9 Scientific Breakthroughs That Killed Science Fiction Subge

9 Scientific Breakthroughs That Killed Science Fiction Subge

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Halb

Original Poster:

53,012 posts

184 months

Wednesday 30th October 2013
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9 Scientific Breakthroughs That Killed Science Fiction Subgenres....apparently. biggrin

http://io9.com/9-scientific-breakthroughs-that-kil...

VinceFox

20,566 posts

173 months

Wednesday 30th October 2013
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love IO9, one of my dailies.

Derek Smith

45,742 posts

249 months

Thursday 31st October 2013
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Once scifi writers found Mars inhospitable, they moved to other planets: Legacy of Heorot is very much in the Martian soap opera. Carter-style fantasy would not appear to have changed.

Eric Mc

122,085 posts

266 months

Thursday 31st October 2013
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There has been a whole raft of science fiction novels about the "modern" Mars.

Halmyre

11,221 posts

140 months

Thursday 31st October 2013
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I don't think the counting problem in Jurassic Park was memory related, it was just sloppy programming.

hairykrishna

13,185 posts

204 months

Thursday 31st October 2013
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Halmyre said:
I don't think the counting problem in Jurassic Park was memory related, it was just sloppy programming.
Agreed. It had nothing to do with memory saving, it was just a classic programming error.

The whole list's a bit crap.

Simpo Two

85,590 posts

266 months

Thursday 31st October 2013
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At least warp speed and transporters are still 'on' smile

Furberger

719 posts

200 months

Sunday 3rd November 2013
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Interesting one number 6. Plenty of people in the world without food, but more of an infrastructure problem I suppose.

Guvernator

13,168 posts

166 months

Tuesday 5th November 2013
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Simpo Two said:
At least warp speed and transporters are still 'on' smile
With what we have learnt about physics, I thought those had been discounted too? I certainly thought faster than light travel was now deemed to be a big no no which is quite depressing when you think about it as it effectively means we are stuck in our own solar system and won't be gallivanting around the stars any time soon.

Halb

Original Poster:

53,012 posts

184 months

Tuesday 5th November 2013
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I don't think you can discount anything. We only know as much as we know, I hope that the next century will be full of amazing things as the last one was.

Catatafish

1,361 posts

146 months

Wednesday 6th November 2013
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Guvernator said:
Simpo Two said:
At least warp speed and transporters are still 'on' smile
With what we have learnt about physics, I thought those had been discounted too? I certainly thought faster than light travel was now deemed to be a big no no which is quite depressing when you think about it as it effectively means we are stuck in our own solar system and won't be gallivanting around the stars any time soon.
One form of theoretical FTL is to warp space around you, so you never actually move, space moves around you and doesn't violate relativity. Nasa have this on their books as an actual project...

Flibble

6,476 posts

182 months

Wednesday 6th November 2013
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Catatafish said:
One form of theoretical FTL is to warp space around you, so you never actually move, space moves around you and doesn't violate relativity. Nasa have this on their books as an actual project...
Or on a similar note, generate wormholes on demand and fly through them.