T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
414.1 | Screens and plugs | ROCK::REDFORD | On a pure caffeine high | Mon Nov 24 1986 18:37 | 13 |
| Alexis Gilliand had a nice anti-missile defense in one of his
Rosinante books. The inhabitants of the space colony Rosinante
detected a nuclear-tipped missile coming their way, and used the
wreckage of the power mirrors of a sister colony to build a giant
screen in space, 10 km on a side. The missile hit it at 10 miles per
second, and that was the end of it.
I've also always liked Larry Niven's earplugs: stuff a wad of totally
sound-proof material in your ears with a little radio transmitter on
the outside and a matching receiver on the inside. Talk of
short-range transmitters...
/jlr
|
414.2 | Macrometal (tm) | PROSE::WAJENBERG | | Tue Nov 25 1986 08:44 | 15 |
| I invented some stuff called "macrometal" for a science fiction
role playing game. Normal metals consist of lots of tiny crystals;
macrometals consist of one big, fat, perfect (or nearly) crystal.
Very brittle, very rigid, and very VERY strong. It had many
construction uses, but it also made dandy armor against missile
attack.
Re .1
What were the ear-plugs supposed to defend you against? Something
acoustic, I presume. Did Niven try to get by the fact that sound can
penetrate bone and flesh, and thus attack from the rear, so to speak?
Earl Wajenberg
|
414.3 | Cordwainer Smith's defenses | VAXRT::CANNOY | The more you love, the more you can. | Tue Nov 25 1986 09:13 | 4 |
| You never found out exactly what they did, but I've always loved
"Mother Hitton's Littul Kittons".
Tamzen
|
414.4 | (Too (many (parens))) | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Tue Nov 25 1986 09:45 | 17 |
| re single crystal metal works - the Scientific American materials
issue included an article on such materials - high performance turbine
blades are now cast as single crystals.
re Cordwainer Smith (a nom de plume which apparently means something
like "wood stacking metal worker"), he uses cats as a defense in
another of his stories, one of my favorites, "The Crime and Glory
of Commander Suzdal" (sp?), which Commander breeds a race of
fanatically devoted (to Man) warrior cats (shades of Larry Niven's
Kzin (Kzinti? which is the plural, which is the adjective?)) whom
he throws back in time to defend Man from some alien menace. I
think he (Mr. Smith) also uses cats in "The Game of Cat and Mouse".
And of course, cats show up in numerous stories as underpeople,
e.g., "The Ballad of the Lost C'mell".
len.
|
414.5 | | MYCRFT::PARODI | John H. Parodi | Tue Nov 25 1986 09:51 | 7 |
|
Yeah, the pinlighters were cats but wasn't the story called "The Game
of Rat and Dragon"?
JP
|
414.6 | It's the thought that counts | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Tue Nov 25 1986 11:13 | 6 |
| Indeed, that sounds much more like it now that you mention it. I'll
look it up when I get home. Probably time to reread some Smith
again anyway. I think my neurons could use some ECC.
len.
|
414.7 | The Kittons Weren't Kittens | PROSE::WAJENBERG | | Tue Nov 25 1986 11:18 | 7 |
| As it happens, Mother Hitton's Littul Kittons weren't cats; they
were weasels, or maybe mink. They had been bred for psychotic fury
(not very hard in weasels). They then provided the output for a
telepathic projector trained on incoming enemy spacecraft. At least
that's what I recall; it's been years since I read it.
Earl Wajenberg
|
414.8 | | INK::KALLIS | Support Hallowe'en | Tue Nov 25 1986 11:22 | 23 |
| Speaking of Smiths:
Doc Smith's "polycyclic force fields," in the Lenmsman books. They'd
block out harmful radiation and some ballistic stuff, but weould
allow you to communicate and see out.
Also, thought screens (the baddies got 'em from Ploor. The Eddorians
finally made better ones).
John W. Campbell's "resistium" -- an ultra-element using
antiproton/antineutron nuclei and orbiting protons (!). Made an
almost impervious hull for spacecraft. (Dunno howcome the orbiting
protons didn't interact with normal-matter electrons, though.)
In another John Campbell story, the Hall Effect Bullet Deflector.
This was a force-field that trapped bullets in it. Problem was
that while it protected the person wearing it, that person quickly
became surrounded by orbiting bullets. [Really!]
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
414.9 | Spindizzy Panic Teleport | PROSE::WAJENBERG | | Tue Nov 25 1986 11:23 | 10 |
| In James Blish's "Cities in Flight" series, there was an emergency
escape you could make by deliberately and carefully overdriving
the spindizzies. (Spindizzies were the gravity engines that moved
the cities both above and below light speed.) When overdriven,
the spindizzies teleported the whole city to a random location.
There may have been an intermediate stop in nowhere at all. As
I recall, the mayor/captain of New York counted himself very lucky
to remain in the Milky Way.
Earl Wajenberg
|
414.10 | | ROCK::REDFORD | On a pure caffeine high | Tue Nov 25 1986 23:28 | 8 |
| re: Cordwainer Smith
A cordwainer is an archaic term for a shoemaker. It has a remote
derivation from cordovan leather. Harlan Ellsion liked it so much
that he used it one of his own pseudonyms: Cordwainer Bird, creator
of "Starlost". It must appear in the Book of the New Sun somewhere...
/jlr
|
414.11 | | NUTMEG::BALS | God is an Iron | Wed Nov 26 1986 08:17 | 9 |
| RE: -1
Just a slight clarification. When you see Ellison use the pseudonym,
"Cordwainer Bird," for anything, you can be certain that he has
disavowed whatever project that name is attached to - especially
"The Starlost." It's Ellison's ungentle way of warning off fans
and to flip the bird at whoever he feels has messed him over.
Fred
|
414.12 | Dune FF's | OPUS::LUBART | | Wed Dec 03 1986 12:10 | 5 |
| The personal forcefields portrayed in Dune were interesting.
Remember, the ones that stop the fast blow but passed the slow one.
/Dan
|
414.13 | Slow-down force fields | SKYLAB::FISHER | Burns Fisher 381-1466, ZKO1-1/D42 | Mon Dec 29 1986 17:08 | 10 |
| re .12: There are a number of those kind of critters around. Niven
and Pournelle's Langston field and (gosh who is it!)'s field in
The Forever War. The latter required you to fight with swords etc
since anything faster would get either slowed down or deflected.
Did Asimov's force field work that way in Foundation and Empire
too?
Burns
|
414.14 | General Products Hull | SKYLAB::FISHER | Burns Fisher 381-1466, ZKO1-1/D42 | Mon Dec 29 1986 17:11 | 7 |
| And who can forget General Product hulls. (Niven's Pierson's
Puppeteers made them). They block any kind of radiation except
that which customer's could sense. (Yipes! Does any customer see
with high energy X-rays?) They also did not block gravity, and
anti-matter did not help their strength any.
Burns
|
414.15 | More Cordwainer Smith | LITRBX::EDECK | | Tue Dec 30 1986 14:36 | 17 |
|
A couple more interesting ones from Cordwainer Smith:
The details are hazy on this one, but when No-space was first discov-
ered, the radiation would...kill? drive insane?...anyone traveling
in it. The answer was to put a false hull on the No-ships and fill
it with oyster spawn to absorb the lethal No-space fields. Sorta
harsh on the oysters, though...
Then there was The Golden Ship--a couple light-minutes worth of
wire and sheet metal, shaped like a HUGE warship. All it had to
do was show up once and scare the bejesus out of the Bright Empire...
It was so secret that after its single mission, they wiped the brain
of the captain, and he spent the rest of his life wondering why
he was a hero...
Ed E.
|
414.16 | DeathWorld | BESPIN::LUBART | | Mon Jan 05 1987 14:58 | 7 |
| re .13, Forever War, by Joe Haldemann.
I have a vague recollection of a book called DeathWorld by Haldemann
that involved some ferocious sort of bodyarmor. Anyone have a better
memory than me on this?
/Dan
|
414.17 | Harrison? | PROSE::WAJENBERG | | Mon Jan 05 1987 15:29 | 9 |
| Re .16
Sure it wasn't Harry Harrison? He wrote of an Earth colony on a
planet with ferocious wildlife. I believe the colonists developed
some highly aggressive armor, including a gun-and-holster combination
that slapped the gun into your hand when you moved your fingers
into the right position to grip the gun.
Earl Wajenberg
|
414.18 | Harry it is | THEHUT::LUBART | | Tue Jan 06 1987 13:04 | 4 |
| I think you got me Earl. It was Deathworld by Harry Harrison.
It was a pretty entertaining book as I remember.
/Dan
|
414.19 | Deathworld Trilogy? | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Tue Jan 13 1987 12:01 | 4 |
| Actually a trilogy as I recall.
len,.
|
414.20 | Jason dinAlt | DROID::DAUGHAN | I love it when you talk Hi-Tech. | Wed Jan 14 1987 12:23 | 6 |
| Consisting of DEATHWORLD, THE ETHICAL ENGINEER (weak), and THE HORSE
BARBARIANS. D is good, THB is better.
Seems to me I have a spare copy of the Trilogy from the SFBC....
Don ICEMAN::Rudman
|
414.21 | | AKOV68::BOYAJIAN | A disgrace to the forces of evil | Thu Jan 15 1987 01:37 | 7 |
| re:.20
Those were the titles of the ANALOG serializations. The books
had the highly creative titles DEATHWORLD, DEATHWORLD 2, and
DEATHWORLD 3.
--- jerry
|
414.22 | That must be why they called it THE DEATHWORLD TRILOGY! | DROID::DAUGHAN | I love it when you talk Hi-Tech. | Tue Jan 20 1987 13:19 | 7 |
| True. After Analog I managed to find all 3 DEATH P-backs as well
as the Trilogy.
I figured the reading populace would see the connection if they run
across a book with DEATHWORLD in the title.
Don
|