I've begun streaming the Netflix remake of Lost in Space. That may be why today's subject line occurred to me. But not the only reason. Consider:
"IBM's tiniest computer is smaller than a grain of rock salt." Actually, the amazing fact is that something so small does compute. "IBM has unveiled a computer that's smaller than a grain of rock salt. It has the power of an x86 chip from 1990 ... The publication says that the machine will cost under $0.10 to
manufacture, which gives credence to IBM's prediction that these types
of computers will be embedded everywhere within the next five years."
But what surely doesn't compute is the mess Facebook has made of elections and (un)civil discourse. See -- if you can bear to revisit it -- " ‘A grand illusion’: seven days that shattered Facebook’s facade."
I have my doubts this omelet can be reassembled into eggs, but if you are (or want to be) more optimistic, consider, "How the Government Could Fix Facebook."
Tuesday, May 29, 2018
Tuesday, May 22, 2018
That's life
Life has been intruding -- not in a bad way, but it's intrusive nonetheless. What more appropriate way to offer a prospectively interesting post despite those distractions than with a post about ... life.
Onward, then, to some recent items from the life sciences.
Given the number of forecasts, dating back, at the least, to Thomas Malthus, that humanity will breed itself to disaster, it's nice(!) to read a counter-argument. As in: "The Population Bomb Has Been Defused: The Earth and humanity will survive as fertility rates fall almost everywhere." This is, unequivocally, Good News.
After a spate of reports about unreproducible and/or statistically questionable psychology experiments, it's also encouraging to see, "Psychologists Have a Plan to Fix the Broken Science of Psychology." There may be a whole new paradigm emerging for performing psychological research.
Onward, then, to some recent items from the life sciences.
Given the number of forecasts, dating back, at the least, to Thomas Malthus, that humanity will breed itself to disaster, it's nice(!) to read a counter-argument. As in: "The Population Bomb Has Been Defused: The Earth and humanity will survive as fertility rates fall almost everywhere." This is, unequivocally, Good News.
After a spate of reports about unreproducible and/or statistically questionable psychology experiments, it's also encouraging to see, "Psychologists Have a Plan to Fix the Broken Science of Psychology." There may be a whole new paradigm emerging for performing psychological research.
Monday, May 14, 2018
Mid-year writing update
Updated August 10, 2018
Updated May 19, 2018
While my recent focus has (understandably, methinks) been the April 30th release of Trope-ing the Light Fantastic: The Science Behind the Fiction, I have some fiction news, as well. If you'll allow me to catch you up ...
"Chance of Storms," one of my rare non-SF stories will appear in the forthcoming reprint antho, Fantasy for the Throne. (You may recall I had a story in last year's Science Fiction for the Throne antho.)
A second short story, "Paradise Regained," also has a reappearance pending, this time as a podcast at Escape Pod.
August 8, 2018 update: Podcast and "Paradise Regained" text available here. It's a fine performance.)
And new fiction? Last January, when I announced the sale to Analog of "Harry and the Lewises," the novella had not yet been assigned to an issue. Now it has: the story is scheduled for the September/October issue. (And if that title brings to mind a campy movie from 1987? You won't be entirely misled. Just somewhat :-) )
And newer still? If you were hooked by last year's story arc (in The Grantville Gazette) beginning with the novelette "The Company Man" and continuing with the novella "The Company Dick" ... be of good cheer. I'm about 10K words into "The Company Mole."
May 19 update: I'm pleased to append, in breaking news, that "Paradise Regained" (indeed, the very same tale as mentioned above) was just announced as the short-story winner in the Analytical Laboratory (Analog readers poll) for 2017. You can find all the winners at Anlab Readers' Award Winners.
Updated May 19, 2018
While my recent focus has (understandably, methinks) been the April 30th release of Trope-ing the Light Fantastic: The Science Behind the Fiction, I have some fiction news, as well. If you'll allow me to catch you up ...
![]() |
| Can they top this cover? |
A second short story, "Paradise Regained," also has a reappearance pending, this time as a podcast at Escape Pod.
August 8, 2018 update: Podcast and "Paradise Regained" text available here. It's a fine performance.)
And new fiction? Last January, when I announced the sale to Analog of "Harry and the Lewises," the novella had not yet been assigned to an issue. Now it has: the story is scheduled for the September/October issue. (And if that title brings to mind a campy movie from 1987? You won't be entirely misled. Just somewhat :-) )
And newer still? If you were hooked by last year's story arc (in The Grantville Gazette) beginning with the novelette "The Company Man" and continuing with the novella "The Company Dick" ... be of good cheer. I'm about 10K words into "The Company Mole."
May 19 update: I'm pleased to append, in breaking news, that "Paradise Regained" (indeed, the very same tale as mentioned above) was just announced as the short-story winner in the Analytical Laboratory (Analog readers poll) for 2017. You can find all the winners at Anlab Readers' Award Winners.
Posted by
Edward M. Lerner
at
9:48 AM
Labels:
business of writing,
ed's fiction,
Science Behind the Fiction
Wednesday, May 9, 2018
Arrrrgh!
And no, today's post isn't a further complaint about Yahoo Mail. (In fact, they've actually begun in recent weeks to get a handle on spam.)
Nor much of a post at all.
One of the household PCs was picked (targeted?) this week for the latest Windows 10 "feature" update. The new features, as far as I can tell are:
Well done, Microsoft! Love these new features!
So: rather than blog this week, I'm doing other things :-(
Nor much of a post at all.
One of the household PCs was picked (targeted?) this week for the latest Windows 10 "feature" update. The new features, as far as I can tell are:
- Breaking my non-MS antivirus software
- Breaking the UI to my non-MS cloud-backup service
- Changing at least one past authorization in the firewall
- Failing to support the installer for the only supported iteration of Adobe Reader
Well done, Microsoft! Love these new features!
So: rather than blog this week, I'm doing other things :-(
Monday, April 30, 2018
Trope-ing the Light Fantastic
Last updated September 2, 2024. Copies are temporarily unavailable. New editions to come.
=====
I am pleased to announce the release today of Trope-ing the Light Fantastic: The Science Behind the Fiction.
Trope-ing? There's a funny word! So what is this book?
In a nutshell: The essential resource for anyone who reads, writes, watches, or studies science fiction.
In a few more words, borrowed from the back cover:
Trope-ing? There's a funny word! So what is this book?In a nutshell: The essential resource for anyone who reads, writes, watches, or studies science fiction.
In a few more words, borrowed from the back cover:
Men have walked on the Moon. Siri and Alexa manage — at least often enough to be helpful — to make sense of the things we say. Biologists have decoded DNA, and doctors have begun to tailor treatments to suit our individual genetic make-ups. In short: science and tech happen.And what's the early buzz? I'm happy you asked.
But faster-than-light travel? Time travel? Telepathy? A six million dollar — as adjusted, of course, for inflation — man? Starfaring aliens? Super-intelligent computers? Those, surely, are mere fodder for storytelling. Or wild extrapolations. Just so many "sci fi" tropes.
Sometimes, yes. But not necessarily.
In Trope-ing the Light Fantastic, physicist, computer engineer, science popularizer, and award-winning science-fiction author Edward M. Lerner entertainingly examines these and many other SF tropes. The science behind the fiction.
Each chapter, along with its eminently accessible scientific discussion, surveys science fiction — foundational and modern, in short and long written form, on TV and the big screen — that illustrates a particular trope. The good, the bad, and occasionally the cringe-worthy. All imparted with wit (and ample references to learn more).
So forget what the Wizard of Oz advised. Let's pull back the curtain ....
Posted by
Edward M. Lerner
at
9:22 AM
Labels:
ed's non-fiction,
science,
Science Behind the Fiction,
trope
Monday, April 23, 2018
The clock is Trope-ing (er, ticking)
One short week from today, the fine folk at Phoenix Pick will release Trope-ing the Light Fantastic: The Science Behind the Fiction.* As in:
Being this near to publication of my first nonfiction book is exciting in its own right ... but isn't the ticking metaphor (whether it brings to mind time bombs or Neverland alligators) a tad overwrought? Nope. Not if you're a Kindle person. The pre-order discount for the Kindle edition disappears when, well, it's too late to pre-order. One week from today.
If you might be interested -- and given that you're visiting SF and Nonsense, how can you not? -- check out Trope-ing the Light Fantastic for Kindle. Because there's nothing wrong with a bargain :-)
(*) More specifically, the hardback and ebook editions will be released April 30, with the trade paperback edition to follow.
The essential resource for anyone who reads, writes, watches, or studies science fiction.
(I've blogged more than once(!) about Trope-ing, but if you're new here -- welcome! -- here's the back story: "From mighty oak trees, little acorns grow.")
![]() |
| To order from Amazon |
If you might be interested -- and given that you're visiting SF and Nonsense, how can you not? -- check out Trope-ing the Light Fantastic for Kindle. Because there's nothing wrong with a bargain :-)
(*) More specifically, the hardback and ebook editions will be released April 30, with the trade paperback edition to follow.
Posted by
Edward M. Lerner
at
9:12 AM
Labels:
ed's non-fiction,
science,
Science Behind the Fiction,
trope
Tuesday, April 17, 2018
Look! Up in the sky! ...
It's astronomy news!
And surely real news of astronomy beats an imaginary guy in tights and a cape.
Case 1: the mind-blowingly mobile mountains of Pluto. (Say that quickly ten times.) See "Pluto’s mountains may have slid along a kilometre a day." That rate of motion isn't something you'd expect to see of a glacier on Earth, much less of ice mountains in the outer Solar System deep freeze. But facts are stubborn things ...
And surely real news of astronomy beats an imaginary guy in tights and a cape.
![]() |
| The Mountains of Madness (er, Pluto) |
Monday, April 9, 2018
Move 'em on, head 'em out (the annual posts roundup)
Starting in the ancient past of 2011 with "Postscript (or is that post post?)", I've blogged every year around this date about popular posts here at SF and Nonsense. These annual summaries have always begun with the blog's top-ten, all-time hits -- but this year, I'm going to dispense with that bit of the tradition. The all-time top ten remain the same as a year ago (see "Post posting"), differing only in a couple slight changes of position within the list.
But recently popular posts? That's another story -- or ten stories, if you will ;-) and only two of these ten are also on that all-time list.
Herewith, the most popular ten posts for the past month (meaning the past thirty days, spanning a calendar-month boundary), Blogger providing that compilation.
| Fine posts, every one |
Herewith, the most popular ten posts for the past month (meaning the past thirty days, spanning a calendar-month boundary), Blogger providing that compilation.
Posted by
Edward M. Lerner
at
11:15 AM
Labels:
Betrayer of Worlds,
business of writing,
ed's fiction,
ed's non-fiction,
fleet of worlds,
Gw'oth,
kindle,
Larry Niven,
miscellany,
Science Behind the Fiction,
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