My TRON Moment

The Grid. A digital frontier. I tried to picture clusters of information as they moved through the computer. What did they look like? Ships? Motorcycles? Were the circuits like freeways? I kept dreaming of a world I thought I’d never see.

And then, one day.. I got in..

Recently I watched the old Tron and the newer TRON: Legacy back-to-back. There are plenty of ridiculous elements in the first film, but at the same time it carried this extraordinary idea: a virtual world with geography and spatial depth inside the computer. Back then it hit something deep in the emerging hacker- and computer culture and became a kind of beacon. For many of us. For me too.

Shortly after seeing the original Tron in the cinema, I had my own personal Tron-moment. In the eighties, if you wanted anything creative to happen on a computer, you had to code it yourself. I had written a Pac-Man clone in a version of BASIC that could be compiled, so it ran absurdly fast. The ghosts were programmed to turn around when they hit a wall, but at the top of the screen I had a score counter, and I had forgotten to tell the ghosts that they also needed to turn if they entered that area. While testing the game, one of the four ghosts suddenly disappeared from the maze—it simply escaped through the hole in my code.

I stopped the program and typed “LIST” to inspect the source. But what had happened was that the ghost had carved its way straight down through the program lines and destroyed them. On a ZX81 the screen memory lived dangerously close to the area used for code, and I just caught a glimpse of how the ghost, like Flynn on his light cycle, had left the arena and driven into the “forbidden” zone. For a couple of seconds the shredded program flickered on the screen. And then the computer crashed.

It was a wild moment. People are welcome to chuckle here, but for me it was a strangely defining moment. The idea that something inside the computer could feel that physical, that concrete, never left me. Later Gibson and the rest came along and filled cyberspace with language and imagery, but for me it was the Tron-mythology that stuck. Today we live with fifteen–twenty layers of abstraction between the CPU and the interface we touch, but back then there were only a couple of thin membranes between the user and the hardware’s heart. Oh, and here’s a similar story, even more TRON than mine. (Thanks, Michael Knudsen)

Tron 1982 – TRON: Legacy 2010 – TRON: Ares 2025

Digging too deep into the datamine

Many years ago, I took on a somewhat ‘special’ freelance job. It was for Jubii, the big Danish portal I also wrote newsletters for. They were planning to launch a new section called “Jubii Lir’kassen” – a large collection of all that ‘humorous’ stuff office workers forward to each other via Outlook. The raw material was a big, unfiltered lump of content pulled from Lycos, which owned Jubii at the time (2003). Lycos already had an “Absolute Viral Golden Collection” in several countries, and my task was to censor, categorize, and describe the content prior to the Danish launch. Looking back, it was very much the shape of things to come, and not in a good way..

At first glance, it seemed like a fun way to spend a couple of days. I can’t recall how many items there were in total – but we’re talking a lower-end four-digit number. The pay was five-digit, and I figured that if I could finish it in no more than three days, I’d walk away with a decent hourly wage. So, early that first morning, I cheerfully launched into the task, actually looking forward to a few unpretentious days as a metadata slave. Because of the content management system, the work had to be done on a PC – and even though such a Windows XP contraption had never set foot inside Tveskov HQ before, I managed to get hold of one thanks to my brother Thomas. So I settled in with my big coffee mug within arm’s reach, in front of the humming, buzzing machine with its big thick CRT screen, and began working through the pile of ‘content.

Very quickly, I discovered that a high number of people from corporate environments have a close relationship with their Office suite. A huge amount of funny cat pictures, death videos, and gag cartoons were buried deep inside Word documents, PowerPoint presentations, and even Excel spreadsheets. People use the tools they know, and instead of simply forwarding a funny JPEG, many of those with a “PC driver’s license” embedded the images where they felt more in control. Good for them, bad for me – the constant switching between Office programs and the CMS system felt like wading through thick, sticky syrup, not a pleasant sensation with that much work ahead.

And of course, it’s never great to sit at a computer you don’t know well. The mouse feels off, the keys are arranged just differently enough to be annoying. Around lunchtime on day one, I began to realize the project would take significantly longer than I had expected.

But what really started to gnaw at me wasn’t the time. It was the stuff upon my screen.

I have never, in such a short span, seen so many people get hit by trains, buses, cars, bicycles, dogs, and other moving objects. There was also an overwhelming number of amazing soccer goals, kids falling in “funny” ways, vomit, broken limbs, and racy jokes, of course styled in Comic Sans and garnished with an absurd number of smileys. It was as if the entire decline of Western civilization passed through me, via small bite-sized nuggets of digital garbage.

Julia Allison (remember her?) once said that there are three things that bring success online: funny, boobs, and kittens. Oh Allison, if only you knew how right you were.

Gradually I realized it’s a rough life being a day laborer in the data mines deep down in the belly of the big portals. After day one, I was completely empty and numb, but still in fairly good spirits. When I shut down the PC on day two, I wasn’t so sure anymore. Especially after going through all the videos that didn’t get approved because they were too bizarre, too violent, or otherwise inappropriate for the general public. All that death and dismemberment. The whole thing started to feel like a deranged Word-based RPG where the gameplay couldn’t get sleazy or extreme enough.

Remember poor Alex at the end of A Clockwork Orange? It was like that.

That night I had evil, evil dreams – cats and puppies being brutally kicked into clip-art soccer goals over and over again by hyperactive Page 3 girls, while I flew off a motorcycle ramp surrounded by drooling, manically grinning babies with enormous eyes staring at me from all sides. And the next morning, it was back down into the data mine again. Fortunately, I’ve repressed most of what I saw back then. I do, however, still remember this little MTV gem I titled â€œUse the Force, Lorenzo.” Thankfully, there was some harmless and funny material in the pile – it just got harder and harder to spot as time went on.

Like a desperate jet pilot slamming “Eject, Eject” on the escape seat, I was clicking “Reject, Reject” in the CMS system just to make the images disappear. Eventually, it became really difficult to tell which videos crossed the line – a line that got fuzzier and fuzzier as my ability to think clearly faded, while the PC just kept buzzing away as if it couldn’t care less about what was passing through it.

That final day was like a simulated car crash in extreme slow motion. Visual distortions, nausea, and self-pity in equal measure. I was confused and numb. Synapses burned out. Too many inputs. Too much metadata to fill out. Overload. Wish I could forget what I saw. But I got through and got paid.

Game over, man. Insert coin.

I almost crashed

Not too long ago I almost crashed on my motorcycle. The keyword here is of course, ‘almost,’ and I will get back to that in a bit, but first a few thoughts on the joys of riding a motorcycle. For me, it started as a kind of happy accident; in my youth, I had never considered riding a bike, but one day in the mid-90s, out in Billund, the bus to Vejle drove off without me. So, a colleague offered a ride home on the back of his motorcycle, and I was sold on the spot; the acceleration, the speed, the open-air feeling, it just felt great. So, without telling anyone, I got the driver’s license and bought my own bike. That has been one of my best decisions in terms of the amount of fun and pleasure it has brought for almost 30 years now. I don’t go that fast (as opposed to when I’m cycling) and almost always avoiding highways and very often taking new, unplanned detours on small roads in the countryside.

Had I not missed the bus by accident 30 years ago, I may not have found out about the joy of riding, and of course, there is a little lesson about trying out unfamiliar and unexpected things. You get the picture. Motorcycles are statistically a bit more dangerous than cars, but I have always tried not to take any chances. Someone early on told me it is so important to ride defensively, as you are the more vulnerable part compared to cars. Many will know that motorcyclists always greet each other on the road (except for police officers and Hells Angels types!) This is such a nice tradition, feels a bit like I salute you for also being an adult on two wheels instead of four.. In fact, as I was headed home from Kolding a while back, I was thinking about this very thing as two motorcycles approached me.. I turned my head for a split second to greet them – the road ahead has a slight bend where the driveway leads into the local inn. And I had not noticed that the car ahead of me had abruptly slowed way down to take a sudden left turn. I was going close to 80 km/h, and without even thinking, I locked my brakes hard and barely managed to steer around the car and then come to a sudden stop. So close.. All my muscles were extremely tense and frozen up, especially in my legs, and I was a bit rattled by the incident. But I quickly got back up to speed and rode homewards like nothing had happened. It felt like the right thing to do, just get back on the road straight away. The incident kept playing in my head for a while, but now I’m just thankful nothing bad happened. Would love to ride for another 30 years if the machinery is up for it.

The Race

So I was on my bicycle going towards downtown Fredericia. It was a grey and windy day, but I was going at full speed. When I bike, I tend to go fast, or at least as fast as possible, and to be honest, I’m just not a big fan of being overtaken. It especially feels like it’s against the laws of nature when I’m being passed by little old ladies on electric bikes. It just feels wrong somehow, but I have slowly learned to live with it.

As I was entering a very long, even stretch of the bike lane along the harbour and marina section of my route, I vaguely sensed something slowly but surely coming up behind me. I could also sense that it wasn’t a bicyclist; the high-pitched sound was different. I increased my speed a bit, but the person was coming closer and closer. I took a quick glance over my shoulder, and it kinda looked like I was being chased by something resembling a big inverted ice cream cone.

I was a bit confused by this but also determined not to be overtaken, so I increased my speed further. But so did my pursuer, and after a few hundred meters of racing, the ice cream cone crept up on my left side. Both of us were now clearly going at max speed, like two heavy trucks taking way too long to pass each other on the highway. I discreetly looked over to the left while maintaining my maximum speed, sweating, headwind was brutal, heart beating like crazy.

The woman was about the same age as me, dressed in a huge curry/brown-ish jacket with a kind of waffle pattern. The jacket was very wide at the bottom, almost hiding the struggling electric scooter underneath her. So it came down to this: me against the finest low- to midrange e-scooter that Temu has to offer. There may or may not have been smoke coming from the motor of the scooter. But there definitely was smoke coming from the transparent neon green vaping device she was clutching with her left hand. I looked straight ahead, and gave it all I had in me, determined not to let her triumph.

And then it happened; I looked her way, she did the same, and we were locked in eye contact for a few uncomfortable seconds. It felt like the longest time. She was kind of looking right through me with cruel, dead eyes while she let out a big puff of scented smoke and then turned to look straight ahead. And right then and there, I knew that I was beaten; all energy and determination left my body. I knew it, and she knew it too. Something in me broke; I just gave up. Almost like in slow motion, I watched her disappear in the distance while I regained my breath. I am sure she has long forgotten the incident, but I will never forget.