[Lab Bench]
A Visionary Passes, But The Dream Survives
William Wong
ED Online ID #18610
April 24, 2008
Copyright © 2006 Penton Media, Inc., All rights reserved. Printing of this document is for personal use only.
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The recent death of sciencefiction
author Arthur C.
Clarke has been noted widely
by the conventional press.
But I wanted to take the time to reflect on
his impact on our industry. Clarke joins the
ranks of sci-fi writers like Isaac Asimov and
Robert Heinlein, whose dreams remain
alive because of their books.
I’d bet only a few of you haven’t read
at least one of his short stories or novels.
Shades of the HAL 9000 supercomputer
from his 2001: A Space Odyssey keep cropping
up in conversations, writings, and movies.
Not all sci-fi writers come up with ideas
that eventually turn into something real,
but Clarke has quite a few to his credit.
His work should be required reading for
patent examiners because it might prevent
the approval of some obvious patents. Sci-fi tends to be rife
with ideas that may be ahead of their time. But many ideas in
Clarke’s work, such as cell phones and geosynchronous global
broadcast satellites, are now mainstays of our industry. In fact,
it was Clarke’s idea to use satellites as communication relays.
MAPS FOR THE FUTURE
Not all sci-fi masters are forebearers of the future, nor are all
of their forecasts accurate. But they’re often close enough to
inspire an innovative engineer create a real incarnation of an
idea. Some may take more time to come to fruition, but our
headlong dash into new technologies may turn these ideas
into real implementations sooner than many of us believe.
For example, Clarke’s 1979 novel Fountains of Paradise
describes a space elevator under construction. His space elevator
used super-strong diamond-like threads to link a space
station to a stationary point on the Earth,
allowing movement of people and cargo
between the Earth and space. Eventually,
the space stations were combined into an
orbiting ring where mankind could reside
during the next ice age.
The idea of a space elevator is alive
and well. Materials research, especially
in nanotubes, continues to move toward
something that may eventually suit the
construction of a real space elevator
that would eliminate much of the need
for rockets and the Space Shuttle. Massive
computing platforms and intelligent
machines will likely show up first, but it is
exciting to watch how dreams are turning
into reality.
As with many of his stories, the vision
and outcome of the space elevator was
positive. Plenty of intrigue, mayhem, and morality were mixed
in as well, but he brought more than science and engineering
into play.
THE DREAM
If you haven’t read any of Clarke’s work, don’t worry. Most of it
is still in print. I could recommend a title or two (or a dozen).
But he has more than a hundred good books to his credit, so
just go ahead and pick one.
Or, aim your Web browser at the Baen Free Library. Baen, a
sci-fi publisher, has posted many novels by other authors online
for your enjoyment. Jim Baen, the company’s publisher, passed
away a few years back. But like Clarke and many other sci-fi
authors and publishers, his dreams remain alive.
BAEN FREE LIBRARY
www.baen.com/library
See associate figure
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