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Book comment: Altered Carbon, Broken Angels, and Woken Furies, by Richard K. Morgan

Submitted by eDave on Sun, 02/22/2009 - 22:42
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These are a series of books by Richard K. Morgan set hundreds of years in the future in which we have colonized other worlds on distant stars courtesy of found technology - technology found on Mars. The technology is a combination of faster-than-light broadcasting, personality recording, and body reproduction such that one's personality is beamed to a distant location faster than light and "decanted" into a new body, the initial people there having traveled by spaceship to set up the receiving stations and such. Anyway, our main character is sort of a private eye named Takeshi Kovacs (TOK-eh-shee KO-votch) who is drawn into intriguing situations. In the first book, it's pretty much a film noir story set in the future with cool technologies. It works, and is a good ride. In the second and third books, Kovacs winds up solving the riddle of the "Martians" whose technology we use to enable quick space travel. Broken Angels is the better of the second and third books in many ways, but both are good rides with lingering film noir characteristics. All in all, I recommend these books for a good ride. They aren't "literary," but are well done and fun. Mind you, I listened to these, and the reader was very good, which makes a big difference.

Book comment: The Graveyard Book, by Neil Gaiman

Submitted by eDave on Sat, 02/21/2009 - 09:51
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Restarting blog after long hiatus

Submitted by eDave on Fri, 02/20/2009 - 12:23
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Long hiatus - restart and maybe refocus, but more frequent posting.

Airship-to-Orbit with Air Reservoirs for Jet Engines

Submitted by eDave on Tue, 03/11/2008 - 22:42
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OK, this isn't complete, but I'm getting way behind, so I'm posting what I have so far.

Airship to Orbit

The technology is disclosed in U.S. Patent Application Publication 2007/0205330, filed by Hubbard Aerospace, LLC, published on 6 September 2007 (it's attached to this post as a PDF, too). The premise here is that a semi-rigid dirigible type craft can be taken into orbit. The craft does not rely solely on lifting gases for lift, nor does it use conventional propeller-type drive, but uses a combination of lifting gas, lifting body shape, and turbojet engines that can draw air for combustion from reservoirs within the craft itself when outside air is too rarefied or simply unavailable.

Read more by clicking the title of the post.

Why should you listen to eDave?

Submitted by eDave on Mon, 02/25/2008 - 14:59
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Why should you take me seriously on issues of technology? It's a good question. The short answer is that I'm a patent lawyer with experience as a patent examiner, an undergraduate degree in Aerospace Engineering, and experience with a wide variety of technologies. Working as a patent examiner and as a patent lawyer requires and hones one's abilitiy to learn and understand new technologies. It also helps one pick things apart to see how they work - or don't. I'm also a computer geek, having ripped apart and rebuilt my computers (and those of others, mostly Macs) for maintenance, repair, and upgrade for over fifteen years - hardware and software.

Read more by clicking the title of this post.

Welcome to eDave's blog!

Submitted by eDave on Mon, 02/25/2008 - 14:03
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