Things are definitely changing in the world of creative media. Oh, you want proof? How about George Lucas’s Lucasfilm outfit sponsoring a Star Wars fan fiction movie contest, then? [SlashDot]
All posts by Paul Raven
Semiconductor 2.0
That’s not my buzzword, either – that’s exactly what Nanoident are calling their new environmentally-friendly semiconductor production systems, which create electronic circuits by printing them instead of growing them the old-fashioned (1.0) way. They’re claiming that printed circuits will soon be as ubiquitous as the normal kind are today, and I can’t see many reasons to doubt it.
Paperback emulator
Some people say it’ll take decades for us to completely jump from dead-tree books to reading long form fiction on computer screens – although Cory Doctorow takes a more evangelical opposite view. I’m inclined towards Cory’s position, myself – and the arrival of free open-source software that not only makes the on-screen experience more like a paperback book, but also acts as an interface with the Gutenberg Project library, suggests that other people are thinking the same way. Not convinced? Think back to how we used to mock people with mobile phones in the 80s … [LifeHacker]
Spotting alien oceans
It seems like only yesterday that astronomers started being able to spot planets around stars other than our own, by using advances in technology and technique to their advantage. According to Centauri Dreams, pretty soon we’ll be able to tell which extrasolar planets have oceans, too.
Digitising history
The New York Times has an article about the precious lesser-known documents and literary artifacts that may be lost forever if their curators decline to have them digitised – or just can’t afford to. While there’s plenty of argument on either side for scanning works still in copyright, it seems a shame that pieces of our world’s history and culture may become even more obscure than they currently are. [Print Is Dead]