Where’s Majel Roddenberry when you need her?
According to the Technology
Review, we’re only three years away from a quantum computer. What does that mean?
Calculations on an unimaginable order of magnitude greater speeds than any we’ve
know so far, among other things. At least, the speeds and calculations are
unimaginable to me! Really fast stuff. And, also, these computers will be able
to factor all kinds of horribly complicated equations that we can only just
concieve of now. Truly, it will result in a computer not too far removed from
that of the U.S.S. Enterprise, which was able to calculate all sorts of obscure
probabilities from pretty fuzzy word problems asked by the crew. Indeed, this
might be the first step towards true machine intelligence.
Eventually, that
is. The computer they’re predicting in the next three years won’t be anything
close to that, but, apply Moore’s Law to that and consider the difference
between the 8088’s of ten or twelve years ago to the Pentium 4’s of today. The
possibilities are endless.
7/12/2005
7/8/2005
No, this is not a bad acid trip.
Actually, it’s a pretty interesting web
comic set in the not too distant future. What’s even more interesting is that it
takes place in an Islamic-centric desert country torn by war and terrorism.
Sound familiar? Yeah, I thought it might. And, trust me, this is a very
different look at how that dynamic works. Very thought provoking.
So, check
out The Spiders and
get ready to be blown away.
Have a fun freaky Friday!
7/7/2005
Today is the birthday of Robert Heinlein.
Mr. Heinlein was born on this
day in 1907 in Butler, Missouri. He wrote numerous novels and collections of
short stories. He is best known for his novel, Stranger in a Strange Land, about a boy born during the first
manned mission to Mars. It’s filled with values from the 60’s, including free
love, new religions and “different” views on marriage. It was quite
ground-breaking in its day and can still be startling to our modern, but still
quite Puritanical, society. Heinlein called his books “speculative fiction”
rather than “science fiction” because he liked to emphasized the idea that he
was writing about things that could, possibly, come true. He tried to stick to
only the scientific laws that we knew and their reasonable extrapolation. I
think that’s why his work stands the test of time.
So, go read some of his
work today, in celebration of his birthday.
7/5/2005
Danger Will Robinson!
Accordingto this article on MSN, those inventive Japanese are at it agian!
This time, they’ve created another piece of science-fiction: The Security Robot.
According to the article, they will patrol shopping malls looking out for
potential trouble. In the picture, they show a security robot putting out a
fire, so I’m assuming they’ll have some safety features, like fire
extinguishers. No word on whether or not they’ll have firearms built in, but I
doubt it, considering the laws in Japan regarding that sort of thing. Of course,
they may develop that for export…
Oh, that’d be scary. A robotic mall
security guard with a gun. Like the human variety isn’t bad enough already. I
just hope the designers have read Asimov’s Laws of
Robotics!
6/24/2005
Okay, movie hype has reached a “whole new level”.
Look , I like Batman. I
read the comic books. I watched the original series. I watched all the different
cartoons, and still do, when I can manage it. I love the movies. Even the bad
ones! But, when Forbes is running an article about how to be Batman, well, I
think we’ve gone a little to far. Though, they haven’t gone as far as
HowStuffWorks, who has a How the Batsuit Works page and a How the
Batmobile Works page.
Well, what the heck, it is Friday, after all. Click on one of the links. They’re all good!
6/20/2005
Look, I
made more art!
I needed a fantasy world to escape into, so I made one. Well,
part of one. So far, I’m just experiementing with some stock images, but at
least I’m producing things. ThisVue d’Espirit program is really intuitive, for me, and makes
great output very easy to produce. Or so I’m told. So far, I’ve only made really
good output, but I see the potential for great. Who knows, one day, someone
might actually donate money for the art I produce! Yeah, okay, that might be
asking too much, but, still… On the other hand, I’ve been thinking about saving
up the money for a new color printer. Rumor has it that Epson produces archival
quality inks for their inkjet printers. In theory, I could use them to produce
prints that I could sell. Make a limited number of prints, frame them, and sell
them on eBay or, dare I say it, my very own web page!
6/17/2005
Okay, this may be fun for a limited number of people…
But, I’ve “invented”
a generator based on the tables found in the d20 Past supplement for TSR’s, er, Wizards of the Coast’s d20 Modern Roleplaying Game. It’s from the section on pulp
heros. Specifically, it’s the table for randomly generating inventions for your
pulp-age scientist. Now, fully automated by yours truly.
So, what are you
waiting for? Go whip up some Pulp Science-Fiction Inventions!
Aw, c’mon, it’s Friday, what have you got to lose?
6/10/2005
I love Dune.
I love the Dune
Encyclopedia even more. I have a now very rare, hard-back copy of this
wonderful book, but it is sadly out of print. I treasure my copy and will, on
occasion, simply thumb through the pages randomly reading entries. The
imagination that generated the source material for the Dune universe, and the
creative people who created the Dune
Encyclopedia are equally brilliant, in my opinion.
In any case, you can
get a fairly good PDF of the Dune
Encyclopedia for free by simply clicking on the link. It’s worth the 10
megabyte download. Trust me.

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