I’m starting a new “not as you might expect” collection for things like this.
Originally shared by Fred Hicks
I’m starting a new “not as you might expect” collection for things like this.
Originally shared by Fred Hicks
Via Charles Barouch.
Originally shared by Andrew Brown (drusepth)
Both awesome and terrifying (but mostly awesome) that technology like this is available now.
https://www.wired.com/2016/09/googles-clever-plan-stop-aspiring-isis-recruits/
Via Winchell Chung.
Originally shared by Gadgetify
PD6B-AW-ARM Large Drone with Dual Robotic Arms
We’re coming up to the 200th anniversary of the book which defined the modern literary vampire – charismatic, aristocratic, consuming and destroying everyone who comes near. There’s a terrible ironic twist near the end of the tale.
Originally shared by The Public Domain Review
Happy birthday to John Polidori — Lord Byron’s long-suffering physician and creator of the modern vampire with his novella The Vampyre (which sees it 200th anniversary this year!). Andrew McConnell Stott explores how a fractious relationship between Polidori and his poet employer lies behind the tale, with Byron himself providing a model for the blood-sucking aristocratic figure of the legend we are familiar with today: http://buff.ly/2c6M2av
tl;dr: The biggest difference is that Democrats are more likely to see difference just as difference, not better or worse, while Republicans (and Trump Republicans especially) are more likely to see difference in terms of one thing being better than the other.
This whole approach of “primals” (fundamental beliefs about the world), though, is very interesting and thought-provoking, which is why I’m posting this in SFF Thought Starters.
Originally shared by Kimberly Chapman
This is a very interesting way to examine Trump support: https://jerclifton.com/2016/08/17/what-reality-are-trump-people-living-in/
And it could be useful in crafting better messages to potentially change minds.
https://jerclifton.com/2016/08/17/what-reality-are-trump-people-living-in
Marketing, as well as R&D, will be involved in any transition to non-animal-sourced proteins.
Originally shared by Winchell Chung
Growing meat in a petri dish is sustainable, more ecological, and harvesting does not require actually killing an animal. But nobody wants to eat food described as “cultured” or “lab-grown”
So the power of marketing and branding is pushing the label Clean Food
The Atomic Rocket interest is for spacecraft closed ecological life support systems. Since it is impractical to raise and slaughter cattle on your spacecraft.
Sam is one of my cover guys, and has done excellent work for me at reasonable rates. Here’s your chance to get a great cover while helping out someone who’s having difficult times.
Originally shared by S. A. Hunt
Looks like I might be heading to the doctor again. This time, for an infection that’s swelling my right ring finger and turning the nail bed green. This month has been total horseshit–first I had to go to the clinic for a double ear infection, then I had a respiratory infection, and now I have something in my damn finger. Apparently my immune system has gone down the crapper.
So if you or somebody you know needs a book cover, I could really use a commission for medical moneys. If you don’t, a signal boost is fine too.
#book #art #help
I’ve finally figured out what to call City of Masks! It’s a Ruritanian fantasy of manners.
Some of my folks here (such as MrsA Wiggins) may well enjoy these stories. They’re not fluffy, trite, or conventional Christian fiction, but thought-provoking, uncomfortable, and sometimes disturbing fantasy, science fiction and horror stories using Christian characters and elements.
Relevant to my steampunk interests. Via Mary Robinette Kowal.
http://www.latimes.com/world/asia/la-fg-chinese-typewriter-snap-story.html