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Ask Bruce Sterling

This week's interview subject is author Bruce Sterling. If you've never heard of him (shame on you!) learn a little about him here or type his name into any search engine. He's an interesting dude and one of my personal favorite contemporary writers, and I feel privileged to have him with us this week. Post your questions below, as usual, and, as usual, Slashdot moderators and editors will select 10 - 15 of them, and (again as usual) Bruce's answers will appear Friday and, if he has time, he might jump into the discussion that follows the posting of his answers.

23 of 111 comments (clear)

  1. Stephenson opinion? by dmorin · · Score: 3

    We're hearing lots about Neal Stephenson in the geek set these days. What's your opinion of the man, his writing style, and his choice of topics upon which to write?

  2. Viridian Green by Lemmy+Caution · · Score: 5

    A lot of your work recently has been on the Viridian project - a movement dedica
    ted to innovative, practical, and far-reaching responses to environmental crisis
    . You've focused on the use of design and engineering to create a less destructi
    ve way of living on this planet.

    You're doing so in a way that seeks to avoid politics - you'll name names, but s
    eem unwilling to pitch battles. Is this fatalism, or an attempt to preserve cons
    ensus in a movement that includes both libertarians and communitarians? Do you b
    elieve that conscientious consumerism is going to be sufficient to avert continu
    ed environmental destruction? Do you believe that "local minima" of the immediat
    e benefits of good design will always win in the market? Do you think lasting ch
    ange will be possible without global regulation? And what do you think the most promising recent Viridian-positive developments have been?

  3. Future William Gibson Collaboration? by Robert.Franklin · · Score: 5

    I thought that The Difference Engine was one of the most offbeat and interesting takes on the cyberpunk (steampunk?) genre. Are you still in contact with William Gibson? Do you have plans to collaborate with him again?

    --
    "Then I'll tell the truth. We're allowed to do that in emergencies."
  4. Dear Bruce by jabber · · Score: 2

    What are your feelings on the 'flying cow' scene in the movie Twister? Since my first experience of airborne bovines came from your book Heavy Weather, I would like to know if you were approached by Spielberg et al. about using that piece of I.P.

    While on the subject of Heavy Weather, IMHO it would make a great movie itself. Any plans?

    --

    -- What you do today will cost you a day of your life.
  5. Who have you influenced? by tilly · · Score: 3

    It is customary to ask people who their influences were. But I would like to turn that around. and ask a harder question...

    Which new authors do you feel that you have most strongly influenced? What specifically makes you select them?

    Thanks,
    Ben

    --
    My usual seat in the cluetrain is at A HREF="http://pub4.ezboard.com/biwethey.ht
  6. Viridian Open Source? by Frank+Sullivan · · Score: 2

    One of the things i enjoy most about your Viridian movement is the idea of designing products that haven't been invented yet, but should be. This is an interesting contrast to a basic principle of Open Source, where a projects' value is measured by its living code, not its high ideals. Although there are many ways to contrast the two movements, i would like to hear what you feel they have in common. Is Open Source a Viridian approach to software?
    ---
    Maybe that's just the price you pay for the chains that you refuse.

    --
    Hand me that airplane glue and I'll tell you another story.
  7. Distraction and open source by seesik · · Score: 3


    First off, did Marianne Dyson get any NASA funding to help get your T1 trunk to Siberia?
    ;-)

    Secondly, in your most recent book titled Distraction, you base a large part of the economic demise of America on the scenario of the Chinese government making all U.S. commercial software freely available on the net. While I am not deluded about the role and importance of many commercial products, how do you think the recent rise in availability and quality of free software would affect this scenario? How much consideration, if any, did you lend to the free software movement when writing Distraction?

    Keep aiming to please.

  8. Dead Media Manifesto? by Robotech_Master · · Score: 3

    I read, some time back, a Manifesto of yours dealing with dead (ie doomed or archaic or obsolete) media; it was a very interesting read.

    If I'm not mistaken, the thrust of your manifesto was that a research tome on such media should be created, but since you were too swamped with projects, you hoped that people out there on the Internet who read it would come together and help to create the book themselves.

    I was wondering if this has been very successful, and if so (or if not) what you have learned from the Manifesto and its consequences.

    --
    Editor Emeritus and Senior Writer, TeleRead.org
  9. The corroded future by Switch · · Score: 3

    It seems that many modern science fiction authors see the future as a time when society gives up on "physical" community in favor of technology. (i.e ruined govt, city states, corporate martial powers, etc..) Do you see this as an amplification of the state of community in today's world, or is it simply convenient literary device?

  10. Your opinion of collaborative writing? by yoshi · · Score: 3
    Some authors consider collaborative writing projects to be rather painful and counterproductive. The Difference Engine , however, was a wonderful piece of writing and seemed to truly be a product of both your and Gibson's styles. My questions:
    • Did you enjoy the challenge of working with another author, especially one with such a distinct style?
    • Do you think that sci-fi is, as a genre, particularly conducive to collaborative projects? If so, why, and if not, any opinion on why they are so common?
    • Do you have any advice for aspiring collaborative writers (other than the key "don't kill your partner")?
    -Josh
  11. questions, questions by engel · · Score: 2

    What has happened to Postmodern Science Fiction?! I read an essay/article that you wrote saying that the cyberpunks were going to die, but that a new (counter)culture would rise from its ashes. So where are the brave souls pushing the envelope of Science Fiction like the cyberpunks? If they exist, who are they; and if they don't exist, was cyberpunk a failed philosophy because of its inability to create a succeeding generation?

  12. Next book? by mischief · · Score: 2

    What are you currently working on?

    --

    --
    Everything I know in life I learnt from .sigs
  13. The Pace of Technology vs. SF by chromatic · · Score: 3


    Rereading Islands in the Net recently, I was struck by the observation that the humble DVD rendered some of the early scenes almost obsolete (only in a speculative sense).

    With that in mind, are there any technological or cultural developments in the past few years that have caused you to rethink your speculations/predictions/opinions about the near future? If so, what are they?

    Thanks for your time!

    --
    QDMerge 0.21!

  14. Post-Cyberpunk: Next? by sabat · · Score: 2

    Let's propose that the category "Cyberpunk" was a real one, and that it was an 80s-early 90s trend.

    Where do you see the cutting edge in the next decade? What young writers do you think are really evolving the form?

    --
    I, for one, welcome our new Antichrist overlord.
  15. Shaper/Mechanist by Jack+William+Bell · · Score: 2

    Will you be doing any more stories set in the Shaper/Mechanist universe? If not, then why? Has it been mined out, made insignificant, is no longer fun or has it been copied by other's too much?

    Jack

    --
    - -
    Are you an SF Fan? Are you a Tru-Fan?
  16. No more 'Whoa'? by G-Man · · Score: 5

    Bruce-

    I still remember early Cyberpunk, and then the early years of Wired, as times of being exposed to one "mind blowing" idea after another. The future, though far from Utopian, was going to be very interesting. Anymore, though, I see few ideas that make me sit back and say "Whoa...now *that* is cool."

    Now, in a mundane world of spam and banner ads, the coming future doesn't seem nearly so thrilling. In trying to pinpoint the source of my apathy about new ideas, I can't quite decide if it's me, us, or you. That is, I can't decide if: (a) My personal perspective has changed, and I've learned enough that little suprises me anymore, (b) We've all gotten better at predicting the future, so little surprises any of us, or (c) You folks (the SF writers and Futurists) blew out all the great ideas in the 80s and early 90s, and we'll just have to wait awhile for the next Big Thing.

    So what I'm wondering is: Have you become at all jaded about technology and its effect on society? What do you think about our current state of predicting the future? Are there any ideas, authors, etc., that you've seen recently that make you say "Whoa..."?

  17. Reflections on a future that has arrived. by sugarman · · Score: 3

    We are starting to see parts of the future that you, Mr. Gibson, and others in the cyberpunk genre have predicted come true. Items such as the Mirrorshades are closer than ever to being a reality (the recent work by IBM on body portables being an example).

    Are you surprised by how much what you forecasted has or has not come true? Is there anything you thought for sure was going to happen but didn't?

    And thought hindsight is often useless, in what ways would the current situation (cultural/political/technological) change the stories that you have written? Part of the trap with writing speculative fiction set in the near-future is that as the future date approaches, unless you are dead on with the predictions, the story will move into the realm of wild fantasy. John Carpenter's 'Escape from New York' serves as an example. In the end, it all comes down to the story. How well do you think your stories (and cyberpunk in general) will stand up in 20 years time?

    --
    --sugarman--
  18. Cyberpunk R Us? by Slur · · Score: 2

    The general sense I get from the CyberPunk genre (and also from SlashDot) is that even as our technological prowess increases and mankind merges its genetics with silicon, we are still at heart brutal confused animals blindly chasing after meaning and purpose in an indifferent universe.

    In your view, are we just groping our way blindly, trying through our technology to get past our perceived shortcomings, or is mankind actually doing something to enhance life on earth, and our future life in the cosmos?

    Or to put it succinctly: Do you believe there really is such a thing as progress?
    Yeah, I'm a Mac programmer. You got a problem with that?

    --
    -- thinkyhead software and media
  19. Sterling FAQ by ucblockhead · · Score: 3

    In case anyone's interested, there's a Sterling FAQ.

    My question? Would you reconsider revisting the world of systems crackers and the like? The Hacker Crackdown was a damn good book.

    --
    The cake is a pie
  20. The shape of future corporations by webmaven · · Score: 4
    One of the things that I found most intrigueing about Islands In The Net was the corporate structure and culture of the Rizome corporation.

    Recently we've seen companies with radical new business models (such as Redhat and VA Linux) hiring developers to work on whatever they want, and corporate HR departments focusing on 'recruiting from within' to minimize employee turnover. Both these trends may be extrapolated to lead to Rizome type corporations.

    So here's the question: What do you currently think future business entities will look like, and what can we do to make those future entities as human-friendly as possible?
    --

    --
    The real Webmaven is user ID 27463. I don't rate an imposter, because my ID is such a lame-ass high number.
  21. Difference Engine Replica by SEGV · · Score: 2

    Hi Bruce. I really enjoyed your novel The Difference Engine. I hadn't realized that the history of computing (notwithstanding math) reached back so far.

    Apparently, the Science Museum in London completed a replica of Babbage's Difference Engine on his 200th birthday (URL below). How do you feel about that? Have you seen it? Neat, eh?

    http://www.nmsi.ac.uk/on-line/treasure/objects/1 862-89.html

    --

    --
    Marc A. Lepage
    Software Developer
  22. Bruce: What are you doing to break up SF monopoly? by WillAffleck · · Score: 2

    Seriously, it seems as if the same old authors are all we see on the shelves.

    So, my question to you is, What are you, as a person and as a writer, doing to foster the next generation of writers who will throw the old fogies of the 80s and 90s into the dustbin of history? Have you been pushing the boundaries of literate SF for other writers, or are you just raking in the bucks like the rest of the IPOs that society is gaga over?

    Or are you growing comfortable with your role in the old paradigm and unwilling to take the lead into the new age, in which, possibly, you may have a lesser place in the grand scheme of things.

    By the by: love most of your writing - it's been great running into you at Cons, back when I did those, in the days when I had a double-hyphenated name. Say hi to Bill for me.

    --
    Will in Seattle
  23. Death of frontiers by boojumsnark · · Score: 4

    Bruce: I remember reading an essay by you about Burning Man a while back; you hauled your daughter along. I thought this move, besides indicating that you were an incredibly cool dad, pretty much marked the end of Burning Man as a "dangerous" underground phenomenom. Similarly, a number of different forces are transfroming the web-centric Internet into something increasingly bland. I know you're a long-time user of the Well, which is now owned by Salon, the Newsweek of the web.

    Which leads me to my question. Do you think it's possible nowadays to create a sustained, independent, and transgressive community (a TAZ, if you will) without it being co-opted by society at large? Some of your old Catscan essays (particularly the one on Jules Verne) hint at what your response to this question would have been in the past, but I'm curious to hear what you have to say now.

    --
    I didn't know what a meme was, so I asked five friends. They didn't know what a meme was, so they asked five friends.