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Thursday, July 31, 2003

Life on Earth Suggests Life is Possible on Mars



Whether there's actually life on Mars or whether life ever gained a toehold there is still moot, but increasingly, scientists find life on earth manages to fill every niche, including those most Mars-like.

NASA scientist discovers new species of organism in Mars-like environment - NSSTC News Release N03-007 (07-30-03)

No moment of time?



A 27-year-old New Zealand broadcasting school tutor (?) has written a paper that may solve the ages-old Zeno of Elea's paradox. The author, who has spent an entire six months at University, says that there's no such thing as a precise instant of time for objects in motion. As I understand it, he suggests such precise moments are a product of human consciousness rather than physics. It's complicated stuff and controversial, but some top physicists praise the work. It reminds me some of David Deutch's theories, which also say there is no "flow" to time, that time doesn't progress.
Does this mean I can't go back in time to my first love and give it another shot when I get that time machine ticket?

Ground-breaking work in understanding of time

Tuesday, July 29, 2003

Coffee Good for the Liver



Hey, I like this. Norway researchers say that drinking three cups of coffee a day may reduce deaths for liver disease by up to 40 percent. I wonder if this still works when you drink about 8 cups a day?

Coffee reduces risk of death from liver disease)

Friday, July 25, 2003

X-Prize Appeals to United Spaceports




Now, the X-Prize Foundation is appealing to United Spaceports for help.

Spaceports? You thought those were sci-fi, you say?

An evolving part of the commercial space transportation industry in the United States is the development of private or state-operated launch, re-entry, and processing sites known as "spaceports."

Several states -- such as Oklahoma, New Mexico, Texas, and California -- are developing commercial spaceports within their borders. These spaceports can provide space transportation service providers and their customers with an alternative to the traditional U.S. federal launch sites and ranges operated by either the U.S. Air Force or NASA.

Yahoo! News - X Prize Looks to Spaceports for Rocket Races

Wednesday, July 23, 2003

Mars of Our Dreams



I read Edgar Rice Burrough's books about the imaginary Mars he called Barsoom at age 12. I still sometimes dream of that fantasy Mars with its four-armed green men of the red desert plains and its nearly naked red-skinned Martian Princess Dejah Thoris. The SF author Fred Pohl, not a man to give up early loves lightly, has argued that Burrough's ideas of air machines pumping breath into the thin Martian atmosphere, of advanced biotechnology and assorted other wonders were not bad for their time.
But I gotta admit, I read them for the adventure. Swords and radium guns and riding giant Martian thoats chased by the great white apes and hordes of four-armed green men. Great stuff.
Lots of other Mars pop culture affected me along with most baby boomers, ranging from the film "Invasion From Mars," parodied nicely by Tim Burton in "Mars Attacks," and the wistful Martian tales of Ray Bradbury. Here's a few reminders of some Mars inputs...
Mars in 20th Century American Pop Culture

Dark Energy Evidence



Astrophysicists say most of the universe is made of "dark" energy and "dark" matter. We don't know what either actually is, but evidence that both are very real, even if we can't see them directly, is accumulating. Here's another piece:

Direct evidence found for dark energy: Mysterious force of cosmic acceleration marked Big Bang's afterglow.

Biotech Marches On



Researchers are unlocking the mysteries of how our bodies fight disease. Another key found recently may help is a protein that carries target information to our immune systems. If I were getting paid for this, I'd translate the following story into English for you. Maybe later.

ScienceDaily News Release: Protein That Fights Bacteria And Viruses Cloned By Scripps Scientists

Singularity May be Disruptive



The idea of a "singularity," a technological advance such as the emergence of real artificial intelligence -- that is, of conscious, A.I. or other tech changes of equal magnitude --is one of the hottest concepts in both tech circles and among science fiction writers. The site, Singularity Watch, keeps its online eye on the lookout for indicators of such change and what it might mean.

Well, it could change everything.

Social Backlash to the Singularity Hypothesis

Best SF related Blogs



Cory Doctorow's blog over at BoingBoing is probably the best one by a techie SF author out there at the moment. He updates regularly and the blog lives up to its title as a "Directory of Wonderful Things." Those include links to futuristic tech, weird cultural events and artifacts and behaviors, and sky-fi out-there stuff ranging from the folk art stylings of SARS masks and other wild images. It also points out cool new software and personal items about well-known techie and SF people.

Boing Boing: A Directory of Wonderful Things

Monday, July 21, 2003

Space Spinoff: Drilling Planets


Expertise derived from working on the joint NASA-ESA Cassini-Huygens mission to Saturn and its moon Titan is now being applied to underground drilling machines.

ESA Portal - Improving Daily Life - Space engineering helps drill better holes in planet Earth

Metal-rich Stars Tend to Have Planets




A comparison of 754 nearby stars like our sun - some with planets and some without - shows definitively that the more iron and other metals there are in a star, the greater the chance it has a companion planet.
"Astronomers have been saying that only 5 percent of stars have planets, but that's not a very precise assessment," said Debra Fischer, a research astronomer at the University of California, Berkeley. "We now know that stars which are abundant in heavy metals are five times more likely to harbor orbiting planets than are stars deficient in metals. If you look at the metal-rich stars, 20 percent have planets. That's stunning."


Stars rich in heavy metals tend to harbor planets

Unmasking the "Elephant Man"



The Discovery Health Channel has united three distinguished medical researchers from three different continents in an attempt to put an end to the mystery of what really afflicted Joseph Merrick, notoriously known as the Elephant Man.

They studied DNA samples from Merrick's century-old hair and bone in the investigation, but the most interesting aspect of the show may be seeing what Merrick would have looked like without the disfiguring ailment.

Ancient DNA analysis unveils mystery of history's most horribly deformed man -- The Elephant Man

Heart Healthy Pizza?



Just one serving a day of tomato-based foods such as pizza or tomato sauce could lower your risk for heart disease by as much as 30 percent, contends a new Harvard study.



Yahoo! News - A Tomato a Day Keeps Heart Disease Away

Saturday, July 19, 2003

Better Animations Coming



More realistic clouds, smoke. Cyberspace simulations resemble reality with ever greater fidelity. Surely, somewhere, Baudrillard is nodding, "I told you so..."

Purdue software promises better animation for movies, games

Friday, July 11, 2003

Glass Engine



I love Philip Glass' work. His opera for Cocteu's "Beauty and the Beast," and soundtrack for the film "Mishima," are favorites, but I can listen to anything he composes. Minimalism isn't for everyone, I guess, but to me, it sounds so sci-fi. Maybe that's why he gets to score so many spooky films and themes ("Dracula," "Fall of the House of Usher," etc.)

Over at the Glass engine, you get Glass in any mood you want. Selections from 60 works, all downloadable. Made my day when I found this.

The IBM glass engine

A little Zen never hurt anyone



Brain tests suggest something about Buddhist practice makes people less stressed, angry or just generally unhappy...and the parts of their brains associated with good mood and positive feelings are more active.

For years I've told people that practicing Zen meditiation brought me a sense of spiritual peace that Western religion certainly never provided. One of the ways it does that, perhaps, it by accepting that living in the moment is all we are sure of and we really should pay attention to that. Mindfullness.
MemeMachineGo!: Scientists give props to Buddhism

All is not what it seems..."



Illusions inform us that our senses do not always see what is or isn't there but make some of it up as they go along. I'm not making this us. See for yourself at Sandlot Science.

SandlotScience.com

A poker playing computer? Hold onto your chips



The University of Alberta says it's poker playing computer program is the best in the world...because it bluffs.


Techdirt:A Poker Computer Program That Bluffs

Who's Afraid of the big bad machine?



Hollywood always took something of a dim view, storywise, of science and technology, odd, considering that it is itself one of technology's most successful products. In the 1950s, the fears evoked by the atomic bomb, our first forays into space, and the UFO craze sparked a spate of films such as "Them," "Invasion of the Body Snatchers," "It Came from Outer Space," "Invasion from Mars," "Beginning of the End," "The Day the Earth Stood Still," "The Thing From Outer Space," "Earth Vs. the Flying Saucers," "Creeping Unknown," and many others. They were often frightening films, at least to their youthful audiences. "Invasion from Mars" was even filmed from angles intended to heighten the effect of being a child's nightmare, looking up at transformed and looming authority figures who no longer had our best interests at heart.

Fear of science and technology persists in popular media of all sorts, even in literary science fiction, where technophillia is as likely as technophobia. But the movies still exemplify it most graphically, even if there is now a counter cinema in which technology and science or even UFOs are not necessarily evil. Terminator, Matrix Reloaded and other such recent films suggest the fear of sci-fi like tech expressed in the well known Wired magazine article by Bill Joy, remains widespread.

Personally, my guess is that the late, much missed Issac Asimov had it right when he said that our only hope for survival is science and technology. But, ok, I do still get a kick out of machines duke-ing it out with us, with each other. So why did the Comedy Channel cancel the battling robots show, anyway? That used to give me a sci-fi in the real world thrill.

I'm watching robots fight, I'd think. I guess it really is 2001 (at the time) after all.

Anyway, Nanodot reporting on the Hollywood fear factor re man and machine.

Movies reflect fear of machine intelligence - Nanodot

Nano-TV screens?



If nanogoo doesn't get us, ala Critchton's "Prey," big TV screens made from carbon nanotubes might...

The Nanodot site is always full of futuristic stuff just this side of sci-fi.


Nanotech and cheap, big-screen TVs - Nanodot

Monday, July 07, 2003

Better Wine Via Space?



Space spinoff -- technology brought down to earth from the space program -- led to miniaturization of electronics that revolutionized medicine and gave us TV sets that never die, but satellite imaging and communications are still two of the most important changes the space program brought about. The space program gave us one world -- one world to see as blue-green spaceship earth in a black void. And one world of instant communications. Those pictures from the sky aren't just beautiful, though. They're useful.
Now they're helping Europe make better wines.
ESA - Satellite Applications - Observing the Earth - Imaging vineyards from space will benefit Europe's wines

Matrix Attack



Lots of people are talking about the movie "Matrix Redux," but online, I'm fond of another Matrix.

Bruce Sterling, who attended the Clarion science fiction and fantasy workshop the same year I did, writes Schism Matrix, the quirkiest, least copycat blog on the Web at Infinite Matrix. He points readers toward links to articles, sites and art about Bollywood, amazing Japanese traditional prints updated in the spirit of science fiction and fantasy, and a whole lot of other stuff.
Schism Matrix

Infinite Matrix is one of the finest science fiction Web sites. It includes a column by Terry Bisson, >Terry Bisson my favorite short story writer, and criticism by John Clute of Science Fiction Encyclopedia fame, the name critic in SF, along with author interviews, articles, and entertaining fiction.

Best SF Site?

It's run by Eileen Gunn, another Clarion grad (influential workshop with graduates far flung and accomplished), who needs some contributions to help keep it going. This one, I really want to see survive. It and others like it could rival the influence of the pulp science fiction and fantasy mags on the field eventually. I think www.Scifi.com, under the guidance of former SF Age editor Scott Edelman, is already carving out a respected space in the genre.
Infinite Matrix
Science Friction


Getting the George Bush led GOP into the 21st century is a problem for leading scientists. One of his advisors on biotethics asked committee members to read Nathaniel Hawthorne's "The Birthmark," before attending their first meeting. I'm glad they're reading SF, but couldn't they at least try to get into the second half of the 20th century? Nicholas Thomson of Washington Monthly explains why scientists find the Bush administration andediluvian.

Science Friction
28 Days Later, a review


Although I loved George Romero's Zombie trilogy, Romero's Dead Trilogywhich began with Night of the Living Dead and peaked with the second, genre-defining film, Dawn of the Dead, 28 Days Later 28 Days Later reminds me most of the last, thus far, of Romero's efforts Day of the Dead.

I first saw Day of the Dead in a smoky, urine scented New York City theater on Times Square. The venue seemed perfect for this most gloomy of post apocalypse films.

28 Days Later mimics the Zombie kept for study by mad military men, the surviving miltary compound, and other features of Day of the Dead. It also has moments reminescent of of the shopping center scenes in the Dawn film, when survivors of the zombie-making virus raid a food story saying, "Let's shop," and race the ailes with their ricketty carts. Even in a world of the dead, shopping lifts everyone's spirits, a telling comment on our society.

The influence of the Romero films has been incaluable, but this is one of the few take-offs that reflects the philosophical and post-apocalypse ruminating of the trilogy. Most zombi films, such as the excreable Italian ripoffs, simply imitate the graphic violence and gore without the science fiction sensibility informing them.

The two Books of the Dead anthologies of stories based on the Romero films edited by Craig Spector and john Skip, and the two more recent Zombie story anthos, The Book of All Flesh, from Eden Studios, BookofAllFleshbased on their zombie video game, which is another sorta spinoff of Romero's trilogy, are surprisingly good. The Joe Landsdale story in the first Book of the Dead, "On the Far Side of the Cadillac Desert With Dead Folks," is one of my favorite Landsdale stories, and I've read a lot of them.

I've always had a taste for post-apocalypse literature. At least one literary critic has defined much of SF as apocalyptic fiction, and I think he's at least partly right.

It's another way of thinking about what we'd do in the face of disaster. Muti-disciplinary studies of narrative suggest we think in stories most of the time, and one of the purposes of the stories we spin in our heads or consume and think about, is to model potential futures, to plan, evaluate, and criticize potential courses of action. To plan for all eventualities.

What's really scary in this era of nuclear proliferation, SARS, AIDS, organized terrorism, and biological and technological warfare, isn't zombie movies. It's the real world.














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