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Synchrotron Gets Sci-Fi Writer In Residence

kandela writes "CBC News is reporting that Nebula and Hugo award winning author Robert J. Sawyer is to become the first-ever writer in residence at the Canadian Light Source synchrotron facility (see also their media release). Sawyer will spend two months at the facility, where he is hoping to be inspired by the everyday grind of scientists, 'I spent a lot of time visiting science labs over the years, but it's always the VIP tour,' he said in an interview Wednesday. 'You are in and you are out in a couple of hours, and everyone has shown you all the things they want you to see but none of the day-to-day grind of the work as well. I want to get the flavour of that.' As a scientist who has worked at synchrotron facilities (and occasional sci-fi writer myself (page 4)), I'm excited to see what a professional can do with that environment for inspiration."

80 comments

  1. Wonder how long by djupedal · · Score: 1

    ...it will take him to 'synch' up...

    1. Re:Wonder how long by MarkRose · · Score: 2, Funny

      First post and we've already begun to synch into the bad jokes...

      --
      Be relentless!
  2. inspiration? by caffeinemessiah · · Score: 1

    ...where he is hoping to be inspired by the everyday grind of scientists

    What, reading papers, crunching numbers, writing papers and browsing Slashdot? Hmm...think I've already read that story.

    --
    An old-timer with old-timey ideas.
    1. Re:inspiration? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, he will be getting a lot of inspiration.

      If by "inspiration" you mean "coffee for the guys doing real work."

      Ah -- the swirling of the cream is like the birth of a galaxy...

  3. Right... by zwekiel · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Obviously the purpose of books is to draw us out of our own day-to-day grind into a universe consisting of... more day-to-day grinds? Right.

    1. Re:Right... by m.ducharme · · Score: 3, Funny

      Why not? It's worked for Blizzard....

      --
      Rule of Slashdot #0: You and people like you are not representative of the larger population. - A.C.
    2. Re:Right... by zwekiel · · Score: 1

      That would be true if WoW didn't take place in an alternate universe filled with trolls, orcs, and virtual armour and words.

    3. Re:Right... by m.ducharme · · Score: 2, Insightful

      To be fair to Sawyer, he has dealt with alternate universes and aliens in his work. I would expect that he'd continue with that, intermixing the more fantastic elements with the prosaic.

      --
      Rule of Slashdot #0: You and people like you are not representative of the larger population. - A.C.
    4. Re:Right... by im_thatoneguy · · Score: 1

      That would be true if WoW didn't take place in an alternate universe filled with trolls, orcs, and virtual armour and words

      Wait... what? Alternate universe? I'm payed in gold and armor how are you payed? And slashdot is already full of trolls.

    5. Re:Right... by JamesTRexx · · Score: 1

      And slashdot is already full of trolls.

      Not to mention full of virtual words...

      --
      home
    6. Re:Right... by lysergic.acid · · Score: 3, Insightful

      i guess that's the difference between hard sci-fi and sci-fi/fantasy, or perhaps between real literature and children's books.

      most adult readers prefer stories based on life-like characters which they can relate to. that includes characters with realistic jobs and responsibilities. yes, books often offer a relaxing diversion from the monotony/stresses of day-to-day life, but just because a story is fictional doesn't mean it has to be set in an idealized utopian paradise; just because the real world is filled with problems and conflict doesn't mean that a fictional story should be devoid of these things.

      it shouldn't be a surprise that sci-fi writers create fictional universes which parallel the real-world in many ways. it adds realism and depth to a story. and even though writers do background research in the real world, they still write stories with creative and original plots. just because you're writing a work of fiction doesn't mean you have to include fairies and unicorns or that you can't include mundane characters like plumbers or office clerks.

      even in real life ordinary people with ordinary routines can have remarkable things happen to them or become involved in extraordinary events. there's no reason fiction should be any different. often the most compelling stories are the ones where the unexpected happens to everyday people. and writers frequently base their fictional characters off of people they encounter or observe in real life.

      doing a short residency at a place like the synchrotron is a great way to see first-hand how real scientists work/live/talk/behave. that would certainly help an author to create realistic portrayals of scientists and capture their demeanor on paper. besides, the synchrotron isn't exactly a mundane place to work. sure, the researchers who work there probably have their share of tedious work to do, but so do rock stars and star athletes. nothing is 100% glamorous, fun & exciting. if that's what you want then read Harry Potter.

    7. Re:Right... by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      I'm impressed that the only capital letters in your whole post are for Harry Potter.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
  4. Potential thread hijack by n9hmg · · Score: 3, Informative

    Ok, Kandela. If you're "Daniel Cotton", let me be one of the ones to tell you - that was fscking brilliant! I haven't been so pleasantly smacked in the face by a short story in a very long time. That bit of fiction is a much bigger story than that of some writer trying to get inspired... and yes, I admit it - I've never heard of Robert J. Sawyer, though I've got on the order of 19 untouched copies of "Asimov's" piled up from between the onset of presbyopia and the procurement of reading glasses(it was hard to admit that need).

    1. Re:Potential thread hijack by Digitus1337 · · Score: 1

      Agreed. The story was quite good, and well worth the read. Kandela's name links to an e-mail address that suggest that he is Daniel Cotton.

    2. Re:Potential thread hijack by kandela · · Score: 2, Informative

      Yes, that's correct. I guess I've revealed my secret identity. When I put the link in I expected it to be edited out. I'm pleasantly surprised that it wasn't. Thank you both for the praise, it is much appreciated. I'm glad you liked the story.

      --
      Conservation of angular momentum makes the world go round.
    3. Re:Potential thread hijack by JamesTRexx · · Score: 1

      At first I wasn't sure where it was going, but then the end made me chuckle.
      I'll definitly remember this next time I put on my player when I'm flying. I'll probably get a few suspicious looks when I start grinning though. :-)

      *renames Kung Fu Fighting to Air Marshall Activation on his player*

      --
      home
    4. Re:Potential thread hijack by Bender0x7D1 · · Score: 1

      I'm also giving you a "Brilliant!" on the story.

      On a side note, you must be really into science fiction. I mean you thought the editors might actually edit your submission.

      --
      Reading code is like reading the dictionary - you have to read half of it before you can go back and understand it.
    5. Re:Potential thread hijack by kandela · · Score: 1

      Thanks and nice line!

      Actually I have had a /. submission edited once. (This one.) I actually wrote "It seems hell has frozen over and the fashion industry has taken an interest in the space industry," but they edited out the 'hell has frozen over' bit.

      --
      Conservation of angular momentum makes the world go round.
    6. Re:Potential thread hijack by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mind linking to the story or at least mentioning the name of it? Daniel Cotton is a bit generic.

    7. Re:Potential thread hijack by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uhhhmmmm, it's linked to in the bloody summary. Do people not even read the summary anymore?

    8. Re:Potential thread hijack by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      Offtopic obviously, but I liked it too.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
  5. Boring by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I've worked at a synchrotron, and...

    oh my god is it boring. This would seem like a good idea for about 3 days.

    1. Re:Boring by ta+bu+shi+da+yu · · Score: 1

      It's fun if you decide to get into mischief. You know those kids who set ants alight with a magnifying glass and the sun? A synchrotron is much better. Muhahahaha!!!!

      --
      XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
    2. Re:Boring by Bowling+Moses · · Score: 1

      I remember visiting SSRL about five years back as a site user. Protocol at the time was that you pretty much ate, slept, and worked at the beamline you were assigned to in 16-N hour shifts until your time ran out. Consequently there was food trash all over...and a huge ant infestation. Near the end of the time I joked that we ought to put one of the ants in the beam. About a year later, a study came out in Science investigating tracheal respiration in insects using synchrotron radiation.

    3. Re:Boring by ta+bu+shi+da+yu · · Score: 1

      I bow to you, oh evil one.

      --
      XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
  6. His next novel will be about... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    shining a synchrotron beam on maple sugar crystals, which accidentally opens a portal from which giant beavers invade our world and cut every tree on Earth. Eh.

  7. should be required of science fact writers as well by drfireman · · Score: 4, Informative

    Shouldn't all science fiction writers have some firsthand experience with science, ideally from an actual involvement with science? Well, maybe or maybe not. But more disturbing is the prevalence of people with no knowledge of science in the business of so-called science journalism. Of course, a few months in a science lab won't cure what ails most science writers. But it would be better than nothing, which is apparently the status quo.

  8. Re:should be required of science fact writers as w by blueg3 · · Score: 1

    There's a certain usefulness to being familiar with what a science lab is like and the daily operations of scientific research, but that's not central to science fiction writing.

    It is clear, though, that some science fiction writers have no understanding of scientific principles, and some certainly do. When science plays a visible role in a sci-fi story, particularly when the author is intending for the story to be not far from reality, the difference is really clear.

    As far as I've seen, there are almost no science journalists that know a bit of science. As they say on the Internet, nearly all science news stories are full of fail.

  9. Aliens invade through a crack in reality. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He'll write a story about a bearded bespectacled scientist, who only armed at first with a wrecking bar, sets out to save the world from aliens who invade through a crack in reality created by a particle accelerator experiment gone wrong!

    It'll be a hit!

  10. Obviously.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's the mindless grind we want to see in a scifi story. How a scientist gets up, stares at a screen for 8 hours and then goes home, stares at his personal screen for a few hours and then goes to sleep.

  11. Brilliant scifi writer? by plasmacutter · · Score: 1

    from that linked wikipedia entry.

    His interest in consciousness studies is also apparent in his WWW trilogy, beginning with Wake, which deals with the spontaneous emergence of consciousness in the infrastructure of the World Wide Web.

    Why does this sound familiar

    So whois the brilliant scifi writer again?

    --
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    1. Re:Brilliant scifi writer? by Rei · · Score: 1

      When was Wake published? Because that's basically the plot of Serial Experiments Lain.

      Meh, there's nothing new under the sun.

      --
      All we want to do is eat your brains.
    2. Re:Brilliant scifi writer? by Rakishi · · Score: 4, Interesting

      That concept is older than old. Heck, computers randomly gaining sentience was done by Heinlein in 1966 and I doubt he was the first. Going from a single computer gaining sentience to a network of computers does not make it brilliant. Hell, the Sprawl trilogy pretty much created cyberpunk and I think it covered this whole area as well.

      The real mark of brilliance in such areas is how you actually treat the subject and what interesting sub-questions you bring to light. There are a hundred different ways to cover some basic ideas and every single one of them can be utterly unique.

  12. I always liked to pretend I was Gordon Freeman... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    whenever I visited SSRL...I swear sometimes it sounded just like the game whenever I would walk on hose metal stairs on the outside of the buildings.

  13. Sawyer: Incompetent Writer, Attention Whore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sawyer is an incompetent SF writer, a shameless attention whore who campaigned his way to an undeserved Hugo, and was forced to resign from SFWA due to massive incompetence. Just ask any Canadian SF writer how Sawyer knifed them in the back once they became more famous than him.

    1. Re:Sawyer: Incompetent Writer, Attention Whore by MichaelSmith · · Score: 1

      [Citation Please]

    2. Re:Sawyer: Incompetent Writer, Attention Whore by sabernet · · Score: 5, Informative

      I've only read one Sawyer book, Mindscan.

      From what I can see, he likes to get ideas from the public. And I will say there were a couple of cool ideas in that book...but the book itself was horrible.

      The emotions were canned, the story forced and the characters unsympathetic. It degenerated into just-plain-silly at times with blatant attempts to be 'socially relevant' with all the subtlety of hammering a railroad spike with a hippo.

      I'm not kidding when I say that it almost felt like a 7th grader who just watched Outer Limits sat down and wrote a book for his end-of-the-week project.

      I'm hoping his other work is better.

    3. Re:Sawyer: Incompetent Writer, Attention Whore by plasmacutter · · Score: 1

      I'm not kidding when I say that it almost felt like a 7th grader who just watched Outer Limits sat down and wrote a book for his end-of-the-week project.

      I nominate this for the slap-down of the week.

      --
      VLC FOR MAC IS DYING! IF YOU DEVELOP, PLEASE SAVE IT!!
    4. Re:Sawyer: Incompetent Writer, Attention Whore by d3m0nCr4t · · Score: 1

      You didn't win that Hugo Award, did you? ;)

    5. Re:Sawyer: Incompetent Writer, Attention Whore by allrite · · Score: 2, Informative

      I wouldn't bother reading his other books then. People keep buying me Robert Sawyer books as presents as I think the Galaxy bookshop (Sydney's big SF shop) recommends him if you like hard SF. I wish they wouldn't. I agree with the comments about his characters and his Canadian inferiority complex is just plain annoying.

      Maybe fans of Michael Crichton's characterisation will appreciate Sawyer's works.

    6. Re:Sawyer: Incompetent Writer, Attention Whore by spditner · · Score: 4, Informative

      I've read three of his other books: The Terminal Experiment, Flashfoward, and Calculating God -- Hoping that maybe they would get better. But sadly, they don't.

      He takes far too many of his scene descriptions directly from public spaces. If you've ever lived in Toronto, you know the exact locations he's talking about, and you really wish he would shut up about it, and stop using the word Toronto. He goes into such inane detail that you know which subway stop to get off at, how many blocks over to walk, and which side of the street to be on to be standing right where his cardboard characters uttered something absolutely obvious, and then go over to Pizza^H^H^H^H^HFood Food for all their dietary needs.

    7. Re:Sawyer: Incompetent Writer, Attention Whore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not kidding when I say that it almost felt like a 7th grader who just watched Outer Limits sat down and wrote a book for his end-of-the-week project.

      Ah, so it's like an Orson Scott Card book.

    8. Re:Sawyer: Incompetent Writer, Attention Whore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      He's not totally incompetent. Some of his stuff is second rate. The book which won the undeserved Hugo (Hominids), for instance. A lot of it, though, is just plain bad. _Rollback_... a lot of hand-wringing and emoting topped off with an old man's wish fulfillment fantasy. The first volume of (God save us, a trilogy) "Wake"... some good concepts, terrible execution.

      He's built a publicity machine based on being a top _Canadian_ SF writer. But if he were American, he'd be lost in the midlist.

    9. Re:Sawyer: Incompetent Writer, Attention Whore by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I've read Flashforward and Calculating God. Both good ideas, both poorly written. As you say, very dislikeable cardboard characters, and plots that are pretty miserable.

    10. Re:Sawyer: Incompetent Writer, Attention Whore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I know Sawyer personally. He is a good man. And much of his work is at least as good as Asimov's early work, which the characters are pretty thin, and the plot barely sufficient. Asimov still became a favourite because I liked his ideas.

      Many of his books don't grab me, however, I really enjoyed the Quintaglio Ascension Trilogy.

      In short, it doesn't take place in Toronto, nor even on this planet. You'll like it :-) I wish he would do more in that series (Far-seer, Fossil-Hunter and Foreigner).

      Unlike many Science Fiction writers, Robert makes a living only writing Science Fiction, and in that, I envy him - I wish I could. It also makes clear that he is doing something right. And if you think you can do better, do it. I'll read it - I can always have another author I am ready to read. And if you can't, well, the obvious retort you can fill in yourself :-)

      Now, if I could just find my slashdot password, I could do this non-anonymously....

  14. I beg to differ. by plasmacutter · · Score: 1, Interesting

    That concept is older than old. Heck, computers randomly gaining sentience was done by Heinlein in 1966 and I doubt he was the first. Going from a single computer gaining sentience to a network of computers does not make it brilliant.

    I beg to differ. The difference between Shirow's version and everyone else is the entity was not created by humans. A data trojan inadvertantly interacted with random data on the web in the same way a molecule interacted with others to form DNA.
    This is very different from "AI's gone wild" a-la heinlein or t-1000.

    The real mark of brilliance in such areas is how you actually treat the subject and what interesting sub-questions you bring to light. There are a hundred different ways to cover some basic ideas and every single one of them can be utterly unique.

    and Shirow covers this entire area better as well if you examine the bulk of his work.

    --
    VLC FOR MAC IS DYING! IF YOU DEVELOP, PLEASE SAVE IT!!
    1. Re:I beg to differ. by Rakishi · · Score: 1

      I beg to differ. The difference between Shirow's version and everyone else is the entity was not created by humans. A data trojan inadvertantly interacted with random data on the web in the same way a molecule interacted with others to form DNA.
      This is very different from "AI's gone wild" a-la heinlein or t-1000.

      What part of "randomly gaining sentience" do you not understand? Heinlein's version simply kept having parts added to it till it simply gained sentience one day from some chance event. It didn't go rogue so I'm guessing you have no idea what I'm talking about either.

      and Shirow covers this entire area better as well if you examine the bulk of his work.

      So you claim while showing apparently no knowledge of any other work in the field or anything that doesn't have pictures in it. Yeah, I'll consider the value of your opinion to be worth about zero. Likewise anyone who claims an author can cover such an area "entirely" in a single work is an idiot who doesn't understand that certain treatments necessarily contradict other treatments plot wise.

    2. Re:I beg to differ. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      wow. Seriously, I love GITS, but you are an idiot.

    3. Re:I beg to differ. by pimp0r · · Score: 1

      Well I have read what you both refer to and I can say that aside from deeper and more beleivable characters and stories in general, Shirow has a distinctly better explanation for his sentient program than Heinlein's handwaving of "it just had so many parts fitted to it". And more interestingly philosophical to boot.

      And attacking someone with "you do not understand books with no pictures" shows that a) you have no appreciation of visual arts and b) you have no valid arguments yet want to find some way of attacking someone who does.

    4. Re:I beg to differ. by plasmacutter · · Score: 1

      and Shirow covers this entire area better as well if you examine the bulk of his work.

      So you claim while showing apparently no knowledge of any other work in the field or anything that doesn't have pictures in it. Yeah, I'll consider the value of your opinion to be worth about zero.

      No, I claim shirow covers the subject better if you examine the bulk of his work. Leave the ad hominems at home please.

      Likewise anyone who claims an author can cover such an area "entirely" in a single work is an idiot who doesn't understand that certain treatments necessarily contradict other treatments plot wise.

      You demonstrate a profound misunderstanding of shirow's work. He uses the same universe for most of his work. Particularly gits is an extension of appleseed, and the new real drive is an extension of gits.

      The fact you don't understand the breadth and depth of his work, and that you defend this hack, points to your shortcomings, not mine.

      --
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    5. Re:I beg to differ. by Rakishi · · Score: 1

      Well I have read what you both refer to and I can say that aside from deeper and more beleivable characters and stories in general, Shirow has a distinctly better explanation for his sentient program than Heinlein's handwaving of "it just had so many parts fitted to it". And more interestingly philosophical to boot.

      Heinlein was an example of the concept of self-creating AI and how it predates this all by decades. You apparently lack the reading comprehension to understand that it's possible to make separate points in a single post. Heinlein was aiming for a completely different plot and idea than Shirow so trying to compare the two works together shows you have no idea what you're talking about. I never compared the two, see previous point on reading comprehension. Now the Sprawl trilogy is in the same genre as is probably most everything else done in cyberpunk.

      As for better explanation, well sometimes authors realize that things can't be well explained. I think Lem poked fun at this when he wrote a lovely but utterly impossible description of how some junk metal gained sentience.

      And attacking someone with "you do not understand books with no pictures" shows that a) you have no appreciation of visual arts and b) you have no valid arguments yet want to find some way of attacking someone who does.

      No, it means I'm making fun of the original poster's limited reading skill and lack of knowledge of the work in this area.

    6. Re:I beg to differ. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ghost in the Shell is cool and all, but you're treating it like it's some grand magnum opus. There's your problem.

    7. Re:I beg to differ. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's a good response. I'm in awe at your restraint, fellow AC. I was juuuust about to tell him to go back to Wapan, where live all the other Wapanese kids who think everything from Japan is automatically better than anything made in the US.

  15. Synchrotrons are great environments by aaron+alderman · · Score: 4, Insightful

    From from my own experience doing research at a synchrotron, I call tell you there is nothing "day to day" about it. We get roughly one week to do as much as humanly possible in an environment which drains you (16+ hour days under high fluorescent lighting with the incessant hum of vacuum pumps and machinery).

    The scientific environment is electric. Things get done - ideas flourish and are crushed in minutes as a gaggle of intelligent scientists throw ideas around and call on their years of experience. Copious amounts of coffee are consumed and everyone stands there silent when the a-ha moment arrives and all the hard work comes together.

    It might be hard for an outsider to appreciate this, and there is a chance this isn't the norm when it comes to the average synchrotron experience.

    1. Re:Synchrotrons are great environments by drinkypoo · · Score: 1, Insightful

      What's hard for me to appreciate is how a bunch of people who are supposedly so fucking brilliant won't band together and get an alternative to the fluorescent lights put in. I mean, come on, form a fucking union or something. Don't those things give you headaches? I know they do me.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    2. Re:Synchrotrons are great environments by Bowling+Moses · · Score: 1

      The electron storage ring at APS has a circumference of 1104 meters. The Experiment Hall wraps around it and is where all the beam lines where most of the work is done are at. Even though I've been a site user there several times I couldn't tell you what sort of lights are used, other than they seemed to be large lights like what a warehouse would use, and were harsh. APS has a picture. Yes brilliant scientists could have put in nice soft full spectrum lights that didn't hum. But they cost money which is in very short supply and high demand. I wouldn't be surprised if the cost for replacing the lights (initial bulb/tube cost, labor, plus any rewiring) in a building that big would be greater than the cost of a brand new detector at a beamline ($million plus). The detector is a major component in what allows us to do work. Lights on the other hand, as long as you don't need a flashlight, suck it up.

    3. Re:Synchrotrons are great environments by bevets · · Score: 1

      It's sounds like you're experience is as a synchrotron user. It's a bit different for the guys and gals who make sure the synchrotron works everyday. I do light source R&D so we only have to work super long hours when we are doing an experimental run, in addition it's mostly us grad students and postdocs who are doing the work under better lighting (we got rid of all florescent lighting), but with the same beautiful hum of vacuum pumps.

      I really can't for the life of me see what this writer is going to be doing other than hanging out while people are discussing technical details and drinking coffee in meetings. I guess you could put him to work like an undergrad or he could document the insane amount time we spend making sure that everything is safe so the inspectors can't nail us to the wall and shut everything down.

    4. Re:Synchrotrons are great environments by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      wuss... when i run an experiment there its more like 20hour shifts .. leaving you enough time to get a 3hour nap and eat some bad food from the break room...

  16. I'm a little confused... by denzacar · · Score: 1

    Don't sugar crystals open a portal to a giant gummy bears dimension?

    --
    Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens
  17. Sadly, in our universe... by denzacar · · Score: 1

    Gordon Freeman is yet another Hollywood douche, who is patiently failing upwards.

    --
    Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens
  18. Saskatoon, Are you sure you wanna be there? by upuv · · Score: 1

    I grew up in this town.

    It's winter there now. And it's F&#$%#$@'n Cold.

    http://www.leaderpost.com/story_print.html?id=1145659&sponsor=

  19. Hmm by Big_Monkey_Bird · · Score: 1

    I heard him on the CBC once. I haven't heard someone so full of himself for quite some time.

  20. Exchange of Ideas by DS256 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I think some of the best stories could come from the dialogue between Sawyer and the scientists at CLS. As to the need for a writer to have a backgroud in science, I think we've seen benefits to a writer having it or not. Did you ever see the bibliography of Andromeda Strain by Michael Crichton? Now there was a science based story. Other writers haven't had a formal training but an aptitude in the sciences that have led to future predictions that have come true. At the heart of good SF is the story and I have read all of Sawyers works and find him to be one of the most distinctive writers I have read. Here's looking for a future Sawyer novel based at CLS.

  21. Misleading Headline by Steneub · · Score: 0

    Am I the only one that thought a murderous synchrotron with a vendetta found a sci-fi writer in his home and killed him in an ironic twist of fate?

  22. The CLS Outreach Office by leonidas · · Score: 1

    I have to put in a word of praise for my friends at the CLS Outreach Office, who do a creative job of explaining the complexities of synchrotron science to a popular audience. Their work with high school students is a really amazing ongoing project.

    I am not familiar with this author, but I can hardly wait to read a novel populated with my CLS colleagues!

  23. Re:I know what I could do with a lab by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're really not too bright if all you can think of to make in a fully equipped wet lab is methamphetamine.

  24. It's not like Ghost in the SHell is unique... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Have you ever actually read "Frankenstein" by Mary Shelley? Arguably much of modern science fiction is just a retelling of that story.

  25. is it a particle accelerator by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    isn't a Synchrotron one of the early particle accelerators, like a poor mans LHC?

    A glance at the website however made it sound more like the Eureka facility (used to be on the SciFi channel)

    1. Re:is it a particle accelerator by JoshuaZ · · Score: 1

      isn't a Synchrotron one of the early particle accelerators, like a poor mans LHC?

      Synchrotrons have been around for over 50 years but they are hardly a poor man's LHC. Different types of accelerators are useful for different types of experiments and synchrotrons have been steadily improving in the energy levels. In fact, the LHC is composed of a collection of different parts one of which is a synchrotron see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proton_Synchrotron_Booster .

      In general, there are three most common types of accelerators which have been used since the 1930s. All three are still in use for productive research today. The simplest accelerators in basic design are linear accelerators. They use a series of electromagnets to accelerate a particle down a a straight tube to a target. The largest of which is the SLAC (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stanford_Linear_Accelerator_Center ) which is about 2 miles (about 3 km) long. However, particles can only go through a linear accelerator once. The second type of accelerator tries to solve this problem. These accelerators are cyclotrons and they try to repeatedly spin particles in a circle constantly accelerating them. However, as the particles move faster they begin to spiral outwards and create other problems. Synchrotrons use clever timing and modifications of the electromagnetic fields to compensate for this and in some cases even take advantage of it. All these types of article accelerators (and few other types more rarely) are still in use to perform research. Different types of questions call for different types of accelerators (among other issues different accelerators accelerate different types of particles). The synchrotron in question is the Canadian Light Source Synchrotron which was completed in 2004 and is thus very current and has done some cutting edge research. So it is by no means at all a "poor man's LHC."

  26. Shakespeare Never Met a King in His Life by RobotRunAmok · · Score: 1

    ...and Robert E. Howard never journeyed more than fifty miles away from his hometown in Texas.

    There's a certain school of writer (and reader, too, apparently) that craves that super-deluxe gritty no-don't-make-it-a-blue-beaker-real-chemists-would-never-use-a-blue-beaker work-a-day realism, and then there are those focused on the human condition, complex themes, and imaginative notions no one has ever put to paper before. Not saying the twain can't meet, but life is short...

    1. Re:Shakespeare Never Met a King in His Life by drfireman · · Score: 1

      I don't know any readers that crave super-deluxe realism, but I'll take your word for it. Still, I've read many works of fiction that are undermined by the author's ignorance. It comes up a lot in science fiction, but in other kinds of fiction as well. Sometimes ignorance undermines the work, sometimes it doesn't. Shakespeare is not on that list for me, but perhaps I'd feel differently if I knew more about how kings act.

    2. Re:Shakespeare Never Met a King in His Life by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sometimes ignorance undermines the work, sometimes it doesn't. Shakespeare is not on that list for me, but perhaps I'd feel differently if I knew more about how kings act.

      Seeing as how he frequently had royalty and other assorted nobles in his audiences, he must have been close to the mark. So kings really were a messed-up bunch.

  27. Re:I know what I could do with a lab by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Does three empty "20 0z" coke bottles; some surgical tubing; and a hotplate really count as a fully equipped wet lab?

  28. Re:should be required of science fact writers as w by RobBebop · · Score: 1

    If real scientists were better writers then it'd be easier for the science journalists to copy-and-paste from their technical papers and conference presentations to tell the real story. There would be more appreciation for science if those conducting it could espouse their hypothesis and experiment results with the eloquence and clarity of professional writers, but the fact is that writing and science are two different proficiencies that are rare to be found within a single individual (both require time and energy to learn how to do well) so the result is that real science writing is plagued by the miss-communication that results when two professionals that don't understand what each other do have to deal with each other.

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  29. Re:should be required of science fact writers as w by drfireman · · Score: 1

    If real scientists were better writers then it'd be easier for the science journalists to copy-and-paste from their technical papers and conference presentations to tell the real story.

    Easier, but still basically impossible. Scientists write for a specialized audience that's defined by having a background in the field, and journalists for the most part don't have that background. In fact, for science writing to be at fault, we would have to assume that science journalists are at least trying to understand the articles. From what I've seen, most of them barely get through the press release and don't care what their interview subjects say.

    I'm not going to claim that most scientists are good writers, but many scientists are. Scientists shouldn't be faulted if publications meant for their peers can't be understood by journalists with no working knowledge of the field. The alternative to this system would be for each journal article to recap the field's entire progress to date, solely for the benefit of laypeople and journalists who haven't been paying attention.

  30. Galatea 2.2 by Veggiesama · · Score: 1

    Sounds like the plot for Galatea 2.2. Ah, humanist-in-residence or writer-in-residence, it's all the same: where can I sign up?

  31. Re:should be required of science fact writers as w by Sidzilla · · Score: 0

    I think the real gain will be to Synchnotron. Science Fiction writers have quite a track record for predicting both future trends and future technology.