- I don't think Ryman got the point of the exercise.
- MacLeod's was the most clever and was remarkable for its lightheartedness compared to the others.
- McDonald seems to envision a future where the iPhone takes over. I also got the impression that he thinks Islamic fundamentalism will dominate.
- Griffith and McAuly envision environmental catastrophe. Yawn. Baxter envisions a Universe catastrophe. No that's what I'm talking about.
- I think the Watson piece is the most interesting. I'd love to see it developed into a novel. How would virtual people change things?
Yes, I think Ryman misunderstood the exercise
I like Baxter's and Watson's too and I also really like Robson's - these are my favourites. I like McAuly's end of the world but Griffith's not so much. MacLeod's is funny. I don't really care about McDonald's.
Welcome aboard!
I meant my first thread - the one I started not just responded to - not post
Evolution, just like gravity, works even if you don't believe in it.
Stupidity doesn't hurt but it kills.
Stupidity doesn't hurt but it kills.
NewScientist science fiction special
17/09/2009 09:09:55 PM
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Wow, those were interesting.
18/09/2009 05:23:24 AM
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Re: Wow, those were interesting.
18/09/2009 09:30:35 AM
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