Earth
Barcoded for Alien Convenience
Bill
Christensen, Technovelgy.com
This
story is a bit different, so bear with me. It starts with the Hello World Project
that Bernd Hopfengärtner was working on this past summer. He spent a considerable
amount of time cutting a semacode into a wheat field just outside of Ilmenau in
Germany.
A
"semacode" is a special kind of a barcode, a two-dimensional barcode
that is a computer-generated visual tag. It has been used for ubiquitous computing
projects; semacode takes an URL (a web address) and converts it into a graphic
that can be read with a suitably-equipped picture phone. You see the semacode
pasted to a real world object, take a picture with your phone, the software decodes
the semacode image and voila you go to the URL on your web-enabled phone. For
example, you could put a semacode tag on a lamppost outside 1600 Pennsylvania
Avenue that encoded "http://www.whitehouse.gov."
So
now Bernd has tagged the Earth with a semacode that reads "Hello World."
His semacode is 170 meters by 170 meters, and consists of an 18x18 grid of light
and dark squares. People can use tools like Google Earth to read it.
Apparently,
he doesn't realize that, since this object can be seen from space, it "tags"
the Earth for visiting aliens in the same way that streetcorners or other objects
can be tagged for people.
It
just so happens that the explicit idea of somehow creating codes or symbols that
are large enough to be read from space by aliens is an idea that is more than
a century old. In his 1867 novel From the Earth to the Moon, nineteenth century
science fiction writer Jules Verne wrote about a way to communicate with the inhabitants
of the Moon:
"I
am bound to add that some practical geniuses have attempted to establish actual
communication with [the Moon]. Thus, a few days ago, a German geometrician proposed
to send a scientific expedition to the steppes of Siberia. There, on those vast
plains, they were to describe enormous geometric figures, drawn in characters
of reflecting luminosity..."