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Carl...

This 1961 photograph shows a young Carl Sagan shortly after he received in PhD. in astronomy and astrophysics.
© Bettmann/CORBIS

Before Neil deGrasse Tyson, there was Carl Sagan. Handsome, articulate and witty, Sagan wasn't a man about town. He was a man about the cosmos. A tireless proponent of the universe, he was a pioneer in bridging the gap between science and nonscientists.



He was a giant among his peers, too. Sagan received 22 honorary degrees from colleges and universities throughout the U.S., published more than 600 scientific papers and articles, authored best-selling books and hosted a record-breaking public television series, "Cosmos: A Personal Voyage." He discovered how Venus was heated -- through the greenhouse effect (something scientists later learned also happened on Earth) and that the red color of Mars came from windstorm dust rather than vegetation. NASA explorations eventually proved he was right [source: Kiger].

Sagan was born in 1934 and grew up in Brooklyn, New York. He graduated from the University of Chicago in 1960 with a doctorate in astronomy and astrophysics, then taught at Harvard and Cornell, where he became the director of Cornell's Laboratory for Planetary Studies and the David Duncan Professor of Astronomy and Space Sciences.

Some of Sagan's most memorable contributions occurred outside the classroom. During the 1950s and 1960s, he was NASA's astronaut whisperer. He offered advice to the Apollo crew before their journeys to the moon and conceived experiments for other planetary expeditions, including an interstellar record designed to greet the unknown inhabitants of deep space [source: Center for Inquiry]. And that's just one cool thing on our list.



How Stuff Works: 10 Coolest Things About Carl Sagan

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The Formula:the Conclusion

Emma rushed to the hatch and descended a twelve-foot ladder to the ground below. A cool, comfortable breeze provided a soothing contrast to the heavy humidity of the transit tube. She drew in a deep breath, inhaling the freshness of a Persian countryside. A full moon hung in the sky like a giant Christmas ornament, bathing a grass-covered landscape in a soft veneer of light. She spotted movement in the distance…rapid movement. Someone running. She didn’t have to guess who that someone was.

            She started to pursue, but figures emerging from the transit tube captured her attention.  

            Emma drew her sword and a throwing knife as she settled on a decision. She could go after Mao and contend with this new, presumed threat later…or deal with it now. She counted nine possible adversaries, masked and dressed in dark, close fitting attire, all armed with bladed weapons.

            The figures fanned out around her, all but one whose proportions and gait was unmistakably female.

            The woman halted seven feet in front of Emma, with hands spread to show that she did not intend to unsheathe either one of the four swords hanging from both hips. Slowly, the woman lifted a hand to her face and pulled off her black mask.

            Emma’s brow rose in recognition at the sight of Sachini Udal, the Sri Lankan. “Professor…or is that really your vocation?” She queried with a cynical lilt.

            “Funny you should ask,” Sachini replied with matching dryness. “Are you and your traveling companion really brother and sister?”

            Emma’s silence spoke loudly and the Sri Lankan’s face broadened to a reptilian smile. “On to more important matters. We want the Chinese. Step aside.”

            Emma shook her head. “He’s mine. I think you should be the one to step aside.”

            Sachini’s smile vanished like a doused candle. “I’m giving you an opportunity to walk away, to live. That’s not a courtesy I render often, especially to enemy agents.”

            “I appreciate the courtesy.” Emma positioned her feet in a fight stance. “But I don’t abandon my assignments so easily.”

            The Sri Lankan regarded Emma with a warm blend of pity and respect. “Such an implacable dedication to duty is to be admired. I will mourn your demise.”

            Emma’s eye darted to her opponent’s four swords. “A little over equipped aren’t we?”

            Sachini’s smile returned. She spread both arms, elevating them until they were level with her shoulders.

            Emma watched the display with curiosity.

            Beneath Sachini’s raised arms another pair of arms sprouted through gaps in her uniform. Flexing the hands of her newly emerged limbs, the Sri Lankan drew all four swords simultaneously.

            Emma gaped at the four-armed woman. “Well…that answered my question.”

            Sachini extended her swords toward Emma and charged.

            The Mandinka’s lips pressed tightly as she braced for a new round of combat. The thought of how she was going to fend off a four-armed opponent, shared easy space with the thrill of meeting a new challenge.

            The thumping of propellers filled the air, followed by a glare of light from above.

            Sachini stopped short and looked up to see an airship descending from the sky.

 Search lights from bow to stern spotlit Emma and her Sri Lankan foes.

            Emma recognized the airship’s distinctive horizontal oval configuration as a Mandinka model. The Mandinka extraction force had arrived in timely fashion, but Mao Li remained at large.

            “Get the Chinese!” Sachini yelled to her soldiers before arrows launched from archers in the airship’s wardeck showered groundward.

            Sachini became a whirling blur of precision. Her four swords sparked brightly in the night as she deflected a torrent of arrows. Six of her soldiers fell, perforated by arrow fire.

            Emma’s sword carved across the chest of the seventh one, fatally striking him down. She sprinted into the darkness, going after Mao Li. Minutes later, she spotted the silhouette of one of Mao’s pursuers up ahead.

            Sensing he was being followed, the soldier stopped and turned. Emma was already on him, the point of her blade thrusting out of her victim’s back. She withdrew her sword from the man’s body and kept running without so much as a rearward glimpse.

 

********

 

 

            Mao Li’s lungs burned. His legs felt like slabs of stone. He slowed his run to a brisk walk. Finally, he halted next to a gnarled tree and leaned exhaustedly against its trunk. Here he was, stranded somewhere in Persia, hounded by a lurid assortment of international rogues and manhunters he would have willingly cooperated with for the right price. But no one offered him the right price. At least not enough to dissuade him from going to North America with his knowledge. Somehow, he would reach his destination…

            His ears picked up a faint rustle. Mao looked about and his heart nearly popped out of his chest. A black clad figure wielding a wicked looking scimitar stood before him, his face concealed beneath a mask that hid all but a pair of piercingly focused eyes.

            Dammit. So much for his trek to North America. Mao Li held up both hands. “I don’t know who you are, but I surrender.”

            The masked man suddenly seized up and pitched forward flat on his face.

            Mao saw a multi-bladed weapon poking out of the man’s back.

A short distance away, the person who flung that weapon approached him. The African woman.

            Mao let out a weary sigh. “You again?”

            Emma ignored the remark, retrieving her throwing knife from the Sri Lankan’s back.

            “Sorry I have to do this,” she said.

            “No need to apologize for doing your duty,” Mao replied sourly. “With insanely determined individuals like you in its service, your nation deserves the formula.”

            “That’s the problem, Mao. I don’t want my nation to have your formula. I don’t want the world to have it. Your formula is anathema. It will only inflict greater misery upon humanity. War in its current form is terrible enough. We don’t need newer ways to maximize wholesale slaughter.”

            “Noble sentiment,” said Mao in a bored tone. “But what you want is irrelevant. What makes you think there can be progress in peace without progress in war making?”

            Emma picked up the dead Sri Lankan soldier’s scimitar. “I have a secret which I’ve revealed to no one up to this point. I’m a latent telepath. It took some effort, but I managed to pry the ingredients of your formula out of your head. 75 parts saltpeter, fifteen parts charcoal, ten parts sulfur. Correct?”

            Mao’s face went white, his eyes widening. “Im…possible…!

            That was all the confirmation Emma needed. She swung the scimitar. Its tip opened a gash in Mao’s throat.

            The Chinese engineer slid down the tree trunk, blood pumping from a severed jugular, his features frozen in shock.

            “I’m not apologizing for kidnapping you. I apologize for killing you.” Emma carefully placed the scimitar back in the fallen Sri Lankan’s grasp and waited.

            A minute later, the Mandinka airship arrived…

 

********

 

 

            Emma and Oduwa returned to Niani, the Mandinka Republic’s capitol, three days later. They reported to Ali Toure, Director of the NIS (National Intelligence Service).

            In his spacious office overlooking Niani’s sprawling splendor, Director Toure’ listened to Emma’s report in grim silence.

            “By the time I reached Mao Li he was dying, struck down by the Sri Lankan operative. I eliminated the operative. I tried to render what first aid I could to Mao Li…but…” Emma shook her head in a display of dejection. “He was too far gone. I’m sorry, Director.”

            Toure frowned, bitter disappointment etched into his features. “Don’t worry about it, Emma. You and Oduwa did your best to secure what would have been a vital asset.  Why the Sri Lankans would want this man dead is beyond me.”

            “Agreed sir, but if you’ll permit me to point out the bright side, at least the Sri Lankans don’t have the formula. Neither do the French, the Arabs or the Zulus. The balance of power remains unaltered.”

            The rotund director nodded slowly, trying, with effort, to squeeze a drop of consolation from those words. “You’re right. Although I can’t say I’m satisfied with that arrangement. We Mandinkas ruled a mighty empire long ago. We were lions among prey.”

            “We remain lions, Director,” Emma insisted.

            “Yes, but now we’re lions among lions. This power balance irks me. It leaves us with no advantage over anyone. The formula would have changed our standing in the world.”

            Emma nodded soberly. Toure’ could not have been more right.

 

********

 

 

            Emma emerged from the director’s office to find Oduwa waiting for her.

“Ah, my dear Emma. A source sent me a dispatch stating that the Sri Lankans never wanted Mao Li dead, at least according to the woman who led the mission to supposedly capture him.”

Emma looked appropriately puzzled. “Strange Sachini would make that claim.”

Oduwa gazed intently at his partner. “Yes. Strange indeed.”

Emma shrugged. “Maybe the operative that killed Mao Li was a rogue.”

“You may be right. He may very well have been killed by a rogue.” Oduwa’s emphatic stare didn’t waver.

Emma smiled. “I’ll save that mystery for another day. I’m taking a nap.”

“Sweet dreams,” Oduwa offered in wry amusement.

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Thank goodness winter's over

The snow mountains at the end of my driveway have been gone about a month. Much snow descended on my village this winter, much-needed water to replenish underground aquifers in the area. With the increase in sunshine, my depression has again faded back; more smiles and laughter is always a good thing. :-)

Trying to decide whether Camp NaNoWriMo (April & July) is something I can do this year. I've got Scrivener (demo) and yWriter5 (much less complicated than Scrivener), so I can't use being disorganized as an excuse. [grin] Anyone else @BSFS considering either Camp or the November NaNoWriMo?

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Sky-Net Averted...

Your very own robot shopper? Dream on (Image: EPA/Corbis/SergeiI Ilinitsky)

...the only apocalypse we might see is the one we stupidly bring about.



So long, robot pals – and robot overlords. Sentient machines may never exist, according to a variation on a leading mathematical model of how our brains create consciousness.



Over the past decade, Giulio Tononi at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and his colleagues have developed a mathematical framework for consciousness that has become one of the most influential theories in the field. According to their model, the ability to integrate information is a key property of consciousness. They argue that in conscious minds, integrated information cannot be reduced into smaller components. For instance, when a human perceives a red triangle, the brain cannot register the object as a colourless triangle plus a shapeless patch of red.



But there is a catch, argues Phil Maguire at the National University of Ireland in Maynooth. He points to a computational device called the XOR logic gate, which involves two inputs, A and B. The output of the gate is "0" if A and B are the same and "1" if A and B are different. In this scenario, it is impossible to predict the output based on A or B alone – you need both.



New Scientist: Sentient Robots? Not possible if you do the maths
Terminator Wiki: Sky-Net

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Just a Little Bit About Me.

Just yesterday I talked to a lady who told me, "Talk about what you know." So that's what I'll do here today. I'll talk about what I know.

When I'm not doing graphic design work for the nonprofit that work for part time, I write and draw. At the moment I am finishing up two book projects, an adventure story about a honeybee, which is my favorite insect, and a fantasy novella that I will dedicate to my favorite musical artist. I have been making art ever since I could hold a crayon, which is still one of my favorite drawing tools. You'd be amazed what you can do with a box of crayons. I am just about finished with my website and can't wait to share it with you.

It's been tough juggling art and writing with getting a new job, networking, and learning everything I can about self-publishing, conferences, and what-not. That's why I joined The Black Science Fiction Society. I just knew there had to be a place where people like me congregate. I just knew there had to be more black authors out there writing sci-fi and fantasy besides The Grande Dame, Octavia E. Butler. So here I am, in hopes that I've found a place to spread my wings and share my skills.

I know I've given a very small tidbit about myself, but as I get comfy cozy here within the society and get to know more people, I'll share more details.

  

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Magnetic Moment...

Illustration showing a proton (red) confined by magnetic-field lines (green) running down the centre of a Penning trap (yellow). (Courtesy: G Schneider, University of Mainz)

The most precise measurement ever of the proton's magnetic moment has been made by an international group of physicists. The new result – combined with a similar measurement planned for the proton's doppelganger, the antiproton – could help explain one of the deepest mysteries of physics – why the universe's matter seems to vastly outweigh its antimatter.



Every fundamental particle has a nearly identical antiparticle with opposite electric charge. Physicists' leading theories indicate that particles and their antiparticles were created in equal amounts during the Big Bang and should have annihilated each other long ago. But the universe is full of matter and lacks antimatter, suggesting that an undetected difference might exist between the two.



Physics World: Physicists lock in on proton's magnetic moment, Gabriel Popkin

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Quantum Collect Calling...

Scientific American: see link "Casimir-like interactions" in Abstract

Abstract:



We show that it is possible to use a massless field in the vacuum to communicate in such a way that the signal travels slower than the speed of light and such that no energy is transmitted from the sender to the receiver. Instead, the receiver has to supply a signal-dependent amount of work to switch his detector on and off. This type of signalling is related to Casimir-like interactions and it is made possible by dimension ---and curvature--- dependent subtleties of Huygens' principle.



Physics arXiv: Quantum Collect Calling
Robert H. Jonsson, Eduardo Martin-Martinez, Achim Kempf

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Rumspringa ... cover art and design

Not really sci-fi, but who doesn't like horse-drawn carriages and majick?



Rumspringa ...



I grew up among the Pennsylvania Dutch folk, complete with horse-drawn buggies, covered bridges, and hex signs on barns, and still find this Amish rite of passage mysterious and somewhat romantic.
 

Rumspringa, sometimes spelled Rumschpringe or Rumshpringa, means running or jumping around and is used to describe the time of adolescence in the Amish community. It begins around fourteen and ends around sixteen or seventeen, when the teen makes the ultimate decision as to whether to be baptised into the faith or choose to 'live among the English.'
 

During this period, teens are permitted to date (with the intent of finding a spouse), and the average rigid life of the Amish is a bit more relaxed. Offenses that would usually result in shunning are likely to be overlooked or treated with less severity, at this time. Defying one's parents, 'dressing English,' smoking, drinking alcohol, even owning a car and traveling outside the community for a year is common.
 

A small percentage of teens decide never to return to Amish life.



With such an exotic tradition within such a secretive community in this modern age, it's not hard to understand how Shakuita Johnson could spin a supernatural tale of fantasy focused around Rumspringa ... A ceremony where teens, instead of leaving for a year to sow their oats, come together to be tested in their abilities to control the natural elements, earth, air, fire, and water, and have their lead element declared on their 16th birthday.
 

As happens with some of my favorite projects, the cover for Rumspringa started with a project outline and morphed into something completely different before it was done. My favorite part? It's hard to say. I was a real challenge to represent the basic elements in a way no one has seen in a movie or on a book before. I also spent a lot of time on the horse and buggy. Maybe it was the moon? lol. What's your favorite part?
 

Shakuita tells me release has been delayed because her story has taken on a life of its own, as did its cover. Maybe the two are connected? lol

Once she gets me a blurb, I'll share it :D



Onto wrapping up the next book :D

Until next time ...


This post edited by*:


*Blurbs and quotes provided are not edited by WillowRaven, but posted as provided by author/publisher. 


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The Formula: Part Five!

“So, you’re not driven strictly by profit,” Oduwa remarked dryly. “Alright then. Let’s assess your current situation. If you drop that thing in the furnace, we’ll all die. I’m sure that’s not your ultimate goal. Come with us instead. Give us the formula. The Mandinka Republic will reward you generously.”

            Mao Li cocked his head in thought. Although, he had to admit there was really nothing to think about. Killing himself would derail his plans. If he could not get his formula to the Americans, the Mandinkas would have to do. What choice did he have under the circumstances?

            “I should caution you that this proliferation you hope for may not occur for a very long time,” said Oduwa. “My government guards its secrets exceptionally well.”

            “I’m sure it does.” Mao withdrew the object from the hot mouth of the furnace. “But this particular secret will prove more slippery than most.” He underhand lobbed the object at Emma who caught it with one hand.

Taking care not to drop it, she examined it closely. Surprisingly, the sphere was not made of metal. It bore the texture of paper that had been soaked in water and dried to rock hardness. What this unremarkable outer shell contained, however, caused her to take measured breaths. She tucked the object in her pants pocket.

            “I surrender myself into your capable hands,” Mao declared resignedly.

            Oduwa walked to the operator’s booth and banged on the door. “Open up!”

            A muted click preceded the door’s opening. A thin, long faced man with a bushy mustache peered out. He wore a light blue denim cap with matching overalls.

            Annoyed initially, a glance at Oduwa’s crossbow quickly sobered the operator. “What…what do you want?”

            “Stop the carriage,” Oduwa ordered.

            “You want me to stop the carriage…now?”

            Emma menacingly hefted a throwing knife. “Do you have a hearing problem?”

            The operator threw up appeasing hands. “Alright, alright, no need to get testy.” He gripped a lever inside the booth and pulled it down.

            The carriage slowed, which initiated a reduction of water flows feeding the tube dispensers. When the carriage came to a complete stop, the water flows ebbed to a trickle.

            Emma allowed herself a small breath of relief. After so much trouble procuring the man with the formula, she halfway expected a little less complication from this point on. Her eye caught something in one of the coal containers that didn’t look like it belonged. She approached the container for a closer inspection, making out what appeared to be a brown leather shoe with black laces. She brushed away a handful of coals, exposing more of the shoe and a portion of a blue denim-covered leg.

            “What in the devil…” Emma set her crossbow on the floor and reached into the container, digging through layers of coal. She felt purchase and heaved, pulling a body with a coal blackened face into view…a face bearing a striking resemblance to the carriage operator. Her mouth hung open. No. More than a resemblance…identical.

She dropped the body and reached for her sword. “Oduwa…shapeshifter!”

            Her partner was ushering the operator out of the booth when the latter lashed out with an elbow to the gut. A blow from one so slight should not have had much effect on Oduwa whose physical conditioning inured him to far worse punishment. Instead, Oduwa doubled over with a pained grimace as if a sledgehammer had struck him.

            The fake operator clenched Oduwa’s throat, forcing the bigger man upright. Instantly, the operator’s body filled out. His stature increased. His skin color darkened. Facial hair receded into follicles, vanishing. His features thickened and molded into a face identical to Oduwa’s.

            Except for attire, the doppelganger was identical to Oduwa in every respect, from height and weight down to the carefree glimmer in his eyes.

            “I will wager that you weren’t expecting this,” the doppelganger taunted, fixing Emma with a gaze too diabolical to have ever been conjured up by the real Oduwa.

            Mao Li stepped back, speechless with fear.

            Emma tilted her head. That voice, the accent…she’d heard it before. Then it dawned on her. “You’re the Frenchman…Jean Matise!”

            The Oduwa doppelganger grinned leeringly. “You are as perceptive as you are lovely.” With his greater than human shapeshifter strength, the Frenchman slammed the real Oduwa against the wall hard enough to render the Mandinka unconscious. “My Templar companions must have failed. They should have been the ones delivering the Chinese prize to me.” Matise darted an eye to Mao.

            “Your Templars are in hell,” Emma growled. “They could use your company.”

            “Feisty.” the shapeshifter leapt toward Emma.

            The Mandinka woman swung her sword left to right.

            The shifter dropped to his knees avoiding the blade as it sliced above him. He slapped both hands on the floor and sprung his body up, bringing one leg about in a snap kick to Emma’s side.

The Frenchman hopped to his feet in another burst of agility and strength the real Oduwa’s body was ill equipped to match.

            “Patience Monsieur Li,” the shifter commented with a glance in the Chinese inventor’s direction. “When I am done with her, you will be in my custody and soon after that in the service of Greater Gaul.”

            Emma leaned against a coal container smarting from the fire burning in her right rib from the shifter’s kick.

            Matise rushed forward with a savage grin contorting his borrowed features.

            Plucking a throwing knife from her belt, Emma flung it in the same motion. The knife pierced the Frenchman’s chest, an inch above the heart.

            Matise grunted in pain, but maintained his headlong rush.

            Emma thrust her blade.

            Matise tilted his upper body sideways, eluding the sword’s bite and seized the woman’s sword wrist. He wrenched hard, forcing Emma’s hand to unclench. The sword tumbled from her grasp hitting the floor with a clang. Matise increased the pressure on Emma’s wrist, twisting it with the intent of breaking her arm.

            With her free hand, Emma whipped out her dagger and plunged it hilt deep into Matise’s abdomen.

            A shocked, stricken look erased the murderous joy on the shifter’s face.

            Emma stabbed a second time and Matise’ full weight propped against her. She stepped back, allowing her opponent to slump to the floor.

            Matise transformed back to his original form…assuming the man she recognized from breakfast indeed bore the form he was born with.

            The shifter managed a shaky grin. “You are a true warrioress…” Matise’s grin remained in place after death claimed him.

            Emma reached down and pulled her throwing knife out of the Frenchman’s chest.

            She looked up and around, gritting her teeth in annoyance. Once again Mao Li had performed a disappearing act. “Can’t stay in one place can you?” She whispered irately. She spotted an open hatch adjacent to the operator’s booth.

            The engineer had gone outside.

            Rubbing her sore wrist, she went to her partner and knelt beside him. Oduwa was coming around. He blinked his eyes, his expression sluggish. “What happened?”

            “I was fighting you,” Emma joked.

            “What?” Oduwa tried to rise, but Emma saw he was clearly in no shape for vigorous activity. And going after Mao promised to be a taxing exercise. She placed a firm but reassuring hand on Oduwa’s shoulder. “Don’t try to get up. I’m going to retrieve Mao.”

            Emma made a swift departure through the hatch and into the artery tube. The tube’s glass was fogged by steam. She ran an eye along the single rail the carriage rested upon until she came across a bottom maintenance hatch leading to ground level. As she expected, the hatch’s lid was ajar. Mao had a head start, but not much more than a minute

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The Formula: Part Four!

Oduwa looked frantically around the chamber before realizing how aimless that action was. Yes! It was painfully obvious that their prisoner had gotten away.
Emma ran for the next partition. “Let’s go!”
Oduwa shook off the pain and followed.

********

The Mandinka pair emerged into the dining section to see Mao struggling with a dark eyed, dark haired abductor.
Prince Abdul Ibn Hajj had his left arm wrapped around the prisoner’s neck, dragging him toward the dining section exit. The Arab’s right arm was encased inside a chrome gauntlet of metal coils and piping held together by interlacing wiring and bolts. A thick spring connected the forearm segment to the upper arm, enabling Abdul to bend the gauntlet at the elbow.
“Please!” Mao yelled in desperate gasps! “Let me go and I’ll make you rich and powerful!”
Abdul chuckled. “I already have a measure of power in my kingdom. Your formula will give me an empire. You and I will stay together.”
“Not if we have anything to say about it!” Oduwa contradicted, raising his crossbow.
Emma inched closer to the pair, steadying her crossbow for a shot at the Prince’s head.
Abdul failed to present an opportune target. He kept all but a minute portion of his face concealed behind his prisoner.
The Arab pointed his gauntlet arm at Emma. A rapid succession of metal slugs whisked from the gauntlet’s central muzzle.
Emma and Oduwa dove for cover as air propelled projectiles spattered above them, punching holes in tables, chairs, and walls.
The two ducked behind a serving bar. “A simple grab and run,” Emma griped.
“You should know by now that even the simplest assignments are not so simple,” Oduwa admonished with a teasing smile.
Emma sighed dramatically. “When will I ever learn?” She scurried to the edge of the bar and risked a quick peek around its corner.
Abdul and Mao were gone. The prince managed to slip his captive into the gaming section. Beyond that section lay the operator’s booth.
“They’re getting away!” Emma and Oduwa raced for the exit.
When they reached the gaming section, Abdul was already at the other end, in the process of opening the partition door. He kept his gauntlet arm trained on Mao. The moment he spotted his Mandinka pursuers, he pivoted the gauntlet weapon in their direction.
Emma and Oduwa launched their bolts.
The Arab slammed against the partition door as two bolts drilled into his chest. His gauntlet weapon flailed, sending slugs arcing wildly around the section, shattering a row of windows and over a dozen slot machines.
Mao seized the opportunity to make a run for it. He opened the partition door and leapt through.
Abdul lay on the floor, wheezing for breath, struggling to lift his gauntlet. A pneumatic whisper issued from the weapon, heralding another round of slug fire.
Emma ran full sprint, plunging her sword through the prince’s heart. She withdrew her blade and brought it down on the gauntlet in a chopping motion, severing wires and denting its flawless chrome. Air hissed from the damaged weapon to the accompaniment of the prince’s dying breath.
Emma nudged the prince’s lifeless body with her foot before advancing cautiously through the partition exit into the next and final section of the carriage.
Oduwa hovered close behind.
Both stopped when they saw Mao Li standing beside a coal furnace holding a small gray, metal object.
The operator’s section of the carriage was a cramped, dull space, strictly designed for the utilitarian purpose that it served. The operator’s booth occupied the very front of the section. A black-hinged door led to its interior.
A carriage’s mobility came from the outside in the form of steam dispensers. But the vehicle was capable of independent motion. If the dispensers failed, the carriage’s internal engine provided a coal-fueled backup. Containers of coal took up much of the section’s space. The coal furnace was kept hot in the event of a rare dispenser failure.
The object Mao Li held inches from the furnace opening filled Emma and Oduwa with cold dread.
They had read enough about the formula’s applications to understand what they were looking at. Their fear was far from unjustified or misplaced.
“You know what this is,” Mao Li commented, a wry, laid back confidence replacing his earlier rabbit-eyed fright. “If I drop it in, you know what will happen.”
Mao made a motion as if he were about to toss the object into the furnace, but stopped short. He grinned in delight at the sight of Emma and Oduwa flinching.
“I’m really an engineer by profession,” Mao confessed. “I spent much of my career designing machines to serve mankind. But when I discovered…actually stumbled upon this formula, I saw incredible possibilities. That’s when I began creating tools designed to destroy. My country will benefit tremendously!”
“Your country…” Emma said, eyes squinting in confusion. “Meaning China, right? How exactly will China benefit when you’re trying to deliver the secrets of this formula to the Americans? The highest bidders!”
The engineer put on a disdainful face. “As I said to you earlier, my emperor is progressive in some areas, woefully shortsighted in others. He saw the weapons I demonstrated with the formula but refused to put them into production. He wanted nothing to do with my formula and forbade me from pursuing further research relating to its use. So I decided to share it with a nation that would be more appreciative of its applications. Eventually, other nations will possess weaponry fueled by my formula, which will force China to adopt such weapons as well. My emperor will have the military China deserves, whether he desires it or not!”

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One Big Step...

Bright Hub: Careers in Environmental Science

...and hopefully, a giant leap for the species.



On Monday (today) the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is expected to unveil proposed regulations that could be the biggest step the U.S. has taken yet toward dealing with climate change. The regulations would limit emissions from power plants, which currently account for 40 percent of all carbon dioxide emissions in the United States, by far the biggest source.



“There’s a good chance that when history is written, this will be seen as the moment when the U.S. fully committed to combating climate change,” says Michael Greenstone, professor of environmental economics at MIT. “It’s a tremendous step forward.”



MIT Technology Review:
EPA to Take Biggest Step Ever to Fight Climate Change, Kevin Bullis

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30 Cubed is Over!


My writing challenge for May, 30 Cubed, is OVER. 

You can partake of these stories here: https://storify.com/ebonstorm/30-cubed-speculative-fiction-for-the-month-of-may

30 stories in 30 days introducing 30 new characters has, as usually, been both grueling and gratifying. I also had four other writers who participated and I have watched their works improve every day. (You guys were great!)

For myself, I have completed 24 of the 30 days with a new or continuing tale of speculative fiction. As usual, I tried not to tackle low hanging fruit: no vampires, no werewolves, no zombies. To make it harder, I would not tell more than one tale of alien invasion (though I love them so). This month has netted me about 40,000 words, give or take.

I created or augmented four serials, one of which I will be entering into Jukepop this month as an ongoing story.

Serials (4)

Air Conditioning (Parts 1-5) - I always write a tale of alien invasion. In this story, the aliens are completely oblivious to the existence of Humans on Earth, since they never touch down on the surface of the planet and don't appear to notice Humanity at all. Humanity's reaction to the creature, however, varies wildly.

A Mistress in Thunder - The Spear of Heaven (parts 1 and 2) - Started as part of a serial I was writing elsewhere, I found the character of Radi, the Mistress in Thunder, warrior, titan and all around bad-ass, too compelling to not start more than one thread at the same time. I have three different points in the character's life and it has been a excellent story so far.

Apostate, Magus, Barbarian (3) I also added to the first Radi, Mistress of Thunder serial stream with the beautiful, fierce and oh so Black princess and her two future companions, Uriel the Magus, less than evil sorcerer of the Shattered Realms and Kom the Ukla who has a penchant for mega-violence and a love of fried human fingers...

More Tales of Tech Support: I added to the already over-the-top adventures of a technical support agent for Farnsworth's Monster Emporium and Death-Ray dealership, Todd. In this selection, Todd is winnowing down the candidates for the next hiring wave. Like everything Todd does, he maintains his aplomb under the most difficult circumstances.

Writing Prompts (7)

Five of the stories were writers prompts from other publications or contests with strict limits on what I could produce. Limitations force me to be creative and to envision stories I might not otherwise try. Writing prompts can make you grow.

1. Come Forth the Rising Tide required I take five random characters from a list on Chuck Wendig's site and weave them into a short story. (I will probably make something much longer because I had so much fun with the characters.)

2. Yearning was a photo prompt from SciFiIdeas.com which has become one of their featured stories when I was done. It can be found on their site.

These three stories were written for a UK short story contest of 500 words and a sensory theme. I will be submitting them on Monday.

3. Betwixt: An avenger of a South American tribe takes the battle to his corporate enemies after being empowered by two opposing mystic forces.

4. Bismillah: An Middle Eastern son of a sheikh loses his vision and discovers his senses and mind growing more acute to compensate.

5. Damned Decent: A Good Samaritan meets an unusual stranded vehicle on the side of the road and offers to help.

6. Can You Make Room for the Impossible? A biomech research officer, MX2 and Scoutship Pilot Alena Maximoff investigate a survey call from a planet with wildly conflicting data, unusual enough for a Scoutship to consider investigating. This story came from a writing prompt sent to me by a friend on StartYourNovel.com. I have written five other stories on his site, so we have become friends.

7. Adleiavde: A tale of a young man and his quantum-challenged feline, Addie who had a habit of appearing exactly as people wanted him to be... This was a writing prompt from my monthly writing group I participate with on LinkedIn Sci-Fi Readers, Writers, Collectors and Artists. I won the month of May with this short story and plan on submitting it to Daily Science Fiction for publication.


Clifford Engram, Paranormal Investigator (4) - Keeping Engram in my mind for his next adventures, I planted four seeds.

1. A Drink and A Smile: A rendezvous with an old girlfriend in order to get information on a case, leads to gratuitous violence, poison and death. Not a strange outing considering Engram used to date a Dweller-in-the-Dark.

2. With Just a Spot of Darkness - Introducing Ink, reveals another primary group of metaphysical entities who believe it is their duty to protect the human race by rendering judgement on it. Ink works for them but disagrees with the process. She and Engram are sure to butt heads in the future.

3. The aforementioned Betwixt, where Paulo harasses the megacorporation which destroyed the rainforest where his tribe once dwelled peacefully. Now Paulo living between all concepts exacts his cruel revenge.

4. How the Other Half Lives: A tale of a family whose patriarch is unable to come home and meets his family for the first time on a trip to a very far away beach. Clifford Engram will meet this family in the future. They will not invite him to the beach...


ONE SHOTS (6): Stories not related to anything else. They come, they go and blaze like meteors in a summer sky, brief but awesome.

1. The Moment of Truth: A knight on a long quest decides he has done enough for the world and wants to just go home free of predestined events. It is dark humor best suited for those who know a bit of roleplaying games and how gamemasters force players on adventures.

2. Sterlings: A hot-blooded scientist, after discovering a plant which can survive and transform water from saline to fresh, realizes he wants to try and woo his equally passionate wife back. His flower of choice is the sterling rose he created in his lab.

3. Sun Kings: A tale of aliens on a mission of mercy. They arrive near Earth to recharge within our sun and to inform us that an extinction-level-event is going to happen soon and there is nothing they can do to help us except...

4. Night Terrors and the Bears who Abet Them: A strange story of a legendary Teddy Bear and the Night Terror trained by him.

5. Humanity Redux: An alien intelligence watches Humanity as we go through a growth state without being aware of how far we've already come.

6. Uncovered: A writer has died and learned he was not quite good enough to get into Heaven. His only hope is for his work to be discovered in the future and inspire enough people to have his sentence changed. But almost all copies of his work have been destroyed after World War II...

What will I do after I come back from the brink of Madness?

Send stories to anyone and everyone who is interested. Retool my websites to account for these new stories and my latest work on Medium.com. I have written thirty stories there since the beginning of the year in addition to these.

Most importantly get my work out there. My social media work has paid off and continues to grow my readership. My blog/websites are slowly coming along and I hope the retool will increase my readers further. I will be extending several of my other serials as well, focuses on finishing them and putting them into print.

We are at the midpoint of the year and I had planned to sell 18 stories this year. I am up to number 10 and have eight more to go. It has been slow going but I am not about to give up now. We are going to INCREASE SPEED, not slow down.

LET'S KEEP WRITING. If you need a writing partner, look me up.

I have a writer's group on Facebook: 'Dammit, I'm a Sci-Fi Writer, Not a Doctor': and we are always looking for new voices of genre and speculative fiction to share ideas, blogs, and stories: https://www.facebook.com/groups/471829406194599/

You can find my speculative fiction at:

http://HubCityBlues.com
https://medium.com/@ebonstorm/latest
http://30cubedsf.wordpress.com

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Words of Insipration

Words of Insipration (from Chuck Palahniuk)

The first step - especially for young people with energy and drive and talent, but not money - the first step to controlling your world is to control your culture. 

  To model and demonstrate the kind of world you demand to live in. To write the books. Make the music. Shoot the films. Paint the art."

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Misogyny's Mirror...



"The man who views the world at 50 the same as he did at 20 has wasted 30 years of his life." Muhammad Ali



A letter to my sons:



My hope at now a few years beyond half a century, that I've been a good example to you. Above all, I hope you know me as "Pop" and never encounter the man I was before I met your mother. Oh, he could write a military communications-electronics plan, he witnessed the rise of DARPANET to its commercial evolution the Internet; he knew engineering, physics and advanced mathematics; he was as much the Trekkie you enjoyed as we watched "The Next Generation," "Deep Space Nine" and "Voyager." He was also at that time shallow, self-centered and quite useless to the human species. He mistook conquest for intimacy.



That man was eager to be a part of the crowd; ran with the dogs of the porch; became a "player" because - before your mother - I apparently could not let on to the Ferrell military wolf pack at that time I was in an actual "relationship" with any woman; influenced easily by others that were themselves not as cock-sure and confident of their swagger as they had led on. Many of them are now the "old-men-at-the-bar": buying drinks on the fantasy someone still wants to see their wrinkled, sagging-without-pants butt-ugly-naked bodies; or interestingly ministers, I assume to atone for our previous promiscuous sins.



I've been reading the trend on Twitter: #YesAllWomen. It would be far too easy to distance myself from the massacre that occurred in Isla Vista at UC Santa Barbara, or the attacks resulting in greater than 200 girls kidnapped by Boka Haram. They are related, reflected in the same dark mirror as the hash tag that has over a million hits world wide from the continent of Africa, Europe, Pakistan and the Americas.



It was not your video games that created this; it was not hip-hop music; it was not a "lack of family values." Those are merely symptoms of misogyny.



It was us: men and the culture of entitlement we've created for ourselves.



It has been imbibed deeply in the stories we've told ourselves: Eve and the apple; "once upon a time." Always, it is the "Prince Charming" that rides to the rescue and slays the evil dragon, never the woman who saves herself. Always, it is Cyrano and Christian contesting and collaborating for the possession of Roxanne, even if by proxy for Cyrano. The feelings of the female and to whom she would like to couple - Adam, Charming, Cyrano or Christian - is seen as an afterthought, irrelevant, a non-issue. Roxanne would have gladly chosen Cyrano (which, is kind of creepy as they were cousins) had he only "asked" rather than worship her from the shadows and treat her like fragile china, a possession: a THING, a brass ring; a prize to be won. The most pious chronicles, the most fantastic, fantasy-based stories; the most "romantic" narratives of all time objectify women as second-class human beings, and not full, equal participants in society. It even extends to the sciences, sadly:

I am writing this to you to disabuse yourselves from such notions. Even at the height of my youth, I could easily walk up to a table of young ladies at any bar in Austin, Texas and ask all (say five) to dance - all five could turn me down. My feelings would be hurt, but I'm not so injured that I'm homicidal. Being "shot-down"/rejected is a part of the agreed "game." If successful at this game, I was guilty of the violence of the lie ("love" is a four-letter-word); the cheat (the ambition to fill a black book and impress the aforementioned "pack"); the steal (as in wasting their precious time); the killing of hope (see previously "lie") and the baggage these women inevitably took into their relationships beyond me. These women: daughters, sisters, cousins, mothers, friends, lovers - humans, deserved better.



Your grandfather gave me some advice that I later put in a haiku:



Father's wisdom: a

Man has caught a woman when

She embraces him.



Meaning: if you don't say or do anything too stupid, you probably - with some manners and patience have a good chance at a relationship, which may only be a friendship, and that is quite fine. The choices of sharing her life and/or her body are hers, and not your entitlement. We need more friendships between the sexes, and less of the following:



Women are not "goals": notches on your belt or proof of your masculinity. Women are not property as slaves, goldfish or Labrador retrievers. Numbers do not prove your virility, they would instead prove your shallowness, and increase the possibility of an STD. There are other greater things you could be known for that could help others; solve an intractable problem; advance the human species and show the positivism of your background, culture and inner natures. No simply means no, which as another human being they have a right to say. I speak this life into you at 50+ so you can glean from my own sad mistakes. My quote:



"Experience isn't the best teacher: other people's experiences is the best teacher."
  1. 1 in 3 American women, 42 million women, plus 28 million children, either live in poverty or are right on the brink of it. (The report defines the “brink of poverty” as making $47,000 a year for a family of four.)
  2. Nearly two-thirds of minimum wage workers are women, and these workers often get zero paid sick days.
  3. Two-thirds of American women are either the primary or co-breadwinners of their families.
  4. The average woman is paid 77 cents for every dollar a man makes, and that figure is much lower for black and Latina women; African American women earn only 64 cents and Hispanic women only 55 cents for every dollar made by a white man. More at: TIME.com.




The above comprises US data, the world is similarly worse. It would appear that the path to world peace is not in the bombs we make, but in the way we treat our women.



Because of this misogynistic culture - underpaid professional cheerleaders, exploited hip-hop video vixens, over-sexual game avatars and reality TV show stars, there are some women that will support their own exploitation unawares. It is a form of Stockholm syndrome; insidious mental conditioning through consumer marketing. You can only help to an extent, but my advice would be to wish them well, move on to someone whom you can both love and respect. Rage or the enactment of violence should never be a part of your interactions. The women you encounter are daughters, sisters, cousins, mothers, friends, lovers: humans!



It is the same way you would like to see me (or any man) treat your own mother.



As men, we need to clear this dark mirror, atone and try again, mightily.

Love always, Pop
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Filter Bubble...



Do tragedies force us to expand our views on controversial topics such as gun control? Unfortunately not, say Web researchers who have studied surfing habits during America’s worst school shooting.



TECHNOLOGY REVIEW: On December 14, 2012, Adam Lanza shot and killed his mother, then drove to Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut and gunned down 20 children and six adult staff members before killing himself.



The incident was the deadliest shooting at a school in U.S. history and triggered an intense debate about gun control. That debate continues today.



One problem is that there is growing evidence online that people tend to seek out views that agree with their own and rarely encounter alternative points of view.



“This so-called ‘filter bubble’ phenomenon has been called out as especially detrimental when it comes to dialogue among people on controversial, emotionally charged topics, such as the labeling of genetically modified food, the right to bear arms, the death penalty, and online privacy,” say Danai Koutra at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh and a couple of Microsoft researchers, Paul Bennett and Eric Horvitz.



Physics arXiv:
Events and Controversies: Influences of a Shocking News Event on Information Seeking
The American Reader:
Paranoid Narcissism: What Dostoevsky Knew About the Internet
by ROSA INOCENCIO SMITH

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The Formula: Part Three

Oduwa and Emma triggered their crossbows, sending bolts flying into the creature’s torso. The werewolf howled enraged pain, but the bolts didn’t seem to slow it down. It slammed into Oduwa on a current of momentum knocking him on his back.

 Emma leapt out of the way, just avoiding being hit and carried to the floor.

            Oduwa jammed a forearm beneath the beast’s chin in an effort to keep its snapping teeth from closing on his neck.

            Emma whipped out a throwing knife and hurled it at near point blank range.

            The multi-pronged blade penetrated an area above the werewolf’s forehead. The distracted lycan wagged its head to shake the knife loose, while attempting to dislodge it with its paw..

            Emma stamped a boot down on the throwing knife, driving it deeper into the werewolf’s head until the creature convulsed and became rigid. Over three hundred pounds of werewolf bulk collapsed on Oduwa, pinning him to the floor.

            “Uh…Emma…”

            “Hold on, Oduwa.” Emma grabbed handfuls of wolf pelt and pulled while Oduwa pushed up until the carcass was off of him.

            Oduwa let out a laborious breath as he rose to his feet.

            At that moment, the werewolf reverted to human.

            “I’ll be damned,” Emma whispered, recognizing the reposeful face of the Dutch Templar.

            “That was no ordinary Templar,” said Oduwa, scooping up his crossbow and notching it. “There’s an elite order within the Templars called the Wolves of Christ.”

            “More like Wolves of the devil,” Emma commented with disgust.

            She glanced down the aisle and saw curious faces peeking from cabins. “Everyone back inside, there’s nothing to see here!”

            An elderly woman screamed at the sight of a dead naked man sprawled on the floor.

            Emma immediately gave up on crowd control and concentrated on getting into Mao Li’s cabin  

            Oduwa kicked in the door and burst into the cabin with Emma close behind.

            Mao Li crouched in a corner of the cabin, next to his bed with a blade in hand, his face an incongruous mix of courage and fright.  Dressed in a dapper gray suit and matching bowler hat, Mao certainly did not have the look of a person about to retire for the evening.

            “Going somewhere?” Oduwa inquired, pointing his crossbow at the passenger.

            Mao Li dropped the blade and raised his hands. “Look, whoever you are, you have the wrong man…I’m just a business executive…”

            Oduwa grabbed the man by his lapel and pulled him toward the door. “Tell it to my superiors. Let’s go.”

            Emma took point down the aisle.

            Mao Li shuffled behind her, prodded along by a crossbow to the small of his back. “Move it,” Oduwa prompted impatiently.

            There was a partition ahead separating passenger cabins from the scenic chamber. Emma and Oduwa planned to nab Mao Li and make their way to the carriage operator’s booth. From there, they planned to hijack the carriage, bring it to a halt and get picked up by a Mandinka Republic airship. Werewolves had not factored into the planning for this operation. Nor had the flint eyed Zulu standing resolutely at the other of end of the scenic chamber, wielding a wide bladed assegai.

            Emma laid eyes on Bongani Mndeni and bit off a curse under her breath.

            “You’re not acting like a diplomat, Mr. Mndeni,” Oduwa called out, holding Mao Li by the back of the neck while directing his crossbow upon Bongani.

            “Step aside, Mr. Mndeni,” warned Emma. “We have no quarrel with you.”

            “As long as you have that man in your custody, I will beg to differ.” Bongani shook his assegai twice. The blade glowed red, becoming brighter until it was enveloped in a translucent coating of flame. Thin jets of steam vented from small holes at the bottom of the iron plated assegai shaft. “Release your prisoner to me and I will allow you your lives.”

            Emma chuckled her disbelief. The arrogance. She released a bolt without warning, hoping to do away with this haughty Zulu in quick fashion.

            Bongani’s spear arm blurred inhumanly fast. The crossbow bolt deflected off the assegai blade inches from the Zulu’s heart and pierced the ceiling.

            Oduwa fired and Bongani swung his flaming assegai in a clipped backhand, knocking the bolt into the chamber’s glass, cracking the window.

            Bongani bellowed a war cry and lunged, his weapon reared back to taste enemy flesh.

            Oduwa shoved Mao Li aside and he and Emma whipped out their swords.

            Emma met the Zulu’s charge, sidestepping an assegai thrust. She attempted a slash to Bongani’s chest. He blocked Emma’s blow with his blade shaft and delivered a brutal straight kick to her gut.

            Bongami batted Oduwa’s sword with such force that it nearly flew out of the latter’s hand. He brought his assegai up and Oduwa jumped back, narrowly avoiding a stab beneath his rib.  

            A wash of intense heat from the fiery blade blew across Oduwa’s face like a bellow’s breath.

            Bongani positioned his assegai for a thrust, but whirled it about at the last second to block the throwing knife Emma pitched in his direction. The assegai carved the airborne knife in half, sending both segments twirling on either side of the chamber.

            A werewolf crashed through the partition door as Bongani swung his blade at Emma.

            The Mandinka woman parried the blow then witnessed the werewolf reach out a rangy arm toward the Zulu.

            If Bongani was surprised by the beast’s presence, his icy calm betrayed no indication. He ducked beneath the lycan’s long arm and buried almost the entirety of his assegai into the monster’s belly. The werewolf’ swiped with his other arm, managing to rip out the Zulu’s throat with a clawed hand.

            Bongani fell in one direction the werewolf in the other. The Zulu died first. The werewolf’s life withered away seconds later and the beast soon transformed back to a man. The German Templar.

            Oduwa grimaced in pain from the near contact with the Zulu’s blade. He felt like a layer of his facial skin had been scoured away by a hot coal.

            Emma gripped his arm. “Mao is gone! Come on!”

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Deeper Than Quantum...



One of the unsung heroes of 20th century science is the mathematician and electronics engineer, Claude Shannon, who worked at the famous Bell laboratories during the 1940s, 50s and 60s. Shannon’s greatest work is the theory of information which he published in 1948 and has since had a profound influence on our world.






This theory is the basis for all digital communication. So mobile phones, digital television and radio, computers and the Internet all depend on Shannon’s theory of information. For that reason, it’s possible to argue that Shannon has had a bigger influence on 21st century technology than anybody in history.



But there’s a problem his theory of information which has stumped physicists and mathematicians in recent years. This is that it only applies to classical information, the kind of 0s and 1s that make up ordinary digital code.



But physicists have become increasingly interested in quantum information and its potential in cryptography and in quantum computing. Quantum information can be both a 1 and 0 at the same time. This among other exotic properties is what allows quantum computers to be so powerful and quantum cryptography to be perfectly secure.



But Shannon’s ideas break down in the quantum regime so various research groups have been searching for an alternative formulation that will give quantum information the same theoretical footing that Shannon gave to its classical cousin.



That goal may now be a step closer thanks to the work of David Deutsch and Chiara Marletto at the University of Oxford in the UK. These guys have come up with a way to link classical and quantum information using a single theory that acts as a foundation for both.



Their new idea is called constructor theory and it is both simpler and deeper than quantum mechanics, or indeed any other laws of physics. In fact, Deutsch claims that constructor theory forms a kind of bedrock of reality from which all the laws of physics emerge.


Physics arXiv blog:
Deeper Than Quantum Mechanics—David Deutsch’s New Theory of Reality

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The Formula: Part Two

 

            The artery carriage arrived in the Persian city of Isfahon at noon. It stopped at a station in the city’s commercial district for a half hour layover. Passengers disembarked and new passengers boarded.

Emma stepped off the carriage, strolling through the entry/exit tube connecting the carriage to the boarding platform. She told the conductor that she wanted to stretch her legs, although she needn’t have explained herself. In spite of the carriage’s comforts, those passengers who faced hours of travel after having put hours behind them reveled in the opportunity to be free of its confinement if only for a few minutes. Still, it didn’t hurt to allay possible suspicions with an innocuous comment here and there.

            Looming spires and majestic minarets greeted Emma when she emerged from the tube. Isfahon’s skyline stretched like a geometric cutout across the horizon. Airships of all sizes soared above and between the towers. The platform overlooked a wide avenue teeming with people attired in a mix of fashion, from Western top hats and spectacles to traditional sarbands and Buluchi dresses.

Emma soaked in the scenery for the benefit of whoever may have been observing her. Although not all of the attention with which she graced her surroundings was an affectation. She genuinely admired Isfahon’s exotic beauty. Locals seemed to be taken by Emma as well, African faces being a novel sight in Persia.

            Emma moved on, exchanging courteous nods and greetings with passersby. She entered the trans-artery office, approached the ticket window and requested the use of a telegraph. The clerk graciously directed her to an adjacent dispatch room where a telegraph operator relayed the message she verbalized.

To: Mary Thianne, Mandinka Republic, Freetown, Sierre Leone Province. From: Clarice Thianne: Hello, Mother. We just arrived in Isfahon, Persia. Will be leaving shortly. Percival and I are so enjoying this trip. China was fantastic. I have souvenirs that I’m sure you will like. See you soon. Love you.

            Emma departed after the operator confirmed her message’s transmittal.

            After a momentary pause on the platform, Emma returned to the carriage to find Oduwa in the refreshment section engaging in friendly chitchat with a couple of passengers. He excused himself after seeing Emma and held up a long stemmed wine filled glass. “Ah my dear sister, did you send mother a communiqué? I’m sure she’s fraught with worry in regard to our well-being.”

            “I sent it. Hopefully her worries will be put to rest.” 

            Emma and Oduwa headed to their cabins, both knowing that the coded message Emma sent had set gears in motion. There could be no turning back.

            A blast of steam issued from dispensers lining the inner conduit at the carriage’s rear. Two minutes of intense steam buildup provided the necessary push to send the carriage on its way. Dispensers every 20 yards added more propulsion to its momentum building up its speed until the carriage became the fastest object on the ground.

 

********

 

 

             Emma stirred to wakefulness and sat up in her cabin bunk. The gold colored clock with the gold colored hands embedded in the wall above her door said 8pm. She and Oduwa agreed to rendezvous in the cabin aisle at nine.

            She looked out her window, seeing nothing but darkness and her own reflection in the glass. Nerves started to set in. Emma had been on missions before. But this was the first time an assignment carried her beyond the African continent, and no mission she ever undertook had been this critical. She and Oduwa were to track down and kidnap a Chinese engineer who possessed a formula for new kinds of weapons; weapons her enthused superiors claimed would revolutionize warfare.

            More newfangled gadgetry, she huffed. She had analyzed first hand accounts, smuggled out of China, of the various types of weapons being tested that utilized this formula. The results chilled her. Being decidedly non-progressive had not impeded her ability to extrapolate many years down the road how truly monstrous, weapons fueled by this formula, could become. In the wrong hands this formula would have devastating consequences.

            Emma hopped out of her bunk and pulled the largest of her travel cases from the storage bin. She removed clothes from the case and opened a false bottom, revealing crossbow components a short sword, a dozen cross bow bolts, six palm size throwing knives, and a double edged dagger.

            Her nerves evaporated like morning mist touched by sunlight when she beheld all that fine steel at her fingertips. She took out the crossbow components and began assembling them into a deadly and efficient caster.

 

********

 

 

            Emma appeared in the aisle a minute before the appointed hour. She wore black slacks, black calf high leather boots, black leather short sleeve tunic, and a black headscarf to contain her flowing braids. A dark gray waist belt held her throwing knives and sword. A sheathed dagger hung off her left hip.

Oduwa emerged from the cabin across from Emma’s dressed in similar attire, minus the headscarf.

Their crossbows were notched.

            “Stunning as always, my dear,” Oduwa remarked wryly, giving his partner a smile and a wink.

 “Could you have picked a better time to flirt?”

            “I promise the next flirt will come your way on a more pleasurable occasion,” Oduwa replied with a grin. He led the way toward the far end of the aisle where Mao Li’s cabin was located.

            Suddenly, a huge creature bounded from around an intersecting corner ten yards ahead. It stood upright like a man, but bore the face of a beast. The creature’s appearance was lupine, its long mouth, hanging open in a wet snarl, revealing teeth perfectly suited for rending flesh. A pelt of brownish fur covered a body bursting at the seams with musculature. Its arms were outstretched, clawed hands poised to grab hold and not let go. A werewolf!

Read more…

The Formula: Part Two

 

            The artery carriage arrived in the Persian city of Isfahon at noon. It stopped at a station in the city’s commercial district for a half hour layover. Passengers disembarked and new passengers boarded.

Emma stepped off the carriage, strolling through the entry/exit tube connecting the carriage to the boarding platform. She told the conductor that she wanted to stretch her legs, although she needn’t have explained herself. In spite of the carriage’s comforts, those passengers who faced hours of travel after having put hours behind them reveled in the opportunity to be free of its confinement if only for a few minutes. Still, it didn’t hurt to allay possible suspicions with an innocuous comment here and there.

            Looming spires and majestic minarets greeted Emma when she emerged from the tube. Isfahon’s skyline stretched like a geometric cutout across the horizon. Airships of all sizes soared above and between the towers. The platform overlooked a wide avenue teeming with people attired in a mix of fashion, from Western top hats and spectacles to traditional sarbands and Buluchi dresses.

Emma soaked in the scenery for the benefit of whoever may have been observing her. Although not all of the attention with which she graced her surroundings was an affectation. She genuinely admired Isfahon’s exotic beauty. Locals seemed to be taken by Emma as well, African faces being a novel sight in Persia.

            Emma moved on, exchanging courteous nods and greetings with passersby. She entered the trans-artery office, approached the ticket window and requested the use of a telegraph. The clerk graciously directed her to an adjacent dispatch room where a telegraph operator relayed the message she verbalized.

To: Mary Thianne, Mandinka Republic, Freetown, Sierre Leone Province. From: Clarice Thianne: Hello, Mother. We just arrived in Isfahon, Persia. Will be leaving shortly. Percival and I are so enjoying this trip. China was fantastic. I have souvenirs that I’m sure you will like. See you soon. Love you.

            Emma departed after the operator confirmed her message’s transmittal.

            After a momentary pause on the platform, Emma returned to the carriage to find Oduwa in the refreshment section engaging in friendly chitchat with a couple of passengers. He excused himself after seeing Emma and held up a long stemmed wine filled glass. “Ah my dear sister, did you send mother a communiqué? I’m sure she’s fraught with worry in regard to our well-being.”

            “I sent it. Hopefully her worries will be put to rest.” 

            Emma and Oduwa headed to their cabins, both knowing that the coded message Emma sent had set gears in motion. There could be no turning back.

            A blast of steam issued from dispensers lining the inner conduit at the carriage’s rear. Two minutes of intense steam buildup provided the necessary push to send the carriage on its way. Dispensers every 20 yards added more propulsion to its momentum building up its speed until the carriage became the fastest object on the ground.

 

********

 

 

             Emma stirred to wakefulness and sat up in her cabin bunk. The gold colored clock with the gold colored hands embedded in the wall above her door said 8pm. She and Oduwa agreed to rendezvous in the cabin aisle at nine.

            She looked out her window, seeing nothing but darkness and her own reflection in the glass. Nerves started to set in. Emma had been on missions before. But this was the first time an assignment carried her beyond the African continent, and no mission she ever undertook had been this critical. She and Oduwa were to track down and kidnap a Chinese engineer who possessed a formula for new kinds of weapons; weapons her enthused superiors claimed would revolutionize warfare.

            More newfangled gadgetry, she huffed. She had analyzed first hand accounts, smuggled out of China, of the various types of weapons being tested that utilized this formula. The results chilled her. Being decidedly non-progressive had not impeded her ability to extrapolate many years down the road how truly monstrous, weapons fueled by this formula, could become. In the wrong hands this formula would have devastating consequences.

            Emma hopped out of her bunk and pulled the largest of her travel cases from the storage bin. She removed clothes from the case and opened a false bottom, revealing crossbow components a short sword, a dozen cross bow bolts, six palm size throwing knives, and a double edged dagger.

            Her nerves evaporated like morning mist touched by sunlight when she beheld all that fine steel at her fingertips. She took out the crossbow components and began assembling them into a deadly and efficient caster.

 

********

 

 

            Emma appeared in the aisle a minute before the appointed hour. She wore black slacks, black calf high leather boots, black leather short sleeve tunic, and a black headscarf to contain her flowing braids. A dark gray waist belt held her throwing knives and sword. A sheathed dagger hung off her left hip.

Oduwa emerged from the cabin across from Emma’s dressed in similar attire, minus the headscarf.

Their crossbows were notched.

            “Stunning as always, my dear,” Oduwa remarked wryly, giving his partner a smile and a wink.

 “Could you have picked a better time to flirt?”

            “I promise the next flirt will come your way on a more pleasurable occasion,” Oduwa replied with a grin. He led the way toward the far end of the aisle where Mao Li’s cabin was located.

            Suddenly, a huge creature bounded from around an intersecting corner ten yards ahead. It stood upright like a man, but bore the face of a beast. The creature’s appearance was lupine, its long mouth, hanging open in a wet snarl, revealing teeth perfectly suited for rending flesh. A pelt of brownish fur covered a body bursting at the seams with musculature. Its arms were outstretched, clawed hands poised to grab hold and not let go. A werewolf!

Read more…

The Formula: Part Two

 

            The artery carriage arrived in the Persian city of Isfahon at noon. It stopped at a station in the city’s commercial district for a half hour layover. Passengers disembarked and new passengers boarded.

Emma stepped off the carriage, strolling through the entry/exit tube connecting the carriage to the boarding platform. She told the conductor that she wanted to stretch her legs, although she needn’t have explained herself. In spite of the carriage’s comforts, those passengers who faced hours of travel after having put hours behind them reveled in the opportunity to be free of its confinement if only for a few minutes. Still, it didn’t hurt to allay possible suspicions with an innocuous comment here and there.

            Looming spires and majestic minarets greeted Emma when she emerged from the tube. Isfahon’s skyline stretched like a geometric cutout across the horizon. Airships of all sizes soared above and between the towers. The platform overlooked a wide avenue teeming with people attired in a mix of fashion, from Western top hats and spectacles to traditional sarbands and Buluchi dresses.

Emma soaked in the scenery for the benefit of whoever may have been observing her. Although not all of the attention with which she graced her surroundings was an affectation. She genuinely admired Isfahon’s exotic beauty. Locals seemed to be taken by Emma as well, African faces being a novel sight in Persia.

            Emma moved on, exchanging courteous nods and greetings with passersby. She entered the trans-artery office, approached the ticket window and requested the use of a telegraph. The clerk graciously directed her to an adjacent dispatch room where a telegraph operator relayed the message she verbalized.

To: Mary Thianne, Mandinka Republic, Freetown, Sierre Leone Province. From: Clarice Thianne: Hello, Mother. We just arrived in Isfahon, Persia. Will be leaving shortly. Percival and I are so enjoying this trip. China was fantastic. I have souvenirs that I’m sure you will like. See you soon. Love you.

            Emma departed after the operator confirmed her message’s transmittal.

            After a momentary pause on the platform, Emma returned to the carriage to find Oduwa in the refreshment section engaging in friendly chitchat with a couple of passengers. He excused himself after seeing Emma and held up a long stemmed wine filled glass. “Ah my dear sister, did you send mother a communiqué? I’m sure she’s fraught with worry in regard to our well-being.”

            “I sent it. Hopefully her worries will be put to rest.” 

            Emma and Oduwa headed to their cabins, both knowing that the coded message Emma sent had set gears in motion. There could be no turning back.

            A blast of steam issued from dispensers lining the inner conduit at the carriage’s rear. Two minutes of intense steam buildup provided the necessary push to send the carriage on its way. Dispensers every 20 yards added more propulsion to its momentum building up its speed until the carriage became the fastest object on the ground.

 

********

 

 

             Emma stirred to wakefulness and sat up in her cabin bunk. The gold colored clock with the gold colored hands embedded in the wall above her door said 8pm. She and Oduwa agreed to rendezvous in the cabin aisle at nine.

            She looked out her window, seeing nothing but darkness and her own reflection in the glass. Nerves started to set in. Emma had been on missions before. But this was the first time an assignment carried her beyond the African continent, and no mission she ever undertook had been this critical. She and Oduwa were to track down and kidnap a Chinese engineer who possessed a formula for new kinds of weapons; weapons her enthused superiors claimed would revolutionize warfare.

            More newfangled gadgetry, she huffed. She had analyzed first hand accounts, smuggled out of China, of the various types of weapons being tested that utilized this formula. The results chilled her. Being decidedly non-progressive had not impeded her ability to extrapolate many years down the road how truly monstrous, weapons fueled by this formula, could become. In the wrong hands this formula would have devastating consequences.

            Emma hopped out of her bunk and pulled the largest of her travel cases from the storage bin. She removed clothes from the case and opened a false bottom, revealing crossbow components a short sword, a dozen cross bow bolts, six palm size throwing knives, and a double edged dagger.

            Her nerves evaporated like morning mist touched by sunlight when she beheld all that fine steel at her fingertips. She took out the crossbow components and began assembling them into a deadly and efficient caster.

 

********

 

 

            Emma appeared in the aisle a minute before the appointed hour. She wore black slacks, black calf high leather boots, black leather short sleeve tunic, and a black headscarf to contain her flowing braids. A dark gray waist belt held her throwing knives and sword. A sheathed dagger hung off her left hip.

Oduwa emerged from the cabin across from Emma’s dressed in similar attire, minus the headscarf.

Their crossbows were notched.

            “Stunning as always, my dear,” Oduwa remarked wryly, giving his partner a smile and a wink.

 “Could you have picked a better time to flirt?”

            “I promise the next flirt will come your way on a more pleasurable occasion,” Oduwa replied with a grin. He led the way toward the far end of the aisle where Mao Li’s cabin was located.

            Suddenly, a huge creature bounded from around an intersecting corner ten yards ahead. It stood upright like a man, but bore the face of a beast. The creature’s appearance was lupine, its long mouth, hanging open in a wet snarl, revealing teeth perfectly suited for rending flesh. A pelt of brownish fur covered a body bursting at the seams with musculature. Its arms were outstretched, clawed hands poised to grab hold and not let go. A werewolf!

Read more…