So who is The Free Thinker? Well he's me, and you can thank me already for jumping in and stopping myself there before I started talking in the third person. Perhaps you'll also thank me for posting here on Gopher, if like me you hate the sight of the modern web. Or if you're of the mindset not to thank people for doing the obvious for people of my cyber-beliefs, then you might think again after I tell you that I'm in my mid-twenties and so should be out Facebooking around with the rest of my generation rather than communicating with you folk clinging on to the past. Actually I don't have much care for the norms of my generation. I like technology, it's facinating in design as much as in execution, and any technology that works for its purpose is valid to consider using at any time. In practice much of the technology that I cling to is about the same age as I am. The PC that I'm typing this on is about the same age as me. My car is five years older (a nice one in its day though), and my TV probably a few years younger (last man alive who still watches a CRT each night talking!). I'm not sure how old my fridge is, but "from the 70s" wouldn't surprise me. There are various philosophies behind my choices as a "consumer" which might be aired here sooner or later, but to a large extent it boils down to the old line "if it ain't broke, don't fix it" (the car is broke quite often though...). For public text on the internet, Gopher still works. I actually think the web does too, if you design sites in plain HTML4 and don't bother trying to please the idiots of the world with useless eye candy. But my websites are directly linked with my real identity, which is directly linked with my excuse for an online business, and I'd worry that expressing all of my wild ideas there could cause some unwelcome echos back into my real life. Of course to protect my identity I'll still have to censor myself a little bit, but hardly as much as I do when talking with people who don't want to hear what I really want to say (usually due to extreme disinterest). So I want a separate place to post text to, and as long as it's just text, and not likely to contain many links (properly researched stuff would probably go on my website, which you'll probably never find, oh the pains of being a member of the general public), it might as well be in Gopher. Plus there seem to be ample providers of free hosting at the moment, which should make an anonymous account pretty easy to create. Now the information about who I am seems to be leaking into this ramble really rather slowly, so time to cover a few key points before I run further into time that is reserved for more important tasks on a Saturday (I just realised that I still haven't put the washing on, for one thing). You've probably skipped over much of the above, so I'll draw your eyes back in with some tasty dot points: *I'm a male living in the middle of nowhere, which I define as somewhere in rural Australia. *I've got far too many interests and hobbies, most of them not pursued to the extent that I'd like to pursue them. Key ones mentioned here are likely to be electronics, computers, photography, and modern history. Others will likely leak out if I stick with you at this keyboard regularly enough. Philosphy is likely to play a part to, but I wouldn't call that a interest/hobby, more an irremovable part of my daily thinking that is usually kept very much to myself. *I'm pretty broke and spend much of my time trying find a way of making money while still keeping at arms length from society and other people in general. The fact that you have to deal with people and society in order for them to give you the money is a catch-22 that I'm eternally troubled by. *I'm not here as a convert away from Facebook, Twitter, or whatever variations there are of "typestuffhereandwewillshowyouads.com". I never saw a strong attraction to them in the first place. It's called "social media" and frankly I'm not all that social. This may turn out to be the most personal thing I put publicly on the internet, but it's not likely to turn into some self-obsessed log of my daily activities. I guess one other thing that I should clear up is the slight ambiguity in the meaning of "free" in the names "Free Thoughts" and "The Free Thinker". Is it free as in, as those open-source drunkards keep putting it, "free beer"? Or is it free from the boundaries of convention, society, tradition, normality, sensibility, conceptuality, sanity, etc.? Really it's probably a bit of both, but the name originally came from the idea of a gift to you. I'd like to pursue most of the thoughts that I express here for some material gain, and if I could then I'd want to do it alone and not tell anyone about them until I had something to show for it. With some less ambitious thoughts/ideas I still hold onto this goal, but many were clearly doomed never to be fulfilled from the moment they were commited to paper. If I'm never going to use them, they might as well be fed into the (frustratingly ineffective) global network of human minds called the internet, so that they might just gives ome of those minds the inspiration to pursue what I can not. That said, I'm also bound to babble on about things that aren't of much help/inspiration to anyone. But that's where the tag line comes in, because with free thoughts, "you get what you pay for". -The Free Thinker