Showing posts with label vernor vinge. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vernor vinge. Show all posts

True Names: And the Opening of the Cyberspace Frontier Review

True Names: And the Opening of the Cyberspace Frontier
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True Names: And the Opening of the Cyberspace Frontier ReviewWhen I was starting out as a PhD student in Artificial Intelligence at Carnegie Mellon, it was made known to us first-year students that an unofficial but necessary part of our education was to locate and read a copy of an obscure science-fiction novella called *True Names*. Since you couldn't find it in bookstores, older grad students and professors would directly mail order sets of ten and set up informal lending libraries -- you would go, for example, to Hans Moravec's office, and sign one out from a little cardboard box over in the corner of his office. This was 1983 -- the Internet was a toy reserved for American academics, "virtual reality" was not a popular topic, and the term "cyberpunk" had not been coined. One by one, we all tracked down copies, and all had the tops of our heads blown off by Vinge's incredible book.
*True Names* remains to this day one of the four or five most seminal science-fiction novels ever written, just in terms of the ideas it presents, and the world it paints. It laid out the ideas that have been subsequently worked over so successfully by William Gibson and Neal Stephenson. *And* it's well written. *And* it's fun.
In my grad student days, we loved to sit around and discuss the implications of Vernor's ideas. Sixteen years later, I do research at MIT, and it's still fun to sit around and talk about how Vernor's ideas are coming to be.
(Amazingly enough, Vinge has done this not once, but twice: *Marooned in Realtime* contains ideas even more interesting than *True Names* -- all in the setting of a murder mystery that takes place 50 million years in the future.)
Vinge has subsequently written other, very popular and enjoyable books, such as *A Fire Upon the Deep* and his just-published *A Deepness in the Sky*. However, it's always been very frustrating to me that *True Names* has been essentially impossible to find. It's always out of print, and you have to know one of the elect who snapped up copies back when it was marginally possible -- and these copies are now jealously guarded. I won't let people read mine outside of my home. (The same goes for *Marooned in Realtime* -- seminal work; out of print.)
So I am really, really delighted that *True Names* is now back in print. I note that it is now fashionable to write books "explaining" the Net and the near-term future of our society to the layman -- books such as Negroponte's *Being Digital,* Gate's *The Road Ahead*, or Dertouzos' *What Will Be*. These books are a waste of time. If you would like to explore the implications and likely future of the computer revolution, I would recommend three novels, instead: *True Names* (Vernor Vinge), *Snowcrash* (Neal Stephenson), and *Neuromancer* (William Gibson).
Vinge and Stephenson are not only excellent writers, they are trained, competent computer scientists. *Neuromancer* is the best-written of the three; *Snowcrash* is the funniest and hippest; *True Names* -- well, *True Names* is the source.
-OlinTrue Names: And the Opening of the Cyberspace Frontier Overview

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The Unincorporated Woman Review

The Unincorporated Woman
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The Unincorporated Woman ReviewContains Spoilers
I'm a little past the halfway point in Unincorporated Woman. And so far it has not disappointed. I got into this series last December when I went to the book store to buy a book, and my only criteria was that it be science fiction and thick. The Unincorporated Man (1st) book fit that criteria, and after reading the back cover blurb, I had to get it. And I am glad I did. The Unincorporated War (2nd book) was more of a military sci-fi novel-IMO, whereas the 1st book introduced us to a very interesting concept. The Unicorporated War continued that story though and was just as good as the first book, with one hell of nailbiter for an ending. The Unincorporated Woman is a bit heavy on the military action, yet comes across as a kind of blending of the first two books. By this, I mean in style only, but not in story by any means. The Unincorporated Woman, so far, is a very solid continuation of the story set up by the first two books. And if you do like military sci-fi, there is a space battle in this book that will absolutely keep you glued to your seat. Can't wait to finish this book, and start the next one when it comes out, which can't be soon enough.The Unincorporated Woman OverviewThere's a civil war in space and the unincorporated woman is enlisted! The epic continues.The award-winning saga of a revolutionary future takes a new turn. Justin Cord, the unincorporated man, is dead, betrayed, and his legacy of rebellion and individual freedom is in danger. General Black is the great hope of the military, but she cannot wage war from behind the President's desk. So there must be a new president, anointed by Black, to hold the desk job, and who better than the only woman resurrected from Justin Cord's past era, the scientist who created his resurrection device, the only born unincorporated woman. The perfect figurehead. Except that she has ideas of her own, and secrets of her own, and the talent to run the government her way. She is a force that no one anticipated, and no one can control.The first novel in this thought-provoking series, The Unincorporated Man, won the 2009 Prometheus Award for best novel.

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