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16 votes
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Cowboy Bebop Netflix opening credits
17 votes -
Russell T Davies to return as Doctor Who showrunner
11 votes -
The Ascent devs dish on the messy launch for 2021’s best sci-fi RPG
4 votes -
Don't Look Up | Official teaser trailer
10 votes -
Star Trek Day - Join Paramount+ and fans from around the world for a free live-streamed celebration on September 8th, 8:30PM EST
4 votes -
New The Matrix Resurrections teaser trailers use inline dynamic time
14 votes -
Star Trek: Prodigy - Title sequence
6 votes -
Foundation | Official trailer
21 votes -
Star Trek: Lower Decks S02E01 - "Strange Energies"
8 votes -
This article is about the standard test brain image. For the original human, see Miguel Acevedo.
13 votes -
Blade Runner and personal identity
7 votes -
Tuvix will never die
10 votes -
Star Trek San Diego Comic-Con (SDCC) 2021 teasers
3 votes -
How Twitter can ruin a life: The story of Isabel Fall
19 votes -
Blade Runner anime announces full cast – and brings back a 2049 character
10 votes -
Zack Snyder sets next movie, sci-fi adventure ‘Rebel Moon’, at Netflix
4 votes -
Foundation | Official teaser 2
16 votes -
Episode 1 : Salad Mug - DYNAMO DREAM
5 votes -
'Katla' is a new Netflix original series from Iceland – a cross between Stanisław Lem's 'Solaris' and the French series 'The Returned'
6 votes -
Other Space (2015)
4 votes -
Science fiction that presents immortality in a good light?
It seems incredibly common in works of science fiction that touch upon technological immortality to focus on every possible way that such a technology could go wrong, create problems, or worsen...
It seems incredibly common in works of science fiction that touch upon technological immortality to focus on every possible way that such a technology could go wrong, create problems, or worsen social dynamics.
Among the negative outcomes that have attained trope levels of frequency, off the top of my head, I can name the following:
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Immortality becomes available only to the ultra-wealthy, allowing them even more power to abuse everyone else, leading immortal people to be antagonists in a pretty generic dystopian plot.
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Immortality subtly twists the morality of its beneficiaries, causing them to lose sight of "the real meaning of life" according to the author's worldview, and the protagonist usually fights for society to recognize how important death and endings are
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Immortality causes people to go insane, become monsters, or otherwise utterly lose their humanity (this is more of an extreme version of case #2, but I feel it's distinct in the way a story plays out)
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Immortality ultimately leads to the extinction of the human species due either to biological effects of the immortality technology in question, or due to cultural/societal shifts that lead people to stop reproducing
I'm sure there are many others that I'd recall if prompted, but my point is that I don't think I can name any science fiction that involves immortality technology that doesn't also decry it as ultimately a harmful development.
Are there any works of science fiction that any of you can think of that do more to celebrate the idea or look forward to it with some optimism?
16 votes -
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So ... The Expanse
Looks like Tildes hasn't discussed this show for a year or two. I just finished binge-watching the first 5 seasons (I'm hoping there is a Season 6 in the offing), and of course, I now feel like...
Looks like Tildes hasn't discussed this show for a year or two. I just finished binge-watching the first 5 seasons (I'm hoping there is a Season 6 in the offing), and of course, I now feel like discussing it. This thread is wide open to whatever anyone wants to bring up about the series. But my first question for people is this--
Did anyone notice any significant change in quality after Amazon took it over? If so, better or worse? How?
For me, somewhere around Season 3 or 4, it felt like the story quality declined. Not that it's "bad" in any way ... just that it got less original, more like traditional series plot devices. And that could just be me, or that--in general--even the best shows tend to lose some of their edge after the first few seasons ... or maybe they're just following the books (never read 'em) and this is how the books went.
But, yeah ... it's turning into a nicer, more nuanced Stargate ... the Good Guys trying to save humanity from The Terrorist Mastermind ... the Evil Post-Soviet Empire conspiring to help said Terrorist, etc. They even had Snidely Whiplash tying the poor girl to the railroad tracks.
I'm obviously over-simplifying here; it is still an excellent show ... just, like I said; it started to feel less original. I'm wondering if that's just my impression, and if not, do we know that it's an "Amazon" thing, or what?
15 votes -
Twenty-five years ago, Star Trek: Voyager tackled one of its most infamous transporter questions
17 votes -
Building a galaxy: The story of the Star Wars Expanded Universe
5 votes -
Recommendation: Person of Interest (2011-2016)
I want to talk about Person of Interest. A CBS series created by Jonathan Nolan, more famously known for his work on Westworld (and brother of "that" Christopher Nolan, talent runs in the family)....
I want to talk about Person of Interest. A CBS series created by Jonathan Nolan, more famously known for his work on Westworld (and brother of "that" Christopher Nolan, talent runs in the family). This is a spoiler-free post.
Premise: An ex-military badass is hired by a rich ex-usgov genius who built an AI that is plugged into the NSA's spying supernetwork, and can predict crime based on all the datapoints.
Strong similarities with: Westworld, Mr. Robot.
Person of Interest is a series that really took me by surprise. I didn't really care for Season 1, which I left running in the background after it was apparent to me that this was a very run-of-the-mill CBS police procedural. I gave it a chance based on a friend's recommendation, and because IT/sec references were accurate and didn't make me cringe. It also had an interesting premise which was written pre-snowden and raised some interesting philosophical questions on privacy and crime prevention.
Then towards the Season 1 finale, the music got pretty good, the scenes were very action-packed and the series started feeling like it was getting very entertaining. So I kept watching.
Without spoiling: throughout Season 2, the series actually completely shifts genre almost unnoticeably, from "generic police procedural" to "long-arc Westworld-style tech scifi".
I was stunned by how smooth the genre transition was. Of all the series I watched, it's something truly unique to that one, which is one of the reasons I rate it as one of the best TV series in my catalogue. It's also, from what I heard, Nolan's strategy from the get-go in order to get a very unique show greenlit on a "safe" network like CBS.
By the end of the series, Person of Interest had inspired me. Made me extremely interested in AI and data. It affected my work and the way I think about the world. POI really toes the scifi line by taking concepts which are possible, but not there yet and explores the possibilities (again, Westworld); unlike most other Sci-Fi shows which take abstract ideas of what we may want to see in the future, regardless of how possible/reasonable they are.
POI does require some suspension of disbelief. You have to accept the trope of a "supergenius" who can build an AI like this all on his own, for example. I think that's fine, and I found that the show was very rigorous at taking only practical shortcuts with very little fridge logic.
I keep mentioning Westworld and that's no accident. POI predates WW and it feels that WW was a continuation of Nolan's ideas about the implications of AI, in a much higher budget setting. (And as an aside, if you haven't watched Westworld, you should)
Tag spoilers in comments :)
21 votes -
Turns out, Spock is kinda bad at logic
14 votes -
William Gibson says today's internet is nothing like what he envisioned
10 votes -
MMAcevedo
4 votes -
Star Trek - First Contact Day
7 votes -
Star Wars: The Bad Batch | Official trailer
6 votes -
Hear me out: Why Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker isn't a bad movie
7 votes -
Science fiction hasn’t prepared us to imagine machine learning
11 votes -
Star Wars characters as classical Japanese art
9 votes -
Science fiction movie recommendations
I just signed back up for the Netflix dvd subscription and am looking for some sci-fi movie recommendations. I tend to not like the horror themes but am open to just about anything else (even...
I just signed back up for the Netflix dvd subscription and am looking for some sci-fi movie recommendations. I tend to not like the horror themes but am open to just about anything else (even "bad" movies that are so bad they are good). Looking for movies that have come out in the last decade or so. May also be open to television series that can be had on dvd that were not on Netflix streaming.
27 votes -
HG Wells fans spot numerous errors on Royal Mint's new £2 coin
9 votes -
Explore Indigenous futurisms with these science fiction and fantasy books by indigenous authors
8 votes -
‘The Mandalorian’ is the most pirated TV-show of 2020
15 votes -
Firefly reboot coming to Disney+
16 votes -
Typeset in the Future on Star Trek: The Motion Picture
7 votes -
The philosophy of Star Trek: Is the Prime Directive ethical?
11 votes -
Legendary science fiction author Ben Bova has passed at the age of 88, due to Covid
10 votes -
Doctor Who: Revolution of the Daleks | Official teaser
8 votes -
Russian Mars Colonization Program (comedy)
7 votes -
Ready Player Two available now
@Ready Player Two: pic.twitter.com/8zsAmQaZV9
8 votes -
Discussion - Raised By Wolves
Available on HBO Max, the first episode can be streamed for free. From Executive Producer Ridley Scott, Raised by Wolves centers on two androids tasked with raising human children on a mysterious...
Available on HBO Max, the first episode can be streamed for free.
From Executive Producer Ridley Scott, Raised by Wolves centers on two androids tasked with raising human children on a mysterious virgin planet. As the burgeoning colony of humans threatens to be torn apart by religious differences, the androids learn that controlling the beliefs of humans is a treacherous and difficult task.
8 votes -
Chaos Walking | Official trailer
6 votes -
Alan Dean Foster—author of novelizations of Star Wars: A New Hope, the Alien franchise, and more—says that Disney has not paid any royalties since acquiring the rights to his books
20 votes -
Harlan Ellison's The Last Dangerous Visions may finally be published, after five-decade wait
7 votes -
Adaptation and nostalgia on an alien world: Scavengers analysis and speculative biology
4 votes