<p><br>
On Oct 19, 2013 7:09 PM, "Monte Davis" <<a href="mailto:montedavis@verizon.net">montedavis@verizon.net</a>> wrote:<br>
><br>
> Chabon is careless there. Ernie's capsule history is not *historically*<br>
> baseless: yes, DARPA did fund some of the IT research leading to TCP/IP and<br>
> packet switching. And yes, the Cold War justification for that funding *was*<br>
> to develop a network technology that could "work around" servers knocked out<br>
> by enemy attack, so that government could keep communicating.<br>
></p>
<p>One of my other favorite authors, John Crowley, in _The Translator_<br>
made the female protagonist's dad a darpa dude and evoked those times wonderfully. </p>
<p>If we were gonna get crazy and do a non-p group read like we did a few yrs back - I guess I finally thought of the one I'd suggest (-:</p>
<p>But getting back to BE, I sort of have a question about this deep web where Deep Archer resides - does that correspond to anything nonfictional? I mean are we talking about using a browser to navigate to some bare IP address known not to dns at all but only to the cognoscenti? Afaik there were bbses, ftp and gopher, and then all of a sudden there was yahoo and aol and urls but nowhere was there anything like deep archer which is sophisticated, ambiguous - nothing like the games I'm aware of - plus it's more and less than a game, possibly even a place that responds to users' emotional and spiritual states of mind and even a place where a person can be said to reside while accessing it. Maybe a mmorpg or a Second Life type environment? </p>
<p>A development of the angelic realms alluded to at the beginning of Vineland and the amazing things computers - the ideal readers with the ideal insomnia - can do with mere 1s and 0s by stringing enough of them together.</p>
<p>Also on a different note a compare/contrast between Maxine and March, Maxine having the annointing (though somewhat revoked) to do a little something about fraud while March is more a John the Baptist voice in the wilderness - strictly speaking there's no real need to say they represent stances that an author could take in depicting a social scene, but if a choice like that is evident in BE, it seems to me Pynchon - whose Sistine Chapel, Gravity's Rainbow, could be described as more March-like - is aiming more at a Mona Lisa effect in bringing Maxine to the fore.</p>