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Living in the future (1 viewing) (1) Guest
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TOPIC: Living in the future
#84664
Bryantop
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Ajax, Cork City, Crystal Palace Chocolate Kimberley Orbital 2 & Toot & Maytals - Funky Kingston Location: Mokum
posted 18-08-2008 16:57

 
11 years ago I took a photography course at high school. I had to learn how to load spools of film, manual exposure, developing of film, transfer to photgraphic paper, etc.

Now you can take a picture with your mobile phone and instantly SMS it to anybody in the world. Boring.
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#84678
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posted 18-08-2008 17:15

 
Having been a computer nerd back in the 80's, I can't help sometimes being amazed by modern computer technology. My mobile packs more punch than a geek wet dream back then...

On the other hand I feel a bit letdown by the space programme, I really thought there would have been more progress made in term of human exploration and steps towards orbital colonies (a la Neuromancer).
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#84702
Wyatt Earp
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posted 18-08-2008 18:03

 
I've no idea what Neuromancer is [/highcourtjudge] but you raise an issue right there. The 1950s saw a rise in the popularity and ubiquity of science fiction, meaning we've had a steady supply of wild speculation about the future since then. The reality can only disappoint.

I often think cultural change seems to have slowed, though, over the last 25 years or so. Students today are barely distinguishable from students when I was a student, for example, apart from that we wore more makeup*. Whereas students a quarter century before that wore tweeds, smoked pipes and wanted to become like their Dads, up to and including marrying, as soon as they could, a girl just like Mum. From what I can gather, like.

(*Newromancers, we were.)
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Last Edit: 18-08-2008 18:04 By Wyatt Earp.
 
#84707
posted 18-08-2008 18:09

 
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#84719
Ginger Yellow
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posted 18-08-2008 18:27

 
Seriously? You've never heard of Neuromancer? It's probably the single most famous sci-fi novel of the last 40 years.
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#84720
posted 18-08-2008 18:35

 
I don't know about that. I'd say it's the single most famous sci-fi novel that has not been adapted for film. It's also extremely influential in film, anime and comics (and other novels, of course).
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#84722
Ginger Yellow
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posted 18-08-2008 18:37

 
What else comes close, outside of manga/graphic novels?

Edit: oh, hang on, I got my calculations wrong. I meant 30 years.
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Last Edit: 18-08-2008 18:38 By Ginger Yellow.
 
#84723
Wyatt Earp
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posted 18-08-2008 18:38

 
Ginger Yellow wrote:
QUOTE:
Seriously? You've never heard of Neuromancer? It's probably the single most famous sci-fi novel of the last 40 years.


Title rings a bell.

I don't like sci-fi.
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#84726
Ginger Yellow
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posted 18-08-2008 18:41

 
I don't like restoration drama but I've heard of Marriage a la Mode.
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#84731
posted 18-08-2008 18:53

 
QUOTE:
What else comes close, outside of manga/graphic novels?

Edit: oh, hang on, I got my calculations wrong. I meant 30 years.


In that case, you're probably right. And I was wrong anyway.

I thought Dune was written in the late 1970s. I am wrong, it was 1965. And Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? was 1968. I thought it was later.

However, two possible contenders would be Battlefield Earth of 1982 (it may be nonsense, but it is well known) and A Scanner Darkly was in 1979.
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#84734
Ginger Yellow
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posted 18-08-2008 18:56

 
Neither of them are particularly famous as books, though, outside of sci-fi circles.
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#84739
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posted 18-08-2008 18:58

 
I'd feel more thrilled by the changes GY talks about if I didn't feel so thoroughly politically pessimistic, which in turn tempers optimism about the uses to which scientific advances will (or will not) be put.

And then climate change/ecological catastrophe is of course the big elephant in The Future's room.
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#84741
Wyatt Earp
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posted 18-08-2008 19:00

 
I didn't say I'd never heard of it.
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#84823
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posted 18-08-2008 21:00

 
The orbital colonies in Neuromancer are on par with the mood of the book, not a particularly bright take on mankind. They are set as a tax haven, a kind of Monaco in space where young rich things go to party and shady deals take place. There is also a rastfari colony up there, tugging along space vehicles from low orbit to the space stations, the pilots having a constant stream of dub played in their ears and smoking massive spliffs as you breathe air.
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#84831
Bryantop
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posted 18-08-2008 21:15

 
What about Ender's Game?
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#84833
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posted 18-08-2008 21:19

 
Excellent book too, I still got Purple Cow's copy in fact...<red face>
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