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Scifi / Fantasy News > Indistinguishable from magic.

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message 1: by Warren (new)

Warren | 1556 comments “Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.”
Arthur C. Clarke,
“an international team of neuroscientists and robotics engineers have demonstrated the viability of direct brain-to-brain communication in humans. Recently published in PLOS ONE the highly novel findings describe the successful transmission of information via the internet between the intact scalps of two human subjects – located 5,000 miles apart.
http://medicalxpress.com/news/2014-09...


message 2: by Gaines (new)

Gaines Post (gainespost) | 206 comments hehe nice :-p


message 3: by John (Taloni) (new)

John (Taloni) Taloni (johntaloni) | 5196 comments Sounds kind of like the mental texting done in Niven / Pournelle's Oath of Fealty.


message 4: by Warren (last edited Sep 11, 2014 07:00PM) (new)

Warren | 1556 comments Since they both have to physically jacked it
its sound less like telepathy then it does the metaverse.
Maybe one step beyond VR glasses.


message 5: by Warren (last edited Sep 12, 2014 10:32AM) (new)

Warren | 1556 comments Alex wrote: "If you're interested in this sort of stuff, I can't recommend Ramez Naam's Nexus enough. It's smartly written by someone who's looked deep into this research, and managed to turn it..."

Millions of people sending friend requests straight to your brain. Sounds like a horror story.
http://iurl.no/79j92
I'll check it out. Thanks


message 6: by Karl (last edited Sep 16, 2014 10:34PM) (new)

Karl Smithe | 77 comments It only makes sense to apply technology to science fiction. What SF writer imagined this?

For years I have found it annoying that most reviewers say little to nothing about the science in the SF works they review. It occurred to me that there can't be much science in a work without using 'science words'. So I wrote a computer program that searches .txt and .rtf files for science and fantasy words and counts them.

For anyone interested in experimenting with the word counting program I have uploaded Windows and Linux versions with GUI interfaces. You must have Python installed on your computer to use them however. I have uploaded and downloaded and tested the downloads so they should work.

Linux - sfforensic_L.pyc
https://www.sendspace.com/file/8awxir

Windows - sfforensic_W.pyc
https://www.sendspace.com/file/pwqz4i

The input file is: ACC.AFalloMndust.txt with 439541 characters.

It uses 79 SF words 450 times for an SF density of 1.024

The input file is: OSC.EndersGame.txt with 582652 characters.

It uses 42 SF words 214 times for an SF density of 0.367

Hard SF tends to get significantly higher SF densities.

Ender's Game is 33% longer than A Fall of Moondust but uses about half as many science words less than half as often.


message 7: by Warren (last edited Sep 27, 2014 09:55AM) (new)

Warren | 1556 comments invisibility cloak
http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/0...

I thought they had these a couple years back.
Or maybe that was just as Hogwarts


message 8: by Ulmer Ian (new)

Ulmer Ian (eean) | 341 comments There's a whole class of physics research which intrepid university PR depts describe as "invisibility cloak". Which is why you keep seeing it "invented" over and over again. I assume when someone actually invents something at all functionally similar to a invisibility cloak they will be ignored. :p


message 9: by Warren (new)

Warren | 1556 comments Ulmer Ian wrote: "There's a whole class of physics research which intrepid university PR depts describe as "invisibility cloak". Which is why you keep seeing it "invented" over and over again. I assume when someone ..."
So if you've seen one invisible cloak you've seen them all?


message 10: by Warren (new)

Warren | 1556 comments There's an app for that
https://vine.co/v/OWgDTdZJwOH


message 11: by Warren (new)

Warren | 1556 comments Scientists learn to selectively erase and restore memories in brain
http://rt.com/news/163688-erase-memor...

http://goo.gl/wcM2F


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