• (ReacTor) Never Mind the Torment Nexus

    From James Nicoll@21:1/5 to All on Mon Feb 26 15:08:52 2024
    Never Mind the Torment Nexus, Here's Five SF Ideas I'd Like to See in Reality

    Hey, tech billionaires--if you want to steal ideas from science fiction,
    start with these...

    https://reactormag.com/never-mind-the-torment-nexus-heres-five-sf-ideas-id-like-to-see-in-reality/
    --
    My reviews can be found at http://jamesdavisnicoll.com/
    My tor pieces at https://www.tor.com/author/james-davis-nicoll/
    My Dreamwidth at https://james-davis-nicoll.dreamwidth.org/
    My patreon is at https://www.patreon.com/jamesdnicoll

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Scott Dorsey@21:1/5 to James Nicoll on Tue Feb 27 01:47:20 2024
    James Nicoll <[email protected]> wrote:
    Never Mind the Torment Nexus, Here's Five SF Ideas I'd Like to See in Reality

    Hey, tech billionaires--if you want to steal ideas from science fiction, >start with these...

    https://reactormag.com/never-mind-the-torment-nexus-heres-five-sf-ideas-id-like-to-see-in-reality/

    What I want to see are computers that explode into flames when presented
    with bad data. You see it all the time in SF, but sadly never in real life. There are a lot of spammers out there whose computers would be exploding
    were the world a better place than it is.
    --scott
    --
    "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Ted Nolan @21:1/5 to Scott Dorsey on Tue Feb 27 03:06:54 2024
    In article <urjev8$4t4$[email protected]>,
    Scott Dorsey <[email protected]> wrote:
    James Nicoll <[email protected]> wrote:
    Never Mind the Torment Nexus, Here's Five SF Ideas I'd Like to See in Reality >>
    Hey, tech billionaires--if you want to steal ideas from science fiction, >>start with these...
    https://reactormag.com/never-mind-the-torment-nexus-heres-five-sf-ideas-id-like-to-see-in-reality/

    What I want to see are computers that explode into flames when presented
    with bad data. You see it all the time in SF, but sadly never in real life. >There are a lot of spammers out there whose computers would be exploding
    were the world a better place than it is.
    --scott
    --

    I have had a CD-ROM drive explode.
    --
    columbiaclosings.com
    What's not in Columbia anymore..

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Scott Lurndal@21:1/5 to Scott Dorsey on Tue Feb 27 14:37:06 2024
    [email protected] (Scott Dorsey) writes:
    James Nicoll <[email protected]> wrote:
    Never Mind the Torment Nexus, Here's Five SF Ideas I'd Like to See in Reality >>
    Hey, tech billionaires--if you want to steal ideas from science fiction, >>start with these...
    https://reactormag.com/never-mind-the-torment-nexus-heres-five-sf-ideas-id-like-to-see-in-reality/

    What I want to see are computers that explode into flames when presented
    with bad data.

    It's happened. Well, close anyway. We had a bios bug once that burned
    up a CPU in a rack-mounted 1U server.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mad Hamish@21:1/5 to Scott Dorsey on Wed Feb 28 09:24:26 2024
    On 27 Feb 2024 01:47:20 -0000, [email protected] (Scott Dorsey) wrote:

    James Nicoll <[email protected]> wrote:
    Never Mind the Torment Nexus, Here's Five SF Ideas I'd Like to See in Reality >>
    Hey, tech billionaires--if you want to steal ideas from science fiction, >>start with these...
    https://reactormag.com/never-mind-the-torment-nexus-heres-five-sf-ideas-id-like-to-see-in-reality/

    What I want to see are computers that explode into flames when presented
    with bad data. You see it all the time in SF, but sadly never in real life. >There are a lot of spammers out there whose computers would be exploding
    were the world a better place than it is.

    There was a guy I worked with 20 years ago who had worked with
    computers with core memory and if you sent the right/wrong combination
    of instructions you could get them to overheat and start burning

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Paul S Person@21:1/5 to [email protected] on Wed Feb 28 08:39:12 2024
    On Tue, 27 Feb 2024 17:29:44 -0500, Cryptoengineer
    <[email protected]> wrote:

    On 2/27/2024 5:24 PM, Mad Hamish wrote:
    On 27 Feb 2024 01:47:20 -0000, [email protected] (Scott Dorsey) wrote:

    James Nicoll <[email protected]> wrote:
    Never Mind the Torment Nexus, Here's Five SF Ideas I'd Like to See in Reality

    Hey, tech billionaires--if you want to steal ideas from science fiction, >>>> start with these...

    https://reactormag.com/never-mind-the-torment-nexus-heres-five-sf-ideas-id-like-to-see-in-reality/

    What I want to see are computers that explode into flames when presented >>> with bad data. You see it all the time in SF, but sadly never in real life.
    There are a lot of spammers out there whose computers would be exploding >>> were the world a better place than it is.

    There was a guy I worked with 20 years ago who had worked with
    computers with core memory and if you sent the right/wrong combination
    of instructions you could get them to overheat and start burning

    A yes, the notorious HCF (Halt and Catch Fire) instruction!

    Well ... for mainframes.

    At least one of the (early) Intel processor chips came with an
    undocumented opcode which those discovering it named "HCF".

    It was used to verify that the chip could actually produce all 64K (I
    /said/ it was an early processor chip!) possible RAM addresses by
    having it cycle through them endlessly while the output was
    monitored/verified.
    --
    "Here lies the Tuscan poet Aretino,
    Who evil spoke of everyone but God,
    Giving as his excuse, 'I never knew him.'"

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christian Weisgerber@21:1/5 to James Nicoll on Wed Feb 28 16:38:07 2024
    On 2024-02-26, James Nicoll <[email protected]> wrote:

    https://reactormag.com/never-mind-the-torment-nexus-heres-five-sf-ideas-id-like-to-see-in-reality/

    | Joymakers combine “telephone, credit card, alarm clock, pocket bar,
    | reference library, and full-time secretary,” as well as other
    | functions, in an affordable, compact package. [...]
    | Readers may notice that joymakers sound a lot like smartphones,
    | pocket bars aside.

    I gotta ask: What's a "pocket bar"?

    --
    Christian "naddy" Weisgerber [email protected]

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From Scott Dorsey@21:1/5 to [email protected] on Wed Feb 28 23:05:46 2024
    Christian Weisgerber <[email protected]> wrote:
    On 2024-02-26, James Nicoll <[email protected]> wrote:
    https://reactormag.com/never-mind-the-torment-nexus-heres-five-sf-ideas-id-like-to-see-in-reality/

    | Joymakers combine “telephone, credit card, alarm clock, pocket bar,
    | reference library, and full-time secretary,” as well as other
    | functions, in an affordable, compact package. [...]
    | Readers may notice that joymakers sound a lot like smartphones,
    | pocket bars aside.

    I gotta ask: What's a "pocket bar"?

    Let's say you're just out of some terrible meeting at work and you really, really want a martini, but you don't want to leave the area. Voila, pocket
    bar comes to the rescue!

    You'll never have to stay sober again! Thank God for self-driving cars to
    get you home safely.
    --scott
    --
    "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Christian Weisgerber@21:1/5 to Scott Dorsey on Thu Feb 29 00:15:29 2024
    On 2024-02-28, Scott Dorsey <[email protected]> wrote:

    I gotta ask: What's a "pocket bar"?

    Let's say you're just out of some terrible meeting at work and you really, really want a martini, but you don't want to leave the area. Voila, pocket bar comes to the rescue!

    So, a hip flask?

    Ah, no, I think I see where I was misled. I guess the term is meant
    literally; it refers to a fictional device that works as a minibar
    that fits into a pocket. When reading the list in James's article,
    I thought "pocket bar" was an established term for some existing
    thingy, the same way "telephone, credit card, alarm clock" are.

    A future hi-tech hip flask then!

    --
    Christian "naddy" Weisgerber [email protected]

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From Christian Weisgerber@21:1/5 to Robert Carnegie on Fri Mar 1 18:45:12 2024
    On 2024-02-29, Robert Carnegie <[email protected]> wrote:

    Not related:

    Yes related!

    A type of cellphone which is or was a thick
    rectangular slab of electronics was called
    informally a "candy bar phone".

    Which is another reason I didn't know what to make of the term
    "pocket bar" in the context of a SFnal smartphone equivalent.

    A type of portable electronics which hasn't
    caught on yet is electric power generated by
    feeding a chemical into a "fuel cell".

    That idea generated numerous articles in the tech news a number of
    years ago but seems to have sunk like a stone in water.

    So theoretically, you could, uh, charge
    your phone with ethanol. And maybe then
    charge your glass.

    That fuel cell will need a purified feed if you don't want to gum
    it up. I guess you could use the fuel to spike your drink, but you
    don't want to feed whiskey etc. into the fuel cell. Now that I
    think about it, denatured alcohol will presumably not make a good
    feed, which raises interesting questions regarding taxation, sale
    to minors, etc.

    One problem that was mooted a lot when fuel-cell portable electronics
    made the rounds on tech news were on-board safety regulations on
    passenger airplanes.

    (The Soviet Union used rectified spirit as a coolant in a number
    of military planes which led exactly to the kind of abuse you might
    think they would, e.g. the Tu-22 booze bomber.)

    --
    Christian "naddy" Weisgerber [email protected]

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Scott Dorsey@21:1/5 to [email protected] on Fri Mar 1 20:39:48 2024
    Christian Weisgerber <[email protected]> wrote:
    On 2024-02-29, Robert Carnegie <[email protected]> wrote:
    A type of portable electronics which hasn't
    caught on yet is electric power generated by
    feeding a chemical into a "fuel cell".

    That idea generated numerous articles in the tech news a number of
    years ago but seems to have sunk like a stone in water.

    So theoretically, you could, uh, charge
    your phone with ethanol. And maybe then
    charge your glass.

    That fuel cell will need a purified feed if you don't want to gum
    it up. I guess you could use the fuel to spike your drink, but you
    don't want to feed whiskey etc. into the fuel cell. Now that I
    think about it, denatured alcohol will presumably not make a good
    feed, which raises interesting questions regarding taxation, sale
    to minors, etc.

    This is the basic reason why it hasn't caught on... it requires pretty
    clean hydrogen as a fuel if it's expected to last very long. Anything
    with carbons in it will gunk it up, and that includes alcohols and paraffins.

    It's a practical idea, and it worked very well in the Gemini spacecraft,
    but nobody has yet figured out how to keep carbon from poisoning it.
    --scott

    --
    "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Default User@21:1/5 to James Nicoll on Sun Mar 3 06:31:12 2024
    James Nicoll wrote:

    Never Mind the Torment Nexus, Here's Five SF Ideas I'd Like to See in
    Reality

    Hey, tech billionaires--if you want to steal ideas from science
    fiction, start with these...

    The only one I read was At The Mountains of Madness, which was pretty sufficient Lovecraft for me.

    Speaking of the Silurian Hypothesis, one of the examples using that was
    The Homecoming by Barry B. Longyear. I read that in Asimov's.

    It features dinosaurs that developed technology, including spaceflight.
    I don't remember much of the details of where they were coming home
    from. Time-dilated interstellar travel perhaps?

    I seem to recall that they were rather disconcerted by Mars being a lot
    drier than when they last saw it. Of course, that would be small
    potatoes compared to what happened to Earth!

    https://www.isfdb.org/cgi-bin/pl.cgi?59265

    https://www.isfdb.org/wiki/images/7/76/ASFOCT79.jpg


    Brian

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Horny Goat@21:1/5 to All on Mon Mar 4 10:55:19 2024
    On Tue, 27 Feb 2024 14:37:06 GMT, [email protected] (Scott Lurndal)
    wrote:

    [email protected] (Scott Dorsey) writes:
    James Nicoll <[email protected]> wrote:
    Never Mind the Torment Nexus, Here's Five SF Ideas I'd Like to See in Reality

    Hey, tech billionaires--if you want to steal ideas from science fiction, >>>start with these...
    https://reactormag.com/never-mind-the-torment-nexus-heres-five-sf-ideas-id-like-to-see-in-reality/

    What I want to see are computers that explode into flames when presented >>with bad data.

    It's happened. Well, close anyway. We had a bios bug once that burned
    up a CPU in a rack-mounted 1U server.

    I've never had that but back in 2010 (when 1.5 gb drives were big) had
    a power supply that while dying was putting out power spikes that
    fried one of my drives then a week later the other one before after
    that frying the motherboard itself.

    Given that I had back up my genealogy files from one drive to the
    other but not elsewhere that put me out of the family history business
    as I lost a LOT of research material I had spent 10+ years collecting
    and scanning.

    My aunt had done a printed (I think it was printed off her computer
    but she's gone now so can't ask her) but this pace https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Craver_Farmstead#:~:text=Today%2C%20the%20Craver%20Farmstead%20is,architecture%20in%20upstate%20New%20York.
    was built by the brother of my 7x great grandfather whose grandparents
    brought them to America from the Rhineland roughly 300 years ago.

    I intend to go there if and when I'm ever visiting the in-laws in
    Ontario.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Horny Goat@21:1/5 to [email protected] on Mon Mar 4 10:58:41 2024
    On Wed, 28 Feb 2024 09:24:26 +1100, Mad Hamish <[email protected]> wrote:

    What I want to see are computers that explode into flames when presented >>with bad data. You see it all the time in SF, but sadly never in real life. >>There are a lot of spammers out there whose computers would be exploding >>were the world a better place than it is.

    There was a guy I worked with 20 years ago who had worked with
    computers with core memory and if you sent the right/wrong combination
    of instructions you could get them to overheat and start burning

    I never encountered that but DO remember the time at my place of work
    when the computer operators (this was in the days when a data center
    was in a highly air conditioned room with raised floors) had during a
    mid summer heat wave stashed a couple of cases of beer under the
    raised flooring in the computer room (which nobody had access to but
    them) and during a power failure their main priority was to get the
    beer to their car's trunks in the parking lot before the brass found
    out where the beer had been just a few minutes previously since if the
    brass found out it could have meant their jobs...

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Paul S Person@21:1/5 to All on Tue Mar 5 09:18:01 2024
    On Mon, 04 Mar 2024 10:55:19 -0800, The Horny Goat <[email protected]>
    wrote:

    On Tue, 27 Feb 2024 14:37:06 GMT, [email protected] (Scott Lurndal)
    wrote:

    [email protected] (Scott Dorsey) writes:
    James Nicoll <[email protected]> wrote:
    Never Mind the Torment Nexus, Here's Five SF Ideas I'd Like to See in Reality

    Hey, tech billionaires--if you want to steal ideas from science fiction, >>>>start with these...
    https://reactormag.com/never-mind-the-torment-nexus-heres-five-sf-ideas-id-like-to-see-in-reality/

    What I want to see are computers that explode into flames when presented >>>with bad data.

    It's happened. Well, close anyway. We had a bios bug once that burned
    up a CPU in a rack-mounted 1U server.

    I've never had that but back in 2010 (when 1.5 gb drives were big) had
    a power supply that while dying was putting out power spikes that
    fried one of my drives then a week later the other one before after
    that frying the motherboard itself.

    Given that I had back up my genealogy files from one drive to the
    other but not elsewhere that put me out of the family history business
    as I lost a LOT of research material I had spent 10+ years collecting
    and scanning.

    Massive data loss -- that's the sort of thing that makes some people
    fanatical believers in backing stuff up to somewhere /other/ than the
    computer.

    My aunt had done a printed (I think it was printed off her computer
    but she's gone now so can't ask her) but this pace >https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Craver_Farmstead#:~:text=Today%2C%20the%20Craver%20Farmstead%20is,architecture%20in%20upstate%20New%20York.
    was built by the brother of my 7x great grandfather whose grandparents >brought them to America from the Rhineland roughly 300 years ago.

    I intend to go there if and when I'm ever visiting the in-laws in
    Ontario.
    --
    "Here lies the Tuscan poet Aretino,
    Who evil spoke of everyone but God,
    Giving as his excuse, 'I never knew him.'"

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Joy Beeson@21:1/5 to Nicoll on Tue Mar 5 22:16:33 2024
    On Mon, 26 Feb 2024 15:08:52 -0000 (UTC), [email protected] (James
    Nicoll) wrote:

    Hey, tech billionaires--if you want to steal ideas from science fiction, start with these...

    https://reactormag.com/never-mind-the-torment-nexus-heres-five-sf-ideas-id-like-to-see-in-reality/



    I want the "I'm taking a nap" button from "The Machine Stops".

    --
    joy beeson at centurylink dot net
    http://wlweather.net/PAGESEW/

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)