#1 Outer Cyberspace
"No one lives in space stations, in
this scenario... Instead, our entire solar system is saturated with cheap
monitoring devices. People, even quite ordinary people, rent time on
them in much the same way that you would pay for satellite cable-TV
service. If you want to know what Neptune looks like today, you just call
up a data center and have a look for yourself."
#2 Buckymania
"A free buckyball rotates merrily
through space at one hundred million revolutions per second. It's just
over one nanometer across. Buckminsterfullerene by the gross forms a solid
crystal, is stable at room temperature, and is an attractive mustard-yellow
color."
#3 Think Of The Prestige
"Project Babylon was Bull's grandest
vision, now almost within his grasp. The Iraqi space-launcher was to have
a barrel five hundred feet long, and would weigh 2,100 tons... The vast,
segmented cannon would fire rocket-assisted projectiles the size of a phone
booth, into orbit around the Earth."
#4 Artificial Life
"Because of the ubiquity of powerful
computers, Artificial Life is 'garage-band science.' Much of A-Life practice
basically consists of picking up computers, pointing them at something
promising, and twiddling with the focus knobs until you see something really
gnarly."
#5 A Brief History Of The Internet (Feb '93)
"Some thirty years ago, the RAND Corporation,
America's foremost Cold War think-tank, faced a strange strategic problem.
How could the US authorities successfully communicate after a nuclear war?"
#6 Magnetic Vision
"It's an odd experience to look long
and hard at one's own brain. Though it's quite a privilege to witness this,
it's also a form of narcissism without much historical parallel. Frankly,
I don't think I ever really believed in my own brain until I saw these
images."
#7 Superglue
"Superglue is potent and almost magical
stuff, the champion of popular glues and, in its own quiet way, something
of an historical advent. There is something pleasantly marvelous, almost
Arabian Nights-like, about a drop of liquid that can lift a ton; and yet
one can buy the stuff anywhere today, and it's cheap."
#8 Creation Science
"How does one deal successfully with
the dissonance between the word of God and the evidence in the physical
world? Or the struggle, as Stephen Jay Gould puts it, between the Rock
of Ages and the age of rocks?"
#9 Robotica '93
"A faithful reader of SF from the
1940s and '50s might be surprised to learn that we're not hip-deep in robots
by now. By this time, robots ought to be making our breakfasts, fetching
our newspapers, and driving our atomic-powered personal helicopters. But
this has not come to pass, and the reason is simple. We don't have any
robot brains."
#10 Watching The Clouds
"Most clouds never manage to rain
or snow. They simply use the vapor-water cycle as a mechanism to carry
and dissipate excess heat, doing the Earth's quiet business of entropy..."
#11 Spires On The Skyline
"In this column, we're going to demystify
broadcast towers, and talk about what they do, and why they look that way,
and how they've earned their peculiar right to loom eerily on the skyline
of every urban center in America."
#12 The New Cryptography
"The real wild-card in the mix, however,
was the new cryptography. A new technique arose in the 1970s: public-key
cryptography. This was an element the codemasters of World War II and the
Cold War had never foreseen."
#13 The Dead Collider
"The Machine in the Desert was a transcendant
scheme to steal cosmic secrets, an enterprise whose unashamed raison d'etre
was to enable wild and glorious flights of imagination and comprehension.
It was sense-of-wonder and utter sleaze at one and the same time. Rather
like science fiction, actually."
#15 Bitter Resistance
"Two hundred thousand bacteria could
easily lurk under the top half of this semicolon; but for the sake of focussing
on a subject that's too often out of sight and out of mind, let's pretend
otherwise. Let's pretend that a bacterium is about the size of a railway
tank car."
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