Comment Re:Ha! (Score 1) 270
An idea I first heard from Tom Digby at the Los Angeles Science Fantasy Society about 1980. Why not?
An idea I first heard from Tom Digby at the Los Angeles Science Fantasy Society about 1980. Why not?
The US government can't order the Fed to just 'hand it over'. That money is loaned to the US at interest. The amount owed to the Fed (principle + interest) is more than the amount of money available, and can never be paid back except by extracting it from somewhere else outside of the US's economy.
I would imagine that s group of some later version of the bird could fly cover for a single (remote or actual) piloted aircraft. That strategy would insinuate human judgement into the mission, while freeing the robots to do what they need to within those restrictions. Of course, hijacking the flight of robots would then require only gaining control over the piloted craft and changing the mission definition. When do we start seeing these things in movies?
This has potential. They'll start teaching each other things, and pretty soon those robots will be sporting what some people might refer to as 'artificial' intelligence. Of course they might get a bit touchy [ http://klurgsheld.wordpress.com/2008/02/02/short-story-the-a-word/ ] about us calling them that, though. And at some point, the lies we tell them will come back [ http://klurgsheld.wordpress.com/2008/02/10/short-story-edifice-of-lies/ ] to bite us. But hey, these are just stories. Fiction. Well, at least they were when I wrote them. Now I'm not so sure.
>>>> Nature didn't select for "non-competitiveness"
Actually, it does. Nature selects for survival, and that can be achieved by finding ways to avoid competing for the same resources. For example, staking out a different plot of ground, or an unoccupied tree, or eating your second-favorite food because you don't have to fight over it.
Not Tesla, Farnsworth. According to the time traveler from Westercon 100 that I met at the Seattle Westercon 50 Science Fiction Convention in 1997, Philo T. Farnsworth not only invented TV, but in 1927 he invented the time machine. If you don't believe me, ask Dr. Robert Forward; his grandson from the future was on some of the panels.
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Read my short stories at klurgsheld.wordpress.com
This sort of thing can be spun either way, so any attempt to investigate it further could be hazardous to the researchers and publishers. In fact, I explored the potential side-effects of doing so in one of the political short stories at my blog, called 'Forced Inquiry'. Pop the following into your browser and have look.
klurgsheld.wordpress.com/2009/03/27/short-story-forced-inquiry/
In particular, it might be handy to have a separate device that is good for reading, and which communicates with your desktop. I've long wanted to have the help or docs somewhere other than either in the way of what I'm working on, covered by what I'm working on, or on a second monitor I don't have. With the doc on an iPad beside my keyboard, I can work more comfortably, and I can take it to somewhere more comfortable if there's a lot to read before proceeding with the software I'm using.
I tried Bob once, but it crashed the PC before I even got in the door.
About the only way I can imagine getting all of those flashy CGI battle scenes into Asimov's storyline is to show Seldon's fears. Start with him working out the details that run through a Crisis period, and have the datavis melt into his nightmare scenario of what would happen if he didn't head it off in time. That way, you get all the destruction Emmerich wants, and then you pan back out through the datavis and onto Seldon's face. He then crafts the countermove. Then we switch up to that future, and we see the events come together to the crisis moment, but then his recording turns on and warns everyone off. Rinse and rep[eat. End with a cliffhanger, the Mule trashing his programmed fix.
Sure. If corporations want to be treated the same as flesh and blood citizens, I say let them have it with both barrels. If they break the law, they get treated the same as anyone else. Jail time and the death penalty can be implemented just as easily for corporations as they can for 'natural' people.
I wrote a series of short stories about a company incarcerated for theft. Set your browser to klurgsheld.wordpress.com. There's a link to Business Short Stories in the tab for About My Short Stories.
Now, if we could only convince a corporation to run for office, maybe we could get this farce out into the open. But then again, they'd probably just render someone and come up with an excuse why s/he's never seen in public. Kind of like Adam Selene in the never-made movie version of Heinlein's "The Moon is a Harsh Mistress".
Waste not, get your budget cut next year.