Bram Kaandorp
Master Poster
Uh.. The new forum will make no money. Not the JREFF.
Sorry. I misread your post as saying "And it makes them no money", hence my response.
Uh.. The new forum will make no money. Not the JREFF.
I'm a PHP dev. But I'm not sure what it is you guys want to do exactly? What do you need a dev for?
Fascinating. You mean you didn't even realize it was meant to be comedy after reading lines such as these?:Try reading it "cold". It imparts a quite different tone to the book.![]()
The fact that this all pretty much matched my opinion of the world at that time may have had something to do with it.Fascinating. You mean you didn't even realize it was meant to be comedy after reading lines such as these?:
"...ape-descended life forms are so amazingly primitive that they still think digital watches are a pretty neat idea",
and: "Oolon Coluphid's trilogy of philosophical blockbusters, Where God Went Wrong, Some More of God's Greatest Mistakes and Who Is This God Person Anyway?"
right in the introduction?
The entire human race murdered in Chapter One? And later we find out it was just an bureaucratic error?
That does have more impact to UK/European readers, I'm sure. Anyone who's seen a Terry Gilliam movie knows they love to make fun of their pervasive, all-intrusive government running utilities everywhere.
Had it been written in the US, the Earth would have been a claim sold off in a bankruptcy proceeding of a corporation or some such.
I'm 62 and not interested in learning code. It would be a tick mark on somebody's CV, and they would get me out of trouble as needed.![]()
That didn't answer my question... :\
What forum is that, exactly? Another SFF forum?
I could do all the former, but not the "modifying styles" part, as I am terrible in design and CSS. Sorry.
From the early years, I'd definitely recommend a great short novel titled "With Folded Hands" (later retitled "The Humanoids" by Jack Williamson) - written way back on 1947. Williamson was waxing prophetic about a future nanny state that would protect us at the expense of our personal freedom.
Had it been more ambiguous about it's theme, and perhaps with a more left leaning perspective, like is often perceived by some in 1984, or Farenheit 451, or Slaughterhouse Five, it might've had a greater claim for being a classic. In my estimation it was everything (Asimov's) "I Robot" has always been perceived to be but never really was: a story about a dystopian world of robots gone mad.
It is about a future world in which robots care for humanity's every want or need, providing complete care and nurturing, which is their prime directive as they see it; the better to keep their fragile charges from harm; even from risking harming themselves.
These robots all are of a single "Borg-like" intelligence, so that there can be no escape by going unnoticed anywhere on any planet any where where they are present. They can communicate instantaneously across the entire galaxy and all its star systems with the benefit of a force called Rhodomagnetism.
A group of human “rebel” vagabonds with wild talents band together in a last ditch attempt to defeat them with their own human "psycho-trans-physical” powers. One of those talents is the power of teleportation which allows them to at first hide themselves away in an entranceless (fractal) cave deep below the surface of the planet.
Doing this they are beyond the robot’s abilities to detect them with their all seeing eyes. Only one member of the group, a little orphan girl, has that particular power but she can transfer it to all the others when they sync their minds to hers to make the trans-physical leap, partly a leap of faith.
Not sure who would have thought of Asimov's robot/human world as dystopian.
I certainly never did and I know what dystopian means.D)
I found the thread in which you discussed your world building really fascinating. I learnt more about medieval warfare in that thread than a year of watching History Channel would have taught me.
Took a long time to discover this thread -- I also frequent the LMB list. Lots of good stuff there, and I enjoy the way off-topic discussion is pretty much free to happen, too.I'm on the LMB mailing list...
Tip on Piers Anthony, if you like the Xanth series and you get a chance to read his short stories, DON'T. It's the rough equivalent of walking into your parents bedroom and not only catching them having sex but a full-blown S&M orgy.