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War Stories

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[originally published May 2009.] For humans, war remains an inexhaustible subject of storytelling and analysis — such a compelling topic that experts trace the origin of historiography to the Athenian general Thucydides, who wrote The Peloponnesian War nearly 2,500 years ago. The appeal of war stories, whether we read them for elevation or escape, is eternal. Science fiction, like every other genre whose authors have written for economic gain and popular acclaim, has plenty of combat. We'll focus on two novels at opposite ends of the SF timeline: Robert A. Heinlein's Hugo-winning classic, Starship Troopers , and newcomer John Scalzi's Hugo-nominated novel, Old Man's War . From the Halls of Montezuma Although war has proven an eternally engaging subject, its portrayal varies widely. Science fiction authors live in a real world, and unless they're remarkably oblivious, the wars around them shape their imaginations. For the two books I focus on here, we'll look a...

Thank you, Jack

Notes from "A Celebration of the Life of Jacob T. Schwartz" at NYU on Friday 27 March 2009 A few notes that I took during the celebration. These notes are expected to be read along with scanned image of the program, included as a PDF file. Jack's widow Diana added some comments to my notes, which are included in italics with the prefix "DS". The program takes the form of a SETL program . DS: I put this together in tribute to SETL. I think he would have loved it. The MC was Ed Schonberg. There was a brief greeting by the head of Courant. DS: I asked Ed to be the MC since he coordinated Jack's 70th birthday festschrift. Marian McPartland performed two pieces on the piano. She clearly knew and cared for Jack and Ed. DS: I came to NY 35 years ago with a scholarship to study jazz piano with Marian. She and I quickly became friends and have been close friends for many years. When I married Jack she instantly was drawn to him and they used to have the mo...

A Young Geek's Fancy Turns to…Science Fiction?

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[originally published May 2005] With all due respect to Alfred, Lord Tennyson, spring is the best time to plan your summer reading (besides, this magazine isn't the place to explore the racier topics in his poem Locksley Hall ). If you go to the beach in August without a couple of good, fat, books already researched and acquired, you risk spending your precious time in expensive resort bookstores, browsing among stacks of trashy titles, embarrassing yourself with plaintive requests to friends or relatives for books, or, even worse, reducing yourself to working your way through a stack of moldering Archie comics. Your reading time is too precious to waste—don't become a poster geek for the Wasted Summer Reading Foundation! A good summer book must meet several exacting requirements. It must be entertaining without being taxing — we're on vacation here, so War and Peace won't do. The book should be long, preferably very long — the number of hours we have at the beach is s...

Use The Force, Luke!

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[originally published November 2004] What presents a greater threat to our future? If we listen to sci-fi writer Vernor Vinge along with Ray Kurzweil, Hans Moravec, Marvin Minsky, and their ilk, transcendent AIs threaten the very foundations of our world. But if we listen to Eric Drexler and Neal Stephenson (among others), we should worry more, or perhaps less, about threats from nanotechnology -- in other words, death by gray goo. Are we living in denial? Vinge's basic argument for singularity is compelling, give or take any real understanding of what a transcendent AI's software might look like. Nanotech is similarly compelling, although the gray-goo thesis is less likely than some alarmists would have us believe -- autonomous nanofactories that can "live off the land" won't happen any time soon or by accident. In this final installment of Biblio Tech, we'll examine some of the various views of life and intelligence that have thriven in sci-fi over the years...

Biblio Tech Redux

Recently the editorial board of IEEE Security & Privacy magazine suggested that we revive Biblio Tech . The flattery was effective, and I agreed to write several more installments of the department, the first of which will probably appear in the March/April issue. I've been reading a lot of older SF recently, notably a collection of Arthur C. Clarke's short stories and Robert A. Heinlein's " Starship Troopers ". In addition, I've recently completed John Scalzi's wonderful " Old Man's War " and its sequels " Ghost Brigades " and " The Last Colony. " I have my good friend Hal Stern to thank for the introduction to Scalzi's work, for which I'll get a suitable revenge at an appropriate later date.

Jennifer Government

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[originally published September 2004] One of the special pleasures of the Harry Potter stories is their send-up of modern consumer culture - from Bertie Botts' Every Flavour Beans (and they do mean every flavor) to Chocolate Frogs, which come complete with a collectible card featuring a celebrity witch or wizard. Potter's creator, J.K. Rowling, pokes fun at contemporary marketing and advertising with tongue-in-cheek warmth that manages to make her simultaneously attractive to Madison Avenue and the rest of us - a remarkable achievement. Down the Rabbit Hole Max Barry's Jennifer Government , the satirical successor to his well-received first novel Syrup , takes a different angle on the consumer-marketing-gone-mad theme. Although Rowling's products are entirely fanciful, they're unmistakably patterned on things we all instantly recognize. Barry, however, doesn't make up the company names he uses: rather, he includes a defensive paragraph at the front of his novel...

Deus Est Machina

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[originally published July 2004] What happens if the artificial intelligence community, in its quest to build intelligent systems, succeeds too well and creates an AI whose intelligence exceeds the threshold marked out by our own? Up to now, it is humans who develop the software and hardware and who drive all progress in capability. After crossing the threshold, however, the AI itself will rapidly augment its own capabilities. What's the intuition here? Although we use technology to help us conceptualize, design, and build today's computers and software (and other technological artifacts such as airliners and skyscrapers), there's no doubt that we remain in the driver's seat. But imagine the software design process reaching a level of complexity at which human designers exert only executive oversight. Most practitioners can't really see us getting to this point anytime soon, but remember that compilers astonished assembler programmers in the late 1950s and early 196...