Funny how that page spends so much of the introduction comparing Julia to Fatou, but the page for Fatou only mentions Julia in passing.
bananaflag 16 hours ago [-]
There should only be one article for what is essentially one concept.
cwnyth 1 days ago [-]
Thank you!
pvillano 20 hours ago [-]
My [interpretation? fanfic?] is that Julia is like a carnivore, and humanity is not it's first prey. Every creature that eats, eats to steal the disentropy of it's meal. Plants can steal order from sunlight, and certain microbes can steal order from thermal vents, but carnivores, herbivores, and decomposers steal order from the work of other organisms. The improbability of living is sustained by arranging stolen amino acids into one's own proteins, powered by the toppleing of sugar towers back into a jumbled mess.
Julia does not reassemble amino acids like earth life does. But it does absorb disentropy from it's prey. The extreme specificity of an interstellar spacecraft, it's contents and occupants, is absorbed by Julia, so that it can move, grow, and attract more prey.
sevensor 1 days ago [-]
I have a recording of le temps des cerises by Charles Trenet, which I picked up after hearing his music on a movie soundtrack. Anyway, this is a song one could imagine playing in the void, echoing the end of everything. A little melancholy, a little sweet. Pairs will with fractals.
arh68 12 hours ago [-]
FYI Don't miss out on the <!-- HTML comments --> .
x4132 5 hours ago [-]
goddamn, almost missed out such a cool extra layer, thanks for the tip!
mynegation 13 hours ago [-]
Purple prose about something unknown and unknowable and fractal-like. As if Nabokov wrote sci-fi.
leodavi 1 days ago [-]
The narrative style reminds me of the novel-game Caves of Qud. Very well done.
slwvx 1 days ago [-]
I assume this is a sort of poem about the programming language Julia...
Am I too dumb? I literally understand none of this.
gwd 17 hours ago [-]
It's meant to be using "modern" jargon, set in the time of the story, that hasn't actually been invented yet. It also refers to a bunch of Classical mythology / works that I'm not familiar with. And also a bunch of obsolete CS ideas; e.g,. a "Chomsky organ", which would presumably be something that generates language based on Chomsky's ideas about grammar -- probably something like a Markov chain -- rather than neural networks, which is how LLMs currently "speak".
At any rate, it's written from the perspective of an AI which controls a ship. The AI may have once been a human on earth, and had its cognitive patterns transferred to the ship. It can do a certain amount towards modifying the ship, but they've apparently turned off its ability to speak. The ship at the beginning of the story has only 2 humans on it, down from hundreds. The ship is stationed at some place near the solar system (?) to look at a weird phenomenon, called 'Julia', presumably because it resembles a Julia set fractal, which defies all known physics. While the ship has been stationed there, the Earth has basically died.
That may give you enough clues to help you orient yourself, so that you can figure out what happens.
Edd314159 19 hours ago [-]
Right there with you. Everyone else on HN is a genius so will love it, but for me this is just incoherent words.
dannyobrien 18 hours ago [-]
What parts of it were confusing? I think science fiction can be confusing if you haven’t read a lot of it, because part of its art is to try and set the scene in as compact way as possible, with a combination of cues that you can work out from their context or by reference (like “laminate” and “squarely” — yes, I had to look it up), and some are the puzzles that the rest of the story will resolve (who/what is Julia? What do they want?)
It’s ok if it’s not your thing. It’s like an emotional crossword puzzle.
nozzlegear 13 hours ago [-]
I'm not a genius at all, and didn't realize this story was about "Julia sets" until I finished reading it and came back here for the comments. I was pretty sure that Julia was something like the 4D space bubble found in the Three Body Problem series.
I just enjoyed the prose in the story. Those incoherent words were the interesting bits of worldbuilding that drew me in.
fxwin 8 hours ago [-]
Despite the name, I wouldn't say it is "about" Julia sets, at least not any more than it is about any other kind of fractal
dominicrose 18 hours ago [-]
One does not simply read a study Bible (2 million words) but if you do then this work of fiction will be easier to understand in comparison.
I'm not promoting or demoting any religion by saying this, I'm talking about the Bible as an old work of fiction, although to be fair, a study bible can be recent and even copyrighted.
17 hours ago [-]
meisel 14 hours ago [-]
> Julia emits light, over an ever-changing spectrum
Haven’t heard of this feature in Julia lang, must be new in v1.12.4
20 hours ago [-]
jrave 1 days ago [-]
this completely sucked me in after skimming half a paragraph while unsure what to expect. very golden age, thanks for the link!
groovy2shoes 1 days ago [-]
i liked this a lot. real Gene Wolfe vibes.
exit 5 hours ago [-]
i'm reminded of the film Annihilation, especially the entity encountered at the end.
Julia does not reassemble amino acids like earth life does. But it does absorb disentropy from it's prey. The extreme specificity of an interstellar spacecraft, it's contents and occupants, is absorbed by Julia, so that it can move, grow, and attract more prey.
;-)
[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julia_set
At any rate, it's written from the perspective of an AI which controls a ship. The AI may have once been a human on earth, and had its cognitive patterns transferred to the ship. It can do a certain amount towards modifying the ship, but they've apparently turned off its ability to speak. The ship at the beginning of the story has only 2 humans on it, down from hundreds. The ship is stationed at some place near the solar system (?) to look at a weird phenomenon, called 'Julia', presumably because it resembles a Julia set fractal, which defies all known physics. While the ship has been stationed there, the Earth has basically died.
That may give you enough clues to help you orient yourself, so that you can figure out what happens.
It’s ok if it’s not your thing. It’s like an emotional crossword puzzle.
I just enjoyed the prose in the story. Those incoherent words were the interesting bits of worldbuilding that drew me in.
I'm not promoting or demoting any religion by saying this, I'm talking about the Bible as an old work of fiction, although to be fair, a study bible can be recent and even copyrighted.
Haven’t heard of this feature in Julia lang, must be new in v1.12.4
I love the way that nothing is explained.
https://www.math.stonybrook.edu/~scott/Papers/India/Fatou-Ju...
I like Cordwainer Smith and Peter Watts; so I really liked this blend of their styles and subjects.
Watts is like brain candy, keeps my mind buzzing from all the ideas for weeks. Charles Stross can have the same effect, a sort of future shock.