Synthetic opals bring post-Kindle e-books closer

A team of chemist-entrepreneurs says it has developed a photonic ink (“P-Ink,” unfortunately) that changes color with the addition of a few volts of electricity.

Electronic inks are already used in commercial products such as Amazon’s Kindle reader. Most current technologies use an electric field to manipulate drops of oil or pigment particles. The presence or absence of a voltage makes pixels on the display appear light or dark, and most displays are confined to monochrome. P-Ink, however, can display any colour without using pigments. Instead, it relies on the same effect that generates shimmering colours in the semi-precious stone, opal.

(If you’re having Roxy Music flashbacks now, me too.)

(Large friendly letters on the cover from BBC)

Happy Holidays from Futurismic!

Hi folks; well, it’s Christmas Eve here in the dismal and overcast south coast of the UK, and I’m soon heading off to the train station to make my way to a family get-together, as I imagine many of you will be as well (if you haven’t already).

I just wanted to take this opportunity to thank you all for following Futurismic this year. I’ve not quite had a full twelve months in the driving seat, but it feels pretty close to it at the moment! This year has seen us crank up the fiction and non-fiction output, and seen lots of new readers and commenters arriving, all of which has been immensely satisfying for me – and Jason’s story being picked up for an anthology was the icing on the cake.

If all goes to plan, 2009 should be even better for Futurismic, and I very much hope you’ll all stick around to see it. But enough of that; I’m going to take a few days off from the site for the holidays, so I thought I’d stop by to wish you all whatever sort of end-of-year happiness fits your particular belief system. Have a great time, and look after yourselves!

All the best…

Paul Raven

Peak coal in Christmas stocking?

A new report from the American Geophysical Union suggests governments may be substantially over-reporting coal reserves, from Ars Technica:

Such fallacious reporting is nothing new—the United States government happily overestimated oil reserves in the 1950s and 1960s until peak oil hit the lower 48. David Rutledge, professor of engineering and applied sciences at the California Institute of Technology, claims the same mistakes are being repeated with coal.

His results, reported in a panel discussion at this year’s American Geophysical Union meeting, state the world only has 662 billion tons of coal, including reserves already exploited. The estimate is well short of the 1,027 billion tons remaining in proven and projected reserves, according to the World Energy Council.

Leading to the possibility of imminent peak coal.

[via Bruce Sterling][image from sic on flickr]

Pope seeks to save humanity from gender theory

So, let’s see: a very rich man wearing a gaudy dress at the head of an organisation which shelters and hence implicitly condones child abuse says that saving humanity from transsexual or homosexual behaviour is as important as saving the environment. I guess that somewhere along the line my definitions of good and evil got a little mixed up… has anyone set up a website where we can send shoes to ol’ Benny?

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