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R A Y M O N D
W E I S L I N G ' S
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The Pig & The Ghostwriter...
The tale of a clairvoyant computer
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E C L E C T I C
C L A T T E R
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This is a true story. It is about
a funky Intel 386 computer that ran Windows 3.1 but had some other strange capabilities
that appeared over a year or two. The setting is Solo, Central Java, Indonesia.
It started, I guess around early 1994, when I formed a map production group,
with four assistant graphics operators. I had a 386 DX computer left over from
an earlier project, but it was not used much, primarily because I have always
been a Macintosh user and Windows 3.1 was pretty awful. But we didn't have a
lot of money for new Macintosh computers, so we decided to try the 386, which
we nicknamed The Pig (actually using the Indonesian form "Si Babi").
The building that we used only had two circuits of 2200 watts each, but we were
running quite a bit below that when everything was turned on. The Pig
wasn't used every day, since there were manual tasks associated with the map
work, such as tracing maps onto vellum paper for later scanning. But when all
tracing was done, we had to call on The Pig to help out.
The problem was that The Pig often started up with a power demand or
surge, and with the other computers already loading the sensitive magnetic circuit
breaker, The Pig might trip the breaker and everyone on the Macintosh
computers would lose their work. At fist this happened with surprising regularity,
and each time we forgot to tell the others to save their work to disk first
because The Pig was going to be turned on. After this happened too often,
we all agreed to be more careful.
The protocol was established that everyone had to be told to save their work
first, and after everyone nodded that their files were done saving (large files
could take 20-30 seconds to write to disk), The Pig was ready to be turned
on. We added the Muslim expression "In the name of God" (Bismillah),
and pressed the button. It always worked, The Pig was merciful and didn't
kill the power. This was very consistent. A few times, in haste, someone forgot
the protocol, and The Pig would retaliate. It seemed if it was a chance
to do damage, it would, but with no chance, and in fear of God, it would be
such a nice Pig.
Eventually we moved to a different office and added more Macs and The Pig
was retired, but I started to use it for doing bilingual crossword puzzles (some
are on the website). With help of a part-time student, we compiled a database
of around 20 thousand words, about half in English and half in Bahasa Indonesia
(Indonesian language). A special crossword program was used to set up a crossword
grid, with blocked cells, and then it was let loose to try to fit words from
the database into the cells so that they all fit together, like a crossword
puzzle is supposed to be. The Pig was a slow 386 running Windows 3.1,
so it often took a long, long time to find the words that linked together across
and down. The time was quite dependent on the grid size and where the blocked
cells were. Since there were far fewer long words, the word length was critical
to monitor as a grid was designed. Some grid designs would never reach completion
even after running all night long. Others would complete in five or ten minutes
(if lucky), but often it could take an hour or so.
One day I started The Pig on a new puzzle, perhaps around 10:30 or 11:00.
It so happened that the wife of President Soeharto, Bu Tien (as she was known)
had suddenly died two days earlier in Jakarta, and her body lay in state at
her family home only a few kilometres away in Solo. Foreign dignitaries from
nearby nations came in by private jet to the little Solo airport to pay their
official last respects. This day was Monday, as I recall, and at about 12:30
or 13:00 a motorcade was to leave the mansion and travel to the rural Soeharto
family grave site at the foot of Lawu mountain. All this was being covered on
all the TV channels, as it was naturally a national day of mourning. I myself
was caught up in the event, watching it on TV downstairs, and occasionally I
peeked in on The Pig to see what it was doing. It always seemed to be
about 1/4 or 1/3 done with the puzzle, gaining some headway, running into an
obstacle, and then erasing about half of what it had made to start over (it
was a recursive build and tear down algorithm).
At about 13:00 the motorcade was ready to depart for the trip, which would
take about an hour. The atmosphere was very heavy, and everyone, whether they
liked Soeharto and his wife or not, was feeling deeply saddened, for it was
the sudden death of the First Lady of Indonesia, who had been standing beside
her iron-fisted husband as president for about thirty years. As the bier was
taken from the home and placed into the hearse, and the motorcade departed,
I decided to take a break and check in on the crossword puzzle.
As I approached The Pig, I saw that it was still working on it, and
as I was just about to turn away, only having looked at the screen for two or
three seconds, it suddenly completed the puzzle. It was done. Was this an ordinary
crossword puzzle? No, it was very strange, and as I looked at it I got a chill.
Among the words, the first one I saw was ALMARUMAH (meaning The Late Deceased,
and the feminine form, from Arabic). That is exactly how you would refer to
Ibu Tien, Almarumah Bu Tien Soeharto. OK, so it was luck that this word appeared.
It was one of perhaps two thousand nine-letter words. But then I spotted a number
of other words that bore a striking association to the event that was at that
very moment occurring only a kilometer or two away.
These are the related words that appeared in the same puzzle, composed by The
Pig, a funky 386 Windows 3.1 computer that might have been clairvoyant.
Remember that the crossword is bilingual so it contains a mixture of the languages,
and that the first 14 in this list are quite directly related to the death.
This represents 18% of the 78 words in the puzzle, and is only 0.07% of the
total database (14 out of 20000 words). If all 19 in this list are counted,
it comes to 24%, nearly a quarter of the words in this puzzle.
WORD |
MEANING, or NOTE OF EXPLANATION |
almarhumah
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The Late (for a woman), here referring to Bu Tien Soeharto
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duda |
widower (referring to President Soeharto) |
roh |
soul, spirit, ghost |
debu |
dust |
dust |
dust again, so dust to dust |
dig |
as in to dig a grave |
death |
(direct enough?) |
elite |
The Soehartos were the tip of the political and economic elite: rich
and firmly in power |
atasan |
superior ranking officer or officeholder (plenty of them were in attendance) |
duta |
ambassador or emissary (many were in attendance from Singapore, Malaysia,
Brunei, Philippines, Thailand, etc.) |
suasana |
the atmosphere, milieu, feeling of the moment---it was very heavy (was
it heavy enough to be felt by The Pig?) |
weeping |
plenty going on all over |
rural |
grave site destination of the funeral cortege that just left the family
home in Kalitan, Solo |
hatred |
hatred for the Soeharto family was, and still is, widespread |
azan |
the Muslim call to prayer by the Muezzin (note: though it is required
to pray at the funeral, the 'azan' is not called) |
umat |
the body of worshippers (the congregation present, but also can refer
to all believers of the faith) |
alkisah |
a grand story, tale, legend |
nasty |
it wasn't a nice situation, and the question later arose: How did she
die? |
ashamed |
Was her death correctly reported, or was the cause something much more
shameful? Rumors later surfaced.
If you read Indonesian, check
this out ---but if you read Indonesian, this is probably old news.
It says that she was killed by a gunshot wound as she intervened in a
heated argument between her two sons, Tommy and Bambang. |
So did The Pig have a mind of its own. Was it visited by a ghost that
composed the crossword puzzle? Was it sensitive, clairvoyant? How could it get
so many words to fit the mood of the day? Was it a mere coincidence or a Supercoincidence?
I can't answer these questions. I'll let you decide.
The Eclectic Clatter © 2003 Raymond
Weisling
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Updated: 25 August 2003


