SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion
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Group Reads Discussions 2016
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"Nexus" - Would You or Wouldn't You? *Possible Spoilers*
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What if you were with a group of people and one of them was a serial killer or something?

I mostly just want the ability to access the internet and run apps in my brain.


Yes, I would be the same. That's how I approach most new tech: wait for the bugs to be ironed out and the price to become more reasonable.

So, I protest, but if I thought the firewalls were good enough (and the games good enough) ... yeah, plug me in, I'm there.

What if somebody developed a Nexus virus, you know, like a computer virus? Would we have to have antiviral software and firewalls for our Nexus brains too? Could they download mobile ads straight into our brains? Would their be Facebook and Goodreads for the brain?

Of course humans would once again turn a new technology into just another way to make a buck, regardless of the actions or consequences. But I can hope that the many benefits would outweigh the bad, and the tech could keep up. "Pay us $100 and you can have all your childhood memories back!" It's inevitable, sadly.



The book focuses heavily on benefits of collaboration, but there are also many drawbacks. Let's face it, this type of shared thought process could lead to a lot of hard feelings. There would be no way to filter out those thoughts like, "Yikes, what did he/she do to his/her hair?"

There's an app for that. :)

I see a bright future for mental hospitals.

Valerie, I love your comment about the hair because it's stuff like that that makes me think this would be very uncomfortable to me. All of those random, unimportant thoughts.



I don't do drugs in general, so if the technology was under ground, definitely not. I'm a technology follower. I don't like "testing" new models. I like second generation products. Still new but not unfamiliar.

However ... I don't even have a smartphone yet so, yeah, I'm sure I'd wait until the umpteenth gen software has been patched 3,000,000 times before installing.
I'm not a Luddite, it's just ... what's the rush?

An argument could be made that the insular nature of our minds is the cause of much of our problems. Complete openness will reveal that we're all flawed, scared, insecure people: that's Normal. But it will also reveal when we are thinking of others with honest compassion and love. The technology's potential for aiding mental health conditions, for example, could be incredibly powerful.
So could all the evil things that could be done with it. ;D

And some things, like my brain, should not be screwed with.
Nope, not for me.

Nexus sounds like my nightmare.

But what if you only communed to other introverts? You could all be peaceful and chill with each other, let each other feel how you're not the only one ... and then avoid telling each other anything else. ??
:D

I know, right? If I weren't a mass murderer before, that would definitely drive me to it.
There's no way I would do this. It's fun in fiction where you have Superscience to Save the Day (TM) and Tech That Never Breaks (c) but has anyone ever had a computer that DIDN'T crash? Imagine getting one of those spam viruses that locks down your brain or turns off your hearing until you pay the hackers money.
Heck, go to any random YouTube video and read the vile comments. Now imagine those people inside your head. Nope. Nopity-no-no-nope.
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As I'm seeing other comments, though, I'm realizing that some people would actually
be crazy enoughthink that this could be a whole lot of fun.So, everybody... Which camp do you fall into? Personally, I'm keeping my secrets in my head, where they belong, as insignificant as they are.