Or science at least.
Walter Jon Williams brings global finance (automatic online trading programs that turn $20,000 into $20 million in two months, and later single-handedly crash currencies of Indonesia, Chile, China, and US and incite riots on the streets) into his latest books This Is Not a Game, and boy, was that a mistake.
This isn't some fantastical future technology where you can suspect disbelief and say "oh yeah, maybe in 50 years we will invest an anti-gravity generator," this is real life stuff, and it just doesn't work the way he describes.
He's such a good writer, too. This is just a shame.
Walter Jon Williams brings global finance (automatic online trading programs that turn $20,000 into $20 million in two months, and later single-handedly crash currencies of Indonesia, Chile, China, and US and incite riots on the streets) into his latest books This Is Not a Game, and boy, was that a mistake.
This isn't some fantastical future technology where you can suspect disbelief and say "oh yeah, maybe in 50 years we will invest an anti-gravity generator," this is real life stuff, and it just doesn't work the way he describes.
He's such a good writer, too. This is just a shame.
Science fiction writers need to stick with physics.
29/10/2010 04:24:16 AM
- 980 Views
If it helps, they mostly get the physics wrong too. *NM*
29/10/2010 07:08:23 AM
- 362 Views
Well technically, quant trading is a branch of physics.
29/10/2010 07:52:26 AM
- 887 Views