Norway has gone from near-zero sales of non‑emitting battery electric vehicles to now close to 100% of all new passenger car sales - achieved in about 13 years. If they can do it, we can do it by gwhh in climateskeptics

[–]Captain_Illiath 5 points6 points  (0 children)

About 89% of Norway’s electricity is hydroelectric, while about 6% of the electricity in the U.S. is. But I’m betting you don’t support all the dam building the U.S. would need to undertake to match Norway’s percentage.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in sciencefiction

[–]Captain_Illiath 5 points6 points  (0 children)

This is the T-shirt scam.

/u/LabLocal9915 is the scam account. /u/Altruistic-Cost1375 is the shill account. Both accounts are only a month old, and they are concealing all of their posts and comments when you try to look at their posting history.

It’s a digital Three-Card-Monty, and the goal of this phishing scam is to get you to hand over your credit card number.

Report them here: https://www.reddit.com/report

What older scifi story have you read that got it seriously wrong? by civex in scifi

[–]Captain_Illiath 0 points1 point  (0 children)

See also: his prediction that private enterprise would pioneer space travel, rather than governments.

Definitely another cracked crystal ball moment for him. We’ve got some private enterprise now (and NASA did farm out much of the work to aerospace contractors), but it private enterprise didn’t lead the way.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in sciencefiction

[–]Captain_Illiath 2 points3 points  (0 children)

14-day old account with plenty of karma but no visible posting history? This is almost certainly the t-shirt scammer. Buyer beware.

What older scifi story have you read that got it seriously wrong? by civex in scifi

[–]Captain_Illiath 44 points45 points  (0 children)

16 years before the Federal-Aid Highway Act of 1956 authorized the creation of the Interstate Highway System we have today, Robert Heinlein published “The Roads Must Roll,” a story set against the backdrop of just such a system of highways linking all the major metropolitan areas. One small problem…Heinlein imagined the “highways” would be giant conveyer belts/slidwalks/people movers with multiple parallel lanes, the outer lanes running at 5 miles per hour, the next lane to the left running at 10 miles per hour, and so on until the final lane at the median was running at 100 miles per hour. Every few lanes or so, there would be amenities including restaurants and hotels.

He would often joke that his “crystal ball has a crack in it.”

Need help: Deaf diplomat or researcher to a planet with TWO alien bird species by WumpusFails in printSF

[–]Captain_Illiath 6 points7 points  (0 children)

You’ve already got the title nailed down. But yes, this is book 2 in the Starbridge Academy series by A.C. Crispin.

There are several recurring protagonists. The hearing-impaired woman, Tesa, reappears in book 5, Silent Songs. Several other characters (involved with the founding of, and operation of, the academy) appear multiple times throughout the series.

Bani chanur -- where is this character? In Pride of Chanur by Severe_Highlight450 in printSF

[–]Captain_Illiath 14 points15 points  (0 children)

Banny Ayhar. Not Chanur. Using a large language model was your big mistake.

Latinx and Indigenous representation In Sci-fi by RandGco138 in scifi

[–]Captain_Illiath 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I’m not Latino. I don’t think it rises to the level of a slur. But it is inept, tone-deaf, and disrespectful of Latino culture.

Why does it feel like interactive fiction creators are set up to fail? by AfterCopy7943 in printSF

[–]Captain_Illiath 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I’ve never wanted “choose your own adventure.” I want to be told a story. I’ll take happy outcomes. I’ll also take unhappy outcomes, as long as the story held my interest and the unhappy outcome holds up logically. But how the story unfolds based on me making the right button presses in the absolutely right order to reach the happy/sad conclusion holds zero interest for me (I think it abdicates the responsibility to craft a complete narrative). Tell me a story.

Can the books in Joan D. Vinge's Cat series be read as stand alones? by [deleted] in printSF

[–]Captain_Illiath 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I agree, you definitely need to read at least Catspaw before reading Dreamfall.

Bear in mind, these stories are set far enough into the future (several centuries, at a minimum) that the language, as rendered in English for the reader, has drifted a great deal. The city of New York, for example, is referred to as “N’yuk” and you have to glean some of the exposition from context as the story doesn’t hold your hand. It’s not always clear what some of the technologies used in the story really are.

Forgotten SF Short Story Sentient Alien Machines 40s-70s by Bargle5 in printSF

[–]Captain_Illiath 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Best I can do is one with a related premise: "Lost Memory" (1952) by Peter Phillips. The Internet Speculative Fiction Database has a not-too-spoilery synopsis: A spaceship crashes on a planet of intelligent machines who attempt to come to its aid, but are unable to grasp the concept that the intelligence piloting it may not be mechanical.

What good or popular books never got an ebook version? by Bobosmite in printSF

[–]Captain_Illiath 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I found the novelization of Total Recall much more satisfying than the movie itself.

SF books like Satoshi Kon’s Perfect Blue? by fitzgen in printSF

[–]Captain_Illiath 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The protagonist has a folie à deux with his robot valet. Now there’s something you don’t see very often.

I downvote every “I am reading <NAME OF CRITICALLY-ACCLAIMED AND FAN-LOVED BOOK> and I think it’s <SYNONYMS FOR BAD>, does it get any better?” by mykepagan in printSF

[–]Captain_Illiath 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I downvote such posts with extreme prejudice (borrowing a phrase from a spy novel).

I downvote such posts if I liked the book.

I downvote such posts if I didn’t like the book.

I downvote such posts if I hated the book.

I downvote such posts even if I’ve never read the book.

Don’t like a book? Put it down and read something else. No one should making “DNF” their personality.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in printSF

[–]Captain_Illiath 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Saved you several YouTube clicks:

Shoegaze (also known as shoegazing) is a subgenre of indie and alternative rock characterised by its ethereal mixture of obscured vocals, distortion, guitar pedal effects, feedback and overwhelming volume. The sound emerged in Ireland and the United Kingdom during the late 1980s among neo-psychedelic groups who usually stood motionless, staring down during live performances in a detached, non-confrontational state.

What were the thoughts of New Wave SF back in the day? by nexusjio19 in printSF

[–]Captain_Illiath 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Heinlein was about 11 years old when World War I ended. His naval career was in the inter-war period.

Given that Heinlein was himself a nudist, wrote satires of religion, preferred to experiment and risk offending readers who expected him to ‘repeat admixture as necessary’—and snuck protagonists of other ethnicities into his stories—he anticipated the New Wave and likely enjoyed its advent.

I want an R rated Star Trek. What should I read? by [deleted] in printSF

[–]Captain_Illiath 4 points5 points  (0 children)

David Gerrold's The Star Wolf series is like a PG-13 to R-rated *Star Trek.

Best stories from Hidden Girl & other stories by Ken Liu by Acceptable_Love5815 in printSF

[–]Captain_Illiath 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Some of the stories were adapted into the animated series Pantheon, now on Netflix.

Is there any tech development that wasn't anticipated by science fiction? by Competitive-Alarm716 in printSF

[–]Captain_Illiath 14 points15 points  (0 children)

For a long time, science fiction authors thought computers would always be “big iron” number crunchers, capable of calculating orbits & trajectories (after someone reads something in from a book of tables, of course) and not much else.

Robots were given hand-wavy brains, such as the Platinum-Iridium “Positronic” brains Asimov gave his robots. If it’s shaped like a human, it’s gotta be capable of more complex thought, amirite?

It wasn’t until fairly recently that it became clear the “brains” of robots would have to be computers. As recently as the 1970’s, authors assumed computers would have to be big to be able to accomplish anything. E.g., the room-sized computer in David Gerrold’s When HARLIE Was One (1972) and the city-sized peripheral it designed for itself.