You may have noticed I’ve been posting early today – that’s because I need time to get my packing sorted before I head off to Eastercon early tomorrow morning. Thankfully, the wonders of portable computing and wireless internet access mean that I can take pictures, record interviews and type reports for my own blog (Velcro City Tourist Board) while in the thick of the UK’s biggest literary SF convention of the year – and I’ll be dropping by here a few times over the weekend to let you know about anything particularly special you might want to take a look at or listen to. I’ll bet the prospect of an interview with Charlie Stross would tempt you to click a few times, no? 🙂
Category Archives: Blog
Video games and violence – yes, again
Here we go – another burst of reactionary technophobia masquerading as serious research into a correlation between video game violence and the real thing. I remain to be convinced that cause and effect are as clear cut as these studies claim them to be – and I’d be very interested to discover where the funding for this particular project came from.
Wake-up tablets – better living through chemistry?
On the surface of it, I rather like the idea of taking tablets that will help me get up feeling fresh when the alarm goes off in the morning. But knowing the little I know about the placebo effect, and how cynical a business the dietary supplements and ‘life enhancement products’ industry really is, I think I’ll let someone else road-test before I lay down money for them. [OhGizmo!]
The future’s so bright, we’re all wearing shades
If willingness to consider science fictional solutions is a mark of how seriously people are starting to take global warming, then I guess the idea of a cloud of two foot wide sunshades at the L1 Lagrange point means that some people are very serious indeed. I hope that idea doesn’t interfere with the flying windfarms in any way.
Ecstasy really is a ‘social’ drug
Research has revealed that MDMA, the club-drug which is best known as Ecstasy, may actually live up to another of its nicknames, ‘the love drug’. It turns out that E promotes the release of oxytocin, the hormone that helps emotional bonding between mothers and their babies. Rumours of research into whether or not new mothers suddenly start enjoying unlistenable music and wearing flourescent clothes during the post-natal period are completely unfounded.