In a culture of increased paranoia about copyright and intellectual property, it’s a relief to see that not everyone wants to lock up their creations. Far from it – Canadian science fiction novelist Karl Schroeder is more than happy to know that people are designing RPG scenarios and campaigns in the world he created for his ‘Virga’ sequence of novels, and is inviting those doing so to share them publicly.
All posts by Paul Raven
Turning plastics back to oil – with microwaves
Plastics are a problem; they use valuable resources in their manufacture, and they’re a nightmare to recycle into anything useful. Or they were – a company called GRC have developed a type of giant multi-frequency microwave that shakes hydrocarbon plastics apart and turns them back into oil. There’s a bit of a trade-off there, I guess – we need to stop using oil if we possibly can, but equally anything that turns unwanted plastics into something other than landfill has got to be a winner. And it seems that the whole planet is finally waking up to pollution issues – even China intends to start levying higher fees and taxes on companies that fail to curb their emissions.
More free fiction from TTA Press and Hub Magazine
Just to prove that us Brits aren’t behind the curve in the “giving it away for nothing” stakes, I’d like to direct you to T3A Space, the website of TTA Press (publishers of Interzone, the UK’s longest running science fiction magazine), where you will find Jack Mangan’s BFA-longlisted story, “The Unsolvable Deathtrap” available to read in full, for free – and there’ll be more like that in months to come, too.
Oh, you need more? Well, in that case I recommend you sign up for Hub Magazine, a weekly free genre fiction magazine that gets delivered as a PDF to your email inbox. The ultimate in easy access – you don’t even need to click through to a bookmark.
[Disclosure: I am Assistant Reviews Editor for Interzone, and have contributed non-fiction pieces to Hub – but I was a subscriber to both long before they started giving me work to do!]
Robotic muscles pumped by air
Robotic hands have always had trouble with picking things up. Or to be more precise, picking things up without damaging them – what is natural and easy to most humans is pretty hard to reproduce mechanically. Japanese company Squse seem to have the right idea, though; their new design of robotic hand uses ‘air muscles’ that enable it to perform delicate tasks, like picking up an egg witrhout breaking it. Once this technology gets cheap enough, I can see the sex-toy industry plunging deep into the Uncanny Valley … [Engadget]
The Metaverse Roadmap
Foresight consultant and Futurismic contributor Jamais Cascio has been busy, along with other like-minded folk, working on a project that attempts to examine the implications of the information and media landscape of the near-future – it’s called The Metaverse Roadmap Overview, and it’s available now. Jamais describes it as “the first attempt to synthesize current and emerging social, economic and technological trends around virtual worlds, immersive networks, and ubiquitous information.” Kind of like coming at science fiction from the other direction, really.