Time for another reread.
@petrillic He didn't die, he just grabbed his towel and left.
@ZenHeathen @CrypticMirror @petrillic he'll be waiting for us at the Restaurant at The End of The Universe.
Possibly in the carpark.
Washing cars.
Good grief. I adored the books of course, and then in an early computer job, my buddy and I had the Infocom game of #THHGTTG, and we spent *hours* on it when we were supposed to be working 🙂
One of my abiding memories of it was:
“Arthur Dent: What happens if I press this button?
Ford Prefect: I wouldn't-
Arthur Dent: Oh.
Ford Prefect: What happened?
Arthur Dent: A sign lit up, saying 'Please do not press this button again.”
In the game, if you then hit the button a second time, you died immediately.
Wait for permission!
_The shoe event horizon! The whole economy overbalances! Shoe shops outnumber ever other kind of shop, it becomes economically impossible to build anything other than shoe shops and bingo, I get to press the button again!_

@tezoatlipoca @bytebro @petrillic he wasn't wrong, was he? just not specifically shoes.
i do wonder if we're reaching the Datacenter Event Horizon…
I'm sat almost daily these days waiting for the inevitable Kessler Collapse of the whole satellite thing, essentially rendering LEO and outward largely unavailable for a 'Long Time'.
Oh, pushing people's buttons is something of a pastime for me. And the better you know someone, the easier it is 😂
But sometimes he seems to speak to us from Beyond, "Chris Petrilli", whoever and whatever you may be.
@petrillic 25 years?!
Still such a huge loss.
@petrillic We lost him far too early. Just imagine all we could have enjoyed if he were still with us.
I met Douglas Adams once at a book signing in East Lansing, Michigan, at a now-defunct bookstore. The highlight was when he read from Mostly Harmless, the book that he had just released. He was a good reader and I remember the event fondly.
And yet the Government has not done anything.
Douglas Adams helped make towels what they are today.
Alun, yes! I was in NYC at the time (1978) and a fen from UK returned with the first half dozen shows that he'd recorded live on audio cassettes while listening to BBC. He basically hijacked me and demanded to know if I had a cassette player. when I said "yes" he insisted (wildly, like a demon possessed) that we get the deck and listen to the episodes. "This is probably the first experience of this in the USA!" he claimed. Maybe. But it was worth it! Magic!
@petrillic every time I think about this I'm reminded by this story posted by this guy who bought a used Mac computer.
It was full of old writing and he immediately deleted everything on it because he didn't want to risk reading someone's private data tgar apparently the original owner forgot to delete.
Later he learned the computer was Adams old computer that was supposedly used to write his books.
I believe that he was much more than just a novelist. His fiction seems to have started a cosmic mudflow in human society. How else to explain the irresistible muckslide taking us down to...
"data centers", aka Marvin, the neurotic robot with "the most powerful brain in the Galaxy"?
@petrillic That loss hit me so hard. I heard about it from a friend who casually slipped it into conversation with the same tone of voice he would have used for "my neighbour's cat is ill". Then he continued talking to others in the room about trivial stuff while I sat there speechless, my world collapsing around me.
Towel Day will be particularly important this year. I might break out the bath sheet.