 17-year-old Ricky Greenblatt, the
       soda-pop swilling science whiz who arrived at MIT as a bewildered
       freshman from Columbia, MO, in 1963.

       Greenblatt still drops in on the railroad club from time to time,
       and exudes boyish enthusiasm when demonstrating "the famous
       Greenblatt track cleaning machine," a cleverly-engineered
       locomotive that spins an abrasive grinding wheel over the
       nickel-silver track.

       He sheepishly explains that he is "out of phase" on a particular
       day, because he spent the previous night hacking away on a
       computer.

       And even though he has cleaned up his presentation - friends say
       he bathed so rarely as an undergraduate that they had to ambush
       him with air freshener - Greenblatt still acts like an
       absent-minded computer genius.  Pallid-skinned from long hours of
       computer work, he trundles around Cambridge in rumpled work
       pants and a plaid shirt, with a digital calculator watch 
       protruding from his breast pocket and a cellular phone slung
       across his shoulder.

       Although he has earned plenty of money in his computer ventures,
       he still rents a room in the same house in Belmont where he has
       lived for 20 years.  Why not buy a house:  "It's too much
       trouble," Greenblatt says.  "You have to pay taxes, mow the lawn.
       I don't want to bother."

       "Ricky lives in a world of his own, dominated by his own genius,"
       says Andy Miller, who briefly roomed with Greenblatt at MIT.  "We
       never saw him when he lived with us.  The Sun meant absolutely
       nothing to him - it happened to rise and fall in a way that
       wasn't in synch with his schedule."

       After two semesters on the Dean's List at MIT, Greenblatt threw
       in with the small band of electronics fanatics hanging around
       the Model Railroad Club.  Synchronizing the model railroad's
       switching system - its circuits can control five trains chugging
       across the vast layout, and set the 200 switches so no crashes
       occur - turned out to be a lot like programming the early
       computers that were making their first appearance in MIT labs.

       (It also resembled another electronic gimmick called "phone
       hacking," or fooling the phone system into placing free
       long-distance calls, which resulted in suspension of several of
       Greenblatt's friends.)

       Greenblatt and his friends often spent the daylight hours working
       on the railroad, and then migrated to a neighboring lab to stay
       up all night next to the PDP-1, DIGITAL EQUIPMENT CORP.'s first
       computer.  Fueled by the Railroad Club's private Coca-Cola
       machine, Greenblatt and his fellow hackers "wrapped around" day
       into night, working for 30 hours at a stretch to solve thorney  
       problems, either with the railway or the computer.

       "To a large extent, our group wasn't interested in the normal
       social events around the institute," explains fellow hacker Alan
       Kotok, now a corporate consulting engineer at Digital.  "The
       railroad club was like a fraternity.  There were people you could
       talk to day or night about things of common interest.

       Although no one asked him to, Greenblatt wrote a high-level
       language computer program for the PDP-1, so the club's timetable
       system could be stored on the new computer.  Unfortunately, the
       young programmer's deepening involvement in computer hacking
       doomed his academic career.  "I sort of zorched out on classes,"
       Greenblatt admits.  During one of his 30-hour work blasts, 
       Greenblatt slept through a final exam, and had to leave MIT.

       Of course, MIT didn't get where it is today by turning away
       computer talent.  After a brief sojourn on Route 128, Greenblatt
       landed a job as a programmer at the Artificial Intelligence Lab,
       and stayed for 20 years.

       Greenblatt's fame grew and grew.  He and a co-worker wrote ITS,
       and early minicomputer time-sharing program that is still in use
       today.  He was one of the early programmers to work in LISP, the
       high-level language that has become the key building block for
       artificial intelligence.

       "He would attack problems with great vigor," remembers Donald
       Eastlake, another railroad club alumnus.  "Everybody was smart,
       but the people who really excelled were smart and tenacious.  
       He was one of the primary examples of that."

       An accomplished chess player, Greenblatt wrote MacHack, a chess
       program for a later DIGITAL mini, the PDP-6.  The program scored
       an important victory for AI boosters when it defeated a
       prominent critic of artificial intelligence who insisted that a
       computer would never play chess well enough to beat a 10-year
       old.  The program later became a member of the American Chess
       Federation and the Massachusetts State Chess Association.

       When Greenblatt later did graduate work at MIT, administrators
       hinted that if he submitted his chess program as a doctoral
       thesis, he might be awarded a degree.  "I never really got around
       to it," Greenblatt confesses.  "It just didn't seem that important."

       {Boston Globe Feb 7, 1988 Contributed by John Stohlberg}
       [I enjoyed HACKERS by S. Levy and recommend it.  Also, do not
       confuse 'hacking', the artistic approach to programming, 
       with 'cracking', the unauthorized accessing of computers. -- MJT]

  <><><><><><><>   VNS Edition : 1503     Tuesday  9-Feb-1988   <><><><><><><>