114 comments
shagie · 5 days ago
Accelerando and Glasshouse fall in a "the ideas of one feed into the next" sequence that I find interesting to read in sequence... the first four of which are available on the web.

COMP.BASILISK FAQ https://www.nature.com/articles/44964

BLIT https://www.infinityplus.co.uk/stories/blit.htm

Different Kinds of Darkness https://www.lightspeedmagazine.com/fiction/different-kinds-o...

Accelerando https://www.antipope.org/charlie/blog-static/fiction/acceler...

("Luckily, infowar turns out to be more survivable than nuclear war – especially once it is discovered that a simple anti-aliasing filter stops nine out of ten neural-wetware-crashing Langford fractals from causing anything worse than a mild headache.")

Glasshouse by Charles Stross

(side trip to The Peace War and Marooned in Realtime by Vernor Vinge as additional material for an alternative singularity)

Implied Spaces by Walter Jon Williams (mentions averting a Vingeian singularity, though I see it more of a Strossian singularity that's at risk - and you've got suggestions of plot lines and backstory in Glasshouse that are not suggestions but rather main plot elements in Implied Spaces)

Show replies

miki123211 · 5 days ago
It's kinda wild to me that Stross literally wrote about cryptocurrency, smart contracts (the legal corporations in Accelerando written in Python 3000, AKA what is now called Python3) and cryptocurrency thefts (the robbing of a decentralized bank due to a bug at the beginning of "halting state"). All of this was years before Bitcoin, not to mention Ethereum, which is where most of that smart contract stuff started.

Show replies

thom · 5 days ago
The first time I read this was over GPRS on an HTC Typhoon smartphone running Windows Mobile during my 2-hour commute to my first job in tech after university, and anything seemed possible. Surprised to be sitting here years later feeling much the same.

Show replies

OgsyedIE · 5 days ago
Read this years ago and reread the first two chapters just now. Brilliantly written and within the conceit of "what if technological and aerospace advancement continued beyond the materials limits to the thermodynamic limits and private entities became exponentially emancipated from states and the old moral panics never re-emerged" the content of the book is almost all good but for one thing that we now know to have aged horribly. That thing is augmented reality.

Every augmented reality device more advanced than subdermal hearing aids to have ever been built has found only a very small minority of users who actually enjoy the damn things. Most of the human race doesn't like augmented reality technology, smart vision, heads-up displays or VR in any way.

Show replies

cafard · 5 days ago
A friend picked this for our neighborhood book club. Having read it, I told him that he should provide a cheat sheet for less technically inclined readers, covering for example "Thompson hack" and "Turing-complete". He did not--I think that he might have suggested that I draw it up--and it became one of the least popular books to have been read in the club's history.

Show replies