The Antiquated Future of Rama

Arthur C. Clarke's 1973 novel Rendezvous with Rama is considered a key example of hard science fiction. However, as a realistic vision of the future, it is notably lacking. Set in the year 2130, read forty years after its publication, its future feels archaic. Clarke's future is one dominated by white Anglo-Saxon men, neo-Judeo-Christian undertones, and an uncanny sense that the future resembles the past more than the present.

Game Pitch: Bewerewolf

You are the werewolf. You make trouble. Unseen, unknown, undetected - until it's too late.

In the city the skies grow black with the fumes from the iron furnaces, while the machinery of man scrubs away the last remnants of the wild. Man has grown overconfident, arrogant in his prowess, sloppy in his execution. Now the time is opportune, the nights grow longer, the winter approaches, what man has built, you can destroy. But time moves swiftly, and even now it may already be too late.

Thoughts On: The Avengers

In the closing moments of The Avengers, Samuel L. Jackson, clothed in eye patch and black trench coat as the ridiculously named Nick Fury, stands in front of a panel of video screens with imposing faceless hand-wringing decision makers. One of them asks, "Was that the point of all this? A statement?", Fury corrects him, "A promise."

The council's question echoes the thoughts of the audience, who having endured the visual effects equivalent of blunt force trauma, is left wondering what the takeaway from this film is. The response "A promise" feels hollow, hackneyed even. Within the framework of the plot it implies that whenever the world is in peril, The Avengers will be there, to the audience it is a pact that sequels will follow, but the purpose of this film, or of its inevitable sequel is left unclear. Perhaps the question should have never been asked, because all I can think of as the appropriate response is, "We like money."

Game Pitch: The Proper Care of Humans

You play as a robot who manages a small ranch in a quiet frontier setting while taking care of the human(s) who live on it. The ranch must be made completely self-sufficient, including raising the animals used to feed the humans, who are both helpless and whiny without your constant attention. In the morning you may have to procure eggs from the hens, use them to create chocolate chip cookies, and milk from cows and use it to make whip cream, to serve a humans' desire for cookies in cream for breakfast. This must be done before daylight when the human wakes. Then you must set the table, wake the human, pull out his seat, arrange his meal, await his opinion.

Evolution Of A Painting: Woman In Water

The idea for this painting came to me pretty much fully formed: an image of a woman emerging from a pool of water, hair slicked back, bathed in splashes of vibrant, exaggerated and highly unrealistic lighting. I started with a quick sketch and divided it up into a grid.

I then divided up the canvas into an equivalent grid and used the sketch as a rough guideline. I was working fast here and not very much concerned with accurately capturing the sketch so this was more to keep it from falling horribly off the rails rather than a measured approach to accuracy of any kind.

In Search Of Extraterrestrial Intelligence

The abundance of worlds is perhaps only rivalled by their variety. Habitable world configurations exist around single-, binary-, and triple-star systems, around red and yellow dwarf stars, as planets and as moons, in mass ranges from 0.8 to 5.5 Earth masses, with very long and very short orbital periods, and with days lasting from a few hours to several months.

The science of planet formation is not sufficiently well developed to exclude solar systems that do not resemble our own. Indeed it seems the laws of physics as we understand them allow for as much variety of star systems as there are initial conditions. It makes sense then, to not presume what kinds of worlds we can expect to find based on our sample size of one.