I understand this has just gone on sale at Amazon for 99c. It’s well worth picking up if you enjoy old-school space opera, smart, plucky, principled underdogs, and banter.
Looking for a source of tension in your long space journey? How about “something goes wrong with the onboard farm”?
Looking for a source of tension in your long space journey? How about “something goes wrong with the onboard farm”?
Originally shared by ExtremeTech
How to feed ourselves while living in space.
I have many of the same struggles and tensions, and have come to much the same conclusions as Lisa Cohen articulates…
I have many of the same struggles and tensions, and have come to much the same conclusions as Lisa Cohen articulates here. With the additional complication that I’m also male, so I’m extra-aware of challenging male-as-default and male-as-real-protagonist.
My basic strategy consists of writing consciously, and this collection, and otherwise mostly shutting up and supporting the voices of others who have less privilege than I have.
This is the most demonically clever computer security attack I’ve seen in years.
Originally shared by Yonatan Zunger
This is the most demonically clever computer security attack I’ve seen in years. It’s a fabrication-time attack: that is, it’s an attack which can be performed by someone who has access to the microchip fabrication facility, and it lets them insert a nearly undetectable backdoor into the chips themselves. (If you’re wondering who might want to do such a thing, think “state-level actors”)
The attack starts with a chip design which has already been routed — i.e., it’s gone from a high-level design in terms of registers and data, to a low-level design in terms of gates and transistors, all the way to a physical layout of how the wires and silicon will be laid out. But instead of adding a chunk of new circuitry (which would take up space), or modifying existing circuitry significantly (which could be detected), it adds nothing more than a single logic gate in a piece of empty space.
When a wire next to this booby-trap gate flips from off to on, the electromagnetic fields it emits add a little bit of charge to a capacitor inside the gate. If it just happens once, that charge bleeds off, and nothing happens. But if that wire is flipped on and off rapidly, it accumulates in the capacitor until it passes a threshold — at which point it triggers that gate, which flips a target flip-flop (switch) inside the chip from off to on.
If you pick a wire which normally doesn’t flip on and off rapidly, and you target a vulnerable switch — say, the switch between user and supervisor mode — then you have a modification to the chip which is too tiny to notice, which is invisible to all known forms of detection, and if you know the correct magic incantation (in software) to flip that wire rapidly, will suddenly give you supervisor-mode access to the chip. (Supervisor mode is the mode the heart of the operating system runs in; in this mode, you have access to all the computer’s memory, rather than just to your own application’s)
The authors of this paper came up with the idea and built an actual microchip with such a backdoor in it, using the open-source OR1200 chip as their target. I don’t know if I want to guess how many three-letter agencies have already had the same idea, or what fraction of chips in the wild already have such a backdoor in them.
As Andreas Schou said in his share, “Okay. That’s it. I give up. Security is impossible.”
‘Body Integrated Programmable Joints Interface’ Extends Your Hand’s Capabilities

Originally shared by Adafruit Industries
‘Body Integrated Programmable Joints Interface’ Extends Your Hand’s Capabilities
We envision a machine-driven evolution of human body form and function, where the programmable nature of machines plays a crucial role. Robotic joints worn on the wrist turn into extra fingers so that a person acquires skills beyond what five fingers can offer, or performs “tri-manual” tasks with the machine joints.
Read more
Minor milestone: I currently have 12 stories out on submission.
Minor milestone: I currently have 12 stories out on submission.
Via Vanessa MacLellan.
Via Vanessa MacLellan.
Characters who create plot tension by stupid decisions or take no action to resolve their issues (but get handed the resolution anyway) are infuriating.
Originally shared by ****
3 Mistakes that Will Make Readers Want to Punch a Book in the Face
There are so many amazing true stories from World War II. This is one of them.
There are so many amazing true stories from World War II. This is one of them.
Originally shared by Fred Hicks
Interesting for a story I’m working on currently (which may end up as a choose-your-path story).
Interesting for a story I’m working on currently (which may end up as a choose-your-path story). There are great advantages to dull contentment; for example, you don’t live in interesting times.