Just finished Accelerando for my exams and really enjoyed it. The book gets better as it goes, and in accordance with Stross's singularitarian themes it's free on the Internet. What I think I like best about the novel is Stross's unflinching take on the "rapture of the nerds," which is reframed at one point in the book as "the Vinge catastrophe"; what the Singularity is for Stross is not so much the moment A.I. achieves sentience but the moment corporations do.
Wednesday, August 05, 2009
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
9:51 PM
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Labels: artificial intelligence, books, Charlie Stross, corporations, rapture of the nerds, science fiction, the Singularity, Victor Vinge
Tuesday, November 18, 2008
Have I told you about how nerds destroy the world? From Pictures for Sad Children, via grinding.be.
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
1:00 PM
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Labels: apocalypse, consumer culture, ecology, guilty as charged, how we're killing the planet, nerds, nerds destroy the world, politics, rapture of the nerds, the Singularity, trash
Monday, June 09, 2008
The Guardian interviews science fiction writer Charlie Stross. Here he is on the Singularity, subject of his recent book Accelerado:
Perhaps the strangest future predicted by science fiction writers is the Singularity - an idea that is already "old hat" for Stross. This concept was more or less invented by scientist and author Vernor Vinge, and started with a simple insight: If an artificial intelligence can be created on computers, it can in turn design more powerful computers to create more powerful artificial intelligence and so on at an ever accelerating rate until we arrive at the Singularity - a point where technological change happens so quickly that it irrevocably alters human existence. A powerful idea, but as Stross is the first to point out, not one that science fiction has always treated with the scientific rigour it deserves.Like all good science-fiction writers, Stross has a blog.
"A whole bunch of extra cruft accreted rapidly around Vinge's idea, which was misappropriated and misunderstood by many writers," he explains. "Along with the idea of nanotechnology, the singularity became a substitute for magic pixie dust that could do anything, and a placeholder for what author Ken McLeod dubbed 'the rapture of the nerds'."
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
10:36 AM
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Labels: Accelerando, Charlie Stross, magic pixie dust that can do anything, rapture of the nerds, science fiction, the Singularity