Category: Hieroglyph
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Inside Minority Report’s “Idea Summit,” Visionaries Saw the Future
https://www.wired.com/underwire/2012/06/minority-report-idea-summit/ “Steven and I talked specifically about creating a new set of vernacular images of the future. Before then, the only images that anybody ever referred to were either Blade Runner or 2001. It was a very dark vision. Our goal was to get on screen a really amazing vision of the future that people…
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Benford & Cambias featured at Hard SF Weekend
We are hosting a weekend-long hard sf micro-convention at our bookstore in Westport, NY including some discussions relevant to Project Hieroglyph. https://www.facebook.com/events/440488539313010/ The program is below: Gregory Benford, James Cambias, Kathryn Cramer, David G. Hartwell, Elizabeth Malartre At the Dragon Press Bookstore, 10 Champlain Avenue, Westport NY 12993, 518-962-2346 (exit 31 off the northway, go…
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Charlie Stross on Near-Future SF worlds and "Unknown Unknowns"
<a href="http://www.antipope.org/charlie/blog-static/2012/01/world-building-404-the-unknown.html#more "> Charlie Stross, "World Building 404: The Unknown Unknowns"</a> Great blog post from science fiction author Charlie Stross about building near-future worlds in SF stories. Stross discusses how authors should balance elements that are continuous and familiar from contemporary society ("known knowns"), elements that are predictable advances on current technologies and social structures ("known unknowns"), and "unknown unknowns," disruptive events or innovations that are as yet unforeseen. This post could provide a starting point for thinking about guidelines or best practices for writing speculative near-term science fiction stories that are inspiring and radically innovative while still being relatable for their audiences. This would likely call for a balance of the familiar and the unfamiliar, as Stross argues. Stories based on a future that is completely alien probably will not have the effect of inspiring tangible research or enhancing public engagement with science.
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Scientific research publishing is changing
This brief article relates to my post from yesterday in The Moon Shot Ecosystem. While the examples I supplied may be outside your game, this might hit closer to home: https://arstechnica.com/science/news/2012/05/uk-to-science-publishers-dont-follow-recording-industry-down-the-tubes.ars
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Neil deGrasse Tyson on Space as Culture
<a href="http://io9.com/5904969/must-watch-neil-degrasse-tyson-discusses-the-link-between-space-and-culture "> Neil deGrasse Tyson Discusses the Link Between Space and Culture,"</a> Robert T. Gonzales, io9.com I urge you to watch this video of Neil deGrasse Tyson speaking at the 28th National Space Symposium in Colorado Springs. In it, he discusses the concept of "space as culture," emphasizing how space exploration and other large-scale scientific endeavors encourage society to dream about tomorrow. deGrasse Tyson focuses especially on how icons of scientific progress (in our project's language, **Hieroglyphs**) become imprinted on the collective imagination. Examples include linking the birth of the ecology movement to the photo of the Earth "rising over" the moon taken by Apollo 8, and connecting the iconic V2 rocket and its fins to the design of cars like the 1957 Chevrolet. These icons reflect the public's fascination with large-scale scientific endeavors and also push culture forward, helping us imagine cultural and social futures in the wake of radical technological change.
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Does “Star Trek” make it look too easy?
Andre Bormanis, writing in The Space Review, asks, “Does “Star Trek” make it look too easy?” https://www.thespacereview.com/article/2069/1 “In an interview with a reporter from the Associated Press, Scott Pace, the current director of the Space Policy Institute at The George Washington University and a former NASA associate administrator, was asked to comment on the April…
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Farm Hack
Though in some respects, this represents the opposite of the Hieroglyph approach, I want to mention Farm Hack and the associated young farmers movements as something exciting which is happening now. I am going to <a href="http://www.youngfarmers.org/practical/farm-hack/intervale/">Farm Hack Intervale/Essex</a> next weekend. I went to a related Greenhorns young farmer event last year and it was full of energetic, intelligent, inventive people. One guy I talked to there, Steve Blood, who has a company for making <a href="http://www.pedal-power.com/">human powered devices</a> also has significant venture capital for his <a href="http://techcrunch.com/2011/04/18/kohort-3-million-seed/">social media software project</a>. Finding the veins of inventive energy is as important as thinking big. UPDATE: My link formatting didn't work right. Here's another try: * Farm Hack: http://www.youngfarmers.org/practical/farm-hack/ * Farm Hack Intervale/Essex: http://www.youngfarmers.org/practical/farm-hack/intervale/ * Pedal Power Engineering: http://www.pedal-power.com/ * Article about Kohort's VC: http://techcrunch.com/2011/04/18/kohort-3-million-seed/ * Kohort.com: http://www.kohort.com/
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Breakout Labs, self-perpetuating nonprofit fund for future tech
We had the pleasure of announcing funding to some very cool projects last week in San Francisco; mostly biotech in this round ( https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/guest-blog/2012/04/17/breakout-labs-a-new-model-for-funding-science-and-technology/ ). Would love to see Hieroglyphers and friends propose new projects or otherwise get involved. The fund’s site is https://www.BreakoutLabs.org.
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NASA Accepting Proposals for 2018 Mars Mission
<a href="http://abcnews.go.com/Technology/wireStory/budget-woes-force-nasa-redraw-plans-mars-16133857#.T4x2eLNrMR9 "> "Budget Woes Force NASA to Redraw Plans to Mars,"</a> Alicia Chang, AP News In response to budget difficulties, NASA has issued an open call for proposals from professional scientists and the general public about how to execute a 2018 mission to Mars to return soil and rock samples. The <a href="http://www.lpi.usra.edu/meetings/marsconcepts2012/ "> call for proposals</a> is an attempt to find cheap, innovative ideas for this mission that will also contribute to NASA's longer-term goal of sending humans to Mars by 2030. What do we think about this idea? Is it realistic? Is NASA being specific enough about what kinds of ideas they need? Is this effort to crowdsource space innovation a promising development?
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Article on the "Space Craze" in 1920s Russia
<a href="http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2012/04/russia-space-craze/"> "The Space Craze That Gripped Russia Nearly 100 Years Ago,"</a> Adam Mann, Wired Really interesting article about the popular fascination in 1920s Russia with space travel and exploration, which was fueled by popular fiction and film, along with articles, public lectures, and museum-style exhibitions. This craze was integral to Russia's early domination of the space race, largely because it inspired young people growing up during the 1920s to pursue scientific careers and technological innovations. This is an excellent historical precedent to consider at Hieroglyph, as we ponder how to use fiction and narrative to spark innovation and moonshot thinking today.