This sounds exciting. I was a huge fan of the magazine and still have many copies gathering dust in various places. Omni introduced me to new artists and writers I'd never heard of before, posted light articles about various scientific matters, and from "Continuum" to "Anti-Matter" gave readers a chaotic, but often optimistic glimpse at possible futures.
"When the last Ice Age set on 28,000 years ago, Neanderthals had no sewn clothes and no large organized groups to rely on each other, hastening their fall. "
No, it would take evidence that these are actually a problem beyond a few alarmists over-reacting when they see a green light. The optics in a hand-held laser are cheap and even with good optics, no laser beam lacks divergence. The laser I use for pointing out stars to my son spreads about ten centimeters for every 100 meters. By the time such a beam would hit a cockpit, it could easily spread to over a meter across and anyone seeing it would be exposed to 1/1000th the brightness of looking directly into the beam at arm's length.
This is just the latest technophobe scare story. No different than worries about x-rays from color televisions, behavior effects of video games, gangs hanging out at arcades, etc.
Personally, I think I'd prefer to let a few people get fake IDs now and then rather than force all of us who need ID to drive to put up with a facial recognition system. I promise you this will find more and more uses in a "post-9/11 world" where bureaucrats fall over themselves to grab more control.
"Yes, 35.8 percent of children in the study have lumps or cysts, but this is not the same as cancer," said Naomi Takagi, an associate professor at Fukushima University Medical School Hospital, which administered the tests.
"We do not know that cause of this, but it is hard to believe that is due to the effects of radiation," she said. "This is an early test and we will only see the effects of radiation exposure after four or five years."
Dose me up with hyronalin and a tri-ox compound, and I'm good to go. And maybe a hit of cordrazine so I'll be sure to take out all you murderers and assassins!
I understand where you're coming from. I grok. We reach. Etc.
Back to "Cold Equations", I don't think there's anything in it that says "we have FTL" or "here's artificial gravity", but there's discussion about a colony on a world that isn't in our solar system, and at one point, the way one character walks on the deck of a small space boat is described.
Anyway, if you have time and an interest, give it a read: here's a copy.
Oh, you're right about that... there's always a few vehement objectionists on any issue, and the "nerdier" the subject, the louder--
BAZINGA!
they can get. Have you ever read Godwin's "Cold Equations"? I think that's one of the hardest SF stories I've ever read, given that the characters involved were very tightly restricted in their actions by (some would say carefully crafted) limitations of technology. It's a classic of SF literature, and yet, at the time it was written, many of the subjects directly addressed were years away from possible and even unproven. Indeed, the setting implies the existence of an interstellar civilization, and the actions of the characters even imply artificial gravity. I would be very interested to know why someone would consider that story to be soft SF.
"If there's anything in the story that's beyond current physics, then it's not "hard sci-fi", and that includes artificial gravity (except that made by rotation), FTL jumping/warp drive, etc. "
I think your criteria for hard SF is too restrictive. Traditionally, the difference between hard and soft SF is that hard SF focuses on a realistic and logical application of science and technology, while soft SF focuses on social or non-scientific issues in a fictional setting.
While some authors prefer to restrict themselves to a rigorous application of known-science only, others allow notions such as FTL and/or artificial gravity to creep in to enable their stories to be told. Peter Hamilton, Arthur C. Clarke, Ben Bova, Isaac Asimov, Robert Forward, James Hogan, and many others have written arguably hard science fiction stories that break the rules you've defined.
I'd argue that hard/soft sf exists on a continuum ranging from the extreme of authors who would meet your criteria, to the extreme of authors like Ray Bradbury who prefer to write social commentaries with murky applications of science at best.
Why should that be his responsibility? She misused his photo. She agreed to terms with GoDaddy that she would not violate copyright laws, and she should have known in the first place that she'd lose all her sites if she broke that agreement.
The owner of the photograph didn't punish her. He notified her through legitimate, legal means that she was misusing his work. If anyone did something wrong, it was GoDaddy for shutting down all her sites, and she should have gone batshit crazy on them rather than the owner of the copyrighted material.
"This provocative billboard was always intended to be an experiment. And after just 24 hours the results are in: It got people's attention.
"This billboard was deliberately provocative, an attempt to turn the tables on the climate alarmists by using their own tactics but with the opposite message. We found it interesting that the ad seemed to evoke reactions more passionate than when leading alarmists compare climate realists to Nazis or declare they are imposing on our children a mass death sentence. We leave it to others to determine why that is so.
"The Heartland Institute doesn't often do 'provocative' communication. In fact, we've spent 15 years presenting the economic and scientific arguments that counter global warming alarmism. No one has worked harder, or better, on that task than Heartland. We will continue to do that -- especially at our next International Conference on Climate Change in Chicago from May 21 -- 23.
"Heartland has spent millions of dollars contributing to the real debate over climate change, and $200 for a one-day digital billboard. In return, we've been subjected to the most uncivil name-calling and disparagement you can possibly imagine from climate alarmists. The other side of the climate debate seems to be playing by different rules. This experiment produced further proof of that.
"We know that our billboard angered and disappointed many of Heartland's friends and supporters, but we hope they understand what we were trying to do with this experiment. We do not apologize for running the ad, and we will continue to experiment with ways to communicate the 'realist' message on the climate."
You're right and I stand corrected. Well, actually sit at the moment, but you're still right.
I'll just put this here. It was on the ThinkProgress site for months whereas the Heartland billboard ad was stopped within 24 hours. Heartland issued an apology. ThinkProgress dropped the post silently and pretended nothing had happened.
This sounds exciting. I was a huge fan of the magazine and still have many copies gathering dust in various places. Omni introduced me to new artists and writers I'd never heard of before, posted light articles about various scientific matters, and from "Continuum" to "Anti-Matter" gave readers a chaotic, but often optimistic glimpse at possible futures.
Please don't leave the optimism out. There's been a resurgence of neo-Malthusian gloom in the last decade or so. If the new Omni becomes a mouthpiece for doom-mongers, I'll gladly walk the other way. Oh, and a little fringe science is kind of fun, too. Maybe ESP and flying saucers have become passé, but I'd like a serving of zero-point energy and parallel universes, please.
It's odd that I'm saying this again, but have you ever heard of the Battle of Athens?
You should look up the "Battle of Athens."
Six digits, you say? Wow.
And they say Latin is a "dead" language! HAH!
All I can say is, "Bad Robots!"
"When the last Ice Age set on 28,000 years ago, Neanderthals had no sewn clothes and no large organized groups to rely on each other, hastening their fall. "
Ha! Take that, Robert J. Sawyer!
When it doesn't even burn at arm's length? You're an idiot.
No, it would take evidence that these are actually a problem beyond a few alarmists over-reacting when they see a green light. The optics in a hand-held laser are cheap and even with good optics, no laser beam lacks divergence. The laser I use for pointing out stars to my son spreads about ten centimeters for every 100 meters. By the time such a beam would hit a cockpit, it could easily spread to over a meter across and anyone seeing it would be exposed to 1/1000th the brightness of looking directly into the beam at arm's length.
This is just the latest technophobe scare story. No different than worries about x-rays from color televisions, behavior effects of video games, gangs hanging out at arcades, etc.
Yooo-hooo! Mr. DHS officer? Yeah, I think this guy knows BlueStrat.
Personally, I think I'd prefer to let a few people get fake IDs now and then rather than force all of us who need ID to drive to put up with a facial recognition system. I promise you this will find more and more uses in a "post-9/11 world" where bureaucrats fall over themselves to grab more control.
Okay ... I'm getting up and moving to a seat a little farther away from BlueStrat.
What's that? No, no, I don't know that guy. Never saw him before in my life.
Dose me up with hyronalin and a tri-ox compound, and I'm good to go. And maybe a hit of cordrazine so I'll be sure to take out all you murderers and assassins!
I understand where you're coming from. I grok. We reach. Etc.
Back to "Cold Equations", I don't think there's anything in it that says "we have FTL" or "here's artificial gravity", but there's discussion about a colony on a world that isn't in our solar system, and at one point, the way one character walks on the deck of a small space boat is described.
Anyway, if you have time and an interest, give it a read: here's a copy.
Oh, you're right about that ... there's always a few vehement objectionists on any issue, and the "nerdier" the subject, the louder--
BAZINGA!
they can get. Have you ever read Godwin's "Cold Equations"? I think that's one of the hardest SF stories I've ever read, given that the characters involved were very tightly restricted in their actions by (some would say carefully crafted) limitations of technology. It's a classic of SF literature, and yet, at the time it was written, many of the subjects directly addressed were years away from possible and even unproven. Indeed, the setting implies the existence of an interstellar civilization, and the actions of the characters even imply artificial gravity. I would be very interested to know why someone would consider that story to be soft SF.
"If there's anything in the story that's beyond current physics, then it's not "hard sci-fi", and that includes artificial gravity (except that made by rotation), FTL jumping/warp drive, etc. "
I think your criteria for hard SF is too restrictive. Traditionally, the difference between hard and soft SF is that hard SF focuses on a realistic and logical application of science and technology, while soft SF focuses on social or non-scientific issues in a fictional setting.
While some authors prefer to restrict themselves to a rigorous application of known-science only, others allow notions such as FTL and/or artificial gravity to creep in to enable their stories to be told. Peter Hamilton, Arthur C. Clarke, Ben Bova, Isaac Asimov, Robert Forward, James Hogan, and many others have written arguably hard science fiction stories that break the rules you've defined.
I'd argue that hard/soft sf exists on a continuum ranging from the extreme of authors who would meet your criteria, to the extreme of authors like Ray Bradbury who prefer to write social commentaries with murky applications of science at best.
Here, have an upvote!
Oh crap, wrong site. You're still right, though.
Why should that be his responsibility? She misused his photo. She agreed to terms with GoDaddy that she would not violate copyright laws, and she should have known in the first place that she'd lose all her sites if she broke that agreement.
The owner of the photograph didn't punish her. He notified her through legitimate, legal means that she was misusing his work. If anyone did something wrong, it was GoDaddy for shutting down all her sites, and she should have gone batshit crazy on them rather than the owner of the copyrighted material.
It is my understanding that the idea we use only 10% of our brain is a myth.
You're right and I stand corrected. Well, actually sit at the moment, but you're still right.
I'll just put this here. It was on the ThinkProgress site for months whereas the Heartland billboard ad was stopped within 24 hours. Heartland issued an apology. ThinkProgress dropped the post silently and pretended nothing had happened.
It's in the constellation Draco.
Why is the "spokesfrog" a ... toad?