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August 31, 2008 12:01 AM PDT

Is visual computing responsible for Sarah Palin and Joe Biden?

by Chris Matyszczyk
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The NVision Conference, held last week in San Jose, has had such an eye-opening effect on me that I have been unable to sleep.

The things those clever scientific people have come up with make me realize that the world as we know it is no longer the world as we know it.

I was particularly moved to hear about an Israeli company called OptiTex.

Their fashion design optical gizmography is so realistic that designers can observe on screen just how the fabrics will shimmy and shake even before the couture gown has been cut and shaped.

I was struck semi-comatose by the comment from NVidia's Chris Malachowsky that, one day, doctors "will be able to recreate scan data so fast you could see your own heart beating."

I am not terribly sure I ever want to see my heart beating. I am not terribly sure I want to ever witness my innards performing live on screen.

But the fact that I hear this is possible gives me great pause to wonder whether there are already some prototypes out there that these terribly bright scientists haven't told us about.

My first thought descended on both Vice-Presidential candidates. Is there actually any proof that either of them is real?

(Credit: New Line Cinema)

Please take a very close look at Joe Biden. Is there anything about him that looks even remotely imperfect?

His coiffure is not so much worn as airbrushed. His teeth have surely been based on those of Angelina Jolie. His shirts stay in place longer than Fidel Castro. And his cuff links- well, have you ever seen them rotate even a quarter of an inch?

It is my solemn suspicion that Joe Biden is a creation of one of these companies like NVidia or OptiTex.

I believe that in order to prove their graphic brilliance, one of these forward-thinking scientific corporations has graphically sculpted this perfect candidate and is hologramically projecting their creation all over the United States.

(In fact, they even tried an international experiment by projecting the new Mr. Biden all the way to hostile projectile territory in Georgia only a couple of weeks ago.)

I think this may, therefore, be the reason for Sarah Palin.

Doesn't she just very slightly remind you of the lead character in the movie S1M0ne?

In the movie, everyone wonders who is the astonishingly enticing actress Simone. Just as everyone is wondering today about Sarah Palin.

Simone, it turns out, was actually an abbreviation for Simulation One, the computer program that created her.

Do you not feel just the slightest intuition that the Republican Party, having discovered the Democrats' nifty scheme in creating the perfect Biden (I mean, come on, no gaffes so far, huh?), decided they had to create their own Perfect Vice?

Fortunately, they already had their prototype going through its test in Alaska. All they had to do was a little fiddling with the graphic controls and beam it onto the national stage.

Please consider just how her perfection matches that of Mr. Biden.

The hair is disciplined, but the scientists have just left the suggestion that wildness could break out at any moment. The fingers are perfectly sculpted to wag without effort.

And the matching element to Mr. Biden's cuff links? Why, the rectangular, rimless glasses that maintain their posture with a rigor not seen since a certain vice-presidential candidate upbraided a schoolchild for failing to spell 'potato' in the appropriate manner.

I would prefer it that the creators of these two Virtual Vices come clean about the extent to which they have expressed their talents.

The nation deserves to know what has really been going on.

Chris Matyszczyk is an award-winning creative director who advises major corporations on content creation and marketing. He brings an irreverent, sarcastic, and sometimes ironic voice to the tech world. He is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CNET.
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Add a Comment (Log in or register)
by Punditty August 31, 2008 12:11 PM PDT
Wonder if Palin''s speech will get higher ratings than Obama's?
Good column at: http://www.allvoices.com/contributed-news/1223337-vp-candidate
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About Technically Incorrect

Chris Matyszczyk brings a fresh and irreverent perspective to the tech world in his CNET blog, Technically Incorrect. He is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CNET.

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