Edward M. Lerner's Blog: SF and Nonsense, page 12
July 16, 2019
Always be skeptical of first reports ...
Carl Sagan had it right: "extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence."
More dark than lightIn that spirit, see: Astronomers Just Solved The Bizarre Mystery of a Galaxy With No Dark Matter
====================== from Edward M. Lerner's "SF and Nonsense"

====================== from Edward M. Lerner's "SF and Nonsense"
Published on July 16, 2019 06:45
July 1, 2019
New Horizons, metaphorical and literal
Did you savor the Pluto closeups returned by NASA's New Horizons probe in July 2015? Of course you did -- it's the kind of thing that appeals to the kind of folk who visit SF and Nonsense.
Fascinating!The saga of New Horizons itself is every bit as fascinating, written (to be precise, coauthored) by the man who first dreamed of the mission and eventually became its principal investigator. The book covers the guerilla struggle to interest NASA in the mission concept, the funding wars, the mad d...

Published on July 01, 2019 09:17
June 15, 2019
It's always a pleasure ...
... to introduce myself to a new group of readers.

The cover is quite snappy, too :-)
Explore the issue online for free (wherein stories come available in stages -- my story, alas, not till July 24) or buy the entire issue now as an ebook.====================== from Edward M. L...
Published on June 15, 2019 07:08
June 11, 2019
Potpourri (an astronomy edition)
Because -- as if you hadn't noticed -- I'm into astronomy. And so, herewith:
The birth of radio astronomy: "Project Diana Honored With an IEEE Milestone."
The football-field-sized radio telescope so central to my
Energized
"Signs of a ‘super Earth’ discovered around a nearby star." How near? Barnard's Star -- after the Alpha Centauri triple system, our closest neighbor. (Not to mention, home to the perfidious Snakes of my InterstellarNet series.)
Also, "A star is born: Astronomers witness rare b...
The birth of radio astronomy: "Project Diana Honored With an IEEE Milestone."

"Signs of a ‘super Earth’ discovered around a nearby star." How near? Barnard's Star -- after the Alpha Centauri triple system, our closest neighbor. (Not to mention, home to the perfidious Snakes of my InterstellarNet series.)
Also, "A star is born: Astronomers witness rare b...
Published on June 11, 2019 08:28
June 5, 2019
Trope-ing redux *redux* (aka, Huzzah!)
More trope-ing-ly good news ...
" … Worth your time, your money, and your consideration, whether you’re interested in accessible science, looking to understand trends in science fiction, or -- optimally -- both."
-- Trevor Quachri, editor of Analog Science Fiction
and Fact (excerpted from his guest foreword)
Trevor refers there, of course, to Trope-ing the Light Fantastic: The Science Behind the Fiction. And as for his suggestion re how you might prudently invest your reading dollars
" … Worth your time, your money, and your consideration, whether you’re interested in accessible science, looking to understand trends in science fiction, or -- optimally -- both."
-- Trevor Quachri, editor of Analog Science Fiction
and Fact (excerpted from his guest foreword)

Published on June 05, 2019 11:18
May 30, 2019
May 28, 2019
Yikes!
From this morning's Washington Post:
"It’s the middle of the night. Do you know who your iPhone is talking to? Apple says, 'What happens on your iPhone stays on your iPhone.' Our privacy experiment showed 5,400 hidden app trackers guzzled our data — in a single week."
(And before Android users breathe a sigh of relief and move on ... the article eventually makes clear that Android is no different.)
In a word ... scary. ====================== from Edward M. Lerner's "SF and Nonsense"
"It’s the middle of the night. Do you know who your iPhone is talking to? Apple says, 'What happens on your iPhone stays on your iPhone.' Our privacy experiment showed 5,400 hidden app trackers guzzled our data — in a single week."
(And before Android users breathe a sigh of relief and move on ... the article eventually makes clear that Android is no different.)
In a word ... scary. ====================== from Edward M. Lerner's "SF and Nonsense"
Published on May 28, 2019 13:50
May 13, 2019
Antisocial networking
NOT (you may be shocked to read) a tirade about Facebook or Twitter ....
I'm being sucked down a different rabbit hole. In this era, an authorial website is -- beyond de rigeur -- essential. And so, for a bit, in lieu of blogging, I'm diverting myself onto some (long) overdue maintenance of my authorial website.
My intergalactic portal ....If you're after a peek at my view of things, your best bet for now might be to take a gander at that website: edwardmlerner.com.
And if you encounter that web...
I'm being sucked down a different rabbit hole. In this era, an authorial website is -- beyond de rigeur -- essential. And so, for a bit, in lieu of blogging, I'm diverting myself onto some (long) overdue maintenance of my authorial website.

And if you encounter that web...
Published on May 13, 2019 11:21
Antisocial social networking
NOT (you may be shocked to read) a tirade about Facebook or Twitter ....
I'm being sucked down a different rabbit hole. In this era, an authorial website is -- beyond de rigeur -- essential. And so, for a bit, in lieu of blogging, I'm diverting myself onto some (long) overdue maintenance of my authorial website.
My intergalactic portal ....If you're after a peek at my view of things, your best bet for now might be to take a gander at that website: edwardmlerner.com.
And if you encounter that web...
I'm being sucked down a different rabbit hole. In this era, an authorial website is -- beyond de rigeur -- essential. And so, for a bit, in lieu of blogging, I'm diverting myself onto some (long) overdue maintenance of my authorial website.

And if you encounter that web...
Published on May 13, 2019 11:21
May 1, 2019
Ugh.
From the WaPo ...
"The Census is vulnerable to digital attack. But Congress may be dropping the ball."
A key, horrifying snippet:
If vulnerabilities in census systems aren’t dealt with, there’s a risk that hackers could compromise Americans’ data — such as birth dates, marital status and telephone numbers — on a mass scale. And that data could be used to help file phony tax returns, apply for credit cards or for other nefarious purposes.
More troubling, if hackers manipulated information collect...
"The Census is vulnerable to digital attack. But Congress may be dropping the ball."
A key, horrifying snippet:
If vulnerabilities in census systems aren’t dealt with, there’s a risk that hackers could compromise Americans’ data — such as birth dates, marital status and telephone numbers — on a mass scale. And that data could be used to help file phony tax returns, apply for credit cards or for other nefarious purposes.
More troubling, if hackers manipulated information collect...
Published on May 01, 2019 07:22
SF and Nonsense
Thoughts (and occasionally fuming) about the state of science, fiction, and science fiction.
by author and technologist
Edward M. Lerner
by author and technologist
Edward M. Lerner
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