Edward M. Lerner's Blog: SF and Nonsense, page 51
May 22, 2012
Dinosaurs in the news
Yup ... they are in the news. Some truly saurian. Some metaphorical. And in a fancifully look-alike category, also dragons.
We'll cover dragons first. Last week (in "Beyond this point (hopefully) be Dragons") I posted about the then imminent launch of the private Dragon space capsule to the ISS. After yet another postponement, the Dragon has launched ("SpaceX Launches Private Capsule on Historic Trip to Space Station.") We now await several days of precision maneuvers to con...
We'll cover dragons first. Last week (in "Beyond this point (hopefully) be Dragons") I posted about the then imminent launch of the private Dragon space capsule to the ISS. After yet another postponement, the Dragon has launched ("SpaceX Launches Private Capsule on Historic Trip to Space Station.") We now await several days of precision maneuvers to con...
Published on May 22, 2012 06:21
May 15, 2012
Beyond this point (hopefully) be Dragons
In the post-Shuttle era, as you will recall, the US has no way to deliver cargo or astronauts to the International Space Station (which, despite its name, was mostly designed and paid for by NASA). I've vented in this blog more than once (as in "Move 'em on. Head 'em out. Rawhide!" and "Crocodile cheers") about retiring the Shuttle before a replacement spacecraft was at hand.
How does stuff get to the ISS? Some cargo arrives on the soon-to-be-discontinued EU automated transfer vehicle. The rem...
How does stuff get to the ISS? Some cargo arrives on the soon-to-be-discontinued EU automated transfer vehicle. The rem...
Published on May 15, 2012 07:02
May 8, 2012
Tech dispatches from the Department of "D'oh"
As Japan slowly recovers from last year's natural disaster ("It's the tsunami, stupid"), that country -- by popular demand -- is about to inflict more hardship on itself.
Nothing but a bit of steam ...How so? Via the shutdown of all nuclear power in the country. That's fifty reactors, which not long ago provided almost thirty percent of the nation's electrical power. IMO, that's quite the overreaction to the (unprecedented) earthquake-plus-tsunami damage to a cluster of four reactors.
Oddly eno...

Oddly eno...
Published on May 08, 2012 06:38
May 1, 2012
Eclectomania
Dunno that that's a real word, but it should be. If enough of you pass it on, it will be.
Buy a Kindle (Beauty not included)All of today's eclectic topics are writing-centric. We'll start with "Sci-fi publisher announces Tor and Forge will go DRM-free with all e-book titles." Tor has published the majority of my titles, so if DRM is an issue for you ... hang in there.
And in other breaking news: "Microsoft buys stake in Barnes and Noble’s Nook e-reader." Maybe there will be longterm competition...

And in other breaking news: "Microsoft buys stake in Barnes and Noble’s Nook e-reader." Maybe there will be longterm competition...
Published on May 01, 2012 07:01
April 24, 2012
Move 'em on. Head 'em out. Rawhide!
You got it: a round-up post. Three newsworthy (not to mention, eclectic) observations on matters of science and technology ...
Circuses (we're out of bread)Last May I ranted about the slow, lingering death of any American space program (see "Crocodile cheers"). In particular, I admitted, "I've progressed from bemused to troubled to angry at the spate of breathless headlines heralding some 'final' activity of a space shuttle." Last week saw new breathless coverage about the Washington DC flyove...

Published on April 24, 2012 05:43
April 17, 2012
Contrariwise
From Through the Looking Glass:
Today's post deals with what must be for any author among the biggest new...
And so to publishing, economics (aka, "the dismal science"), public policy, and Through the Looking Glass (aka, world-class) examples of (il)logic.Alice meets the twins"I know what you're thinking about," said Tweedledum; "but it isn't so, nohow."
"Contrariwise," continued Tweedledee, "if it was so, it might be; and if it were so, it would be; but as it isn't, it ain't. That's logic."
Today's post deals with what must be for any author among the biggest new...
Published on April 17, 2012 06:41
April 10, 2012
Post postscript
About a year ago (April 12, 2011, to be precise), I commented here on Google's first full year of statistics regarding post popularity on SF and Nonsense.
Effectively a year later,
Betrayer of Worlds
(October 12, 2010) remains -- by better than three to one! -- my most visited post. It's also, and by a similar margin, the post most often commented upon. (My Fate of Worlds post -- you know, surely, that one is coming -- has its work cut out for it.)
Number two in cumulative popular...

Number two in cumulative popular...
Published on April 10, 2012 06:03
April 3, 2012
Frontiers of Space, Time, and Thought -- an odyssey
Practically the first thing I did after declaring an end to day jobs -- apart from the occasional shout of joy -- was write "The Day of the RFIDs." That was in 2004.
An RFID chipThe next year, when I sold my first short-fiction collection, TDotR was its opening story. Most stories in
Creative Destruction
-- though not TDotR -- had first appeared in
Analog Science Fiction and Fact
, so I asked Stanley Schmidt, the editor, if he'd consider writing a guest introduction. He graciously agreed -- an...

Published on April 03, 2012 14:00
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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