Theres A Lion In My Living Room
My seven year old son wants to know why he can't download Disney movies while I'm working.
I explain to him that when he downloads videos, it takes up all the space in the cable leaving
no space for any other information to come through. He wants to know what happens to my
computer, why and how downloading affects my work. "I need to have aces to websites
because I write stories and send them to websites so people can read them" I explain.
He is satisfied with my simple answer, but I can tell that the cable concept is not quite
grounded in reality. How does the Lion King himself get through the cable and land in
our living room, in color and singing to the beat of an African drum?
The truth is I don't really understand it myself. I get lost somewhere between 'sound floats
along air waves ' and 'information is reduced to digital signals'. I grab for the remote, the
chocolate biscuit, the telephone, really anything that will distract me from the inevitable
fact that there are some things I will never understand. Still something fascinates me
about all that information flying through wires and landing up in our living room.
The cables themselves are only wires and plastic coating. Maybe some are a better
quality than others, copper a better conductor than aluminum, but still pull apart the
cable and no pixie dust comes out to explain this magic flow of information that allows
us to receive the wonderful world of Disney with surround sound, color and light as
if we were sitting in the private viewing theatre of the head of a Hollywood studio.
There's something almost mystical about the concept of cables. In fact many mystical
traditions use the analogy of a cable to explain how the physical and spiritual worlds
are connected, how we are connected to our ancestors or even to a greater spiritual Force.
The cable that sends information from the brain to the body is equally fascinating, complex
and awesome in concept. The split seconds that it takes for my hand to type this word
offers an illuminating example of the brilliance of the cable by way of the nervous system
and as technology is fast discovering, it's all about speed.
As technology delivers more sophisticated media into our homes, cables are required to deliver
information faster and more efficiently. Todays high definition cable -
<a href=http://www.monstercable.com>HDMI Cable</a> - delivers information at a speed of six billion bits
per second, which is six times the data rate required for playback from a standard DVD - still
not as fast as information is delivered from my brain to my hand. The difference being that
in time, my delivery apparatus will be significantly diminished, and while I'm slowly making
my way across the lawn of an aged care facility, the cable in my grandchildren's play pen
will have Timon and Pumba themselves swinging from the light fittings and having Hakuna Matata.
Meanwhile the Disney channel clogs up my cable and technology continues to suggest that
some things are better done the old way, on my disconnected laptop where the "world wide web"
is just a glorified out of reach thesaurus. Later when the children are all in bed and Simba and
Nala are all tucked in for the night, like Peter Pan I will once again fly through my limitless
cable at ludicrous speed.