Vernor Vinge 1944-2024

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Vernor Vinge 1944-2024

1dukedom_enough
maaliskuu 21, 4:05 pm

Notices around the web for Vernor Vinge. David Brin has a memorial on his website.

2lorax
maaliskuu 21, 4:20 pm

Damn. Time to reread A Fire Upon The Deep.

3dukedom_enough
Muokkaaja: maaliskuu 21, 4:24 pm

>2 lorax: You have to reread A Deepness in the Sky if you reread Fire! I had reread "True Names" a couple months ago.

4jillmwo
maaliskuu 21, 5:29 pm

He was so clear-sighted in many ways. From an article I wrote about artificial intelligence back in 2006:

In 1993, Vernor Vinge, at the time a professor of math at San Diego State University (SDSU) and now Professor Emeritus of Computer Science at SDSU, gave a talk at the Vision-21 Symposium sponsored by NASA Lewis Research Center and the Ohio Aerospace Institute. It was called “The Coming Technological Singularity: How to Survive in the Post-Human Era” and Vinge suggested that progress in computer science and technology was rapidly driving us to the verge of one of two things, artificial intelligence (AI) where machines achieve the power of independent thought beyond that for which they have been programmed *or* alternatively, intelligence amplified (IA) where the capabilities of humans and machines have melded so intimately that human productivity and creativity are “amplified”. https://edoras.sdsu.edu/~vinge/misc/singularity.html Once we’ve reached that point (his so-called Technological Singularity), Vinge suggests, human capabilities will be such that we will achieve ends not yet imaginable – no slight admission from a writer who won the 1991 Hugo Award for his science fiction novel, A Fire Upon The Deep. He’s not a blithe optimist. Vinge recognizes that the Singularity could trigger some unfortunate consequences and he suggests the need for thought, particularly since he specifies a time frame for the occurrence of the Technological Singularity as some point between 2005 and 2030. Even now, when invited to predict the future for his scientific colleagues in a 2006 issue of Nature, Vinge writes, “In the end, computers plus networks plus people add up to something significantly greater than the parts. The ensemble eventually grows beyond human creativity. To become what? We can't know until we get there.”
https://www.nature.com/articles/440411a .


Note both of those URLs take you to non-firewalled full text.

I remember a colleague (who'd read the article I'm quoting from above) texting me in excitement when she heard him speak at an ALA Midwinter Meeting back in 2011.

5dukedom_enough
maaliskuu 21, 5:46 pm

>4 jillmwo: We are approaching the end of that 2005-2030 window. I don't doubt that intelligence greater than human is possible (have you seen the news recently? Or ever?) but think it'll be a harder problem, needed more decades to solve.

6paradoxosalpha
Muokkaaja: maaliskuu 21, 6:18 pm

I just read A Deepness in the Sky a short while ago, and I already had Children of the Sky on my list to read this year.

Wrt "the Singularity," I think we've already reached what artist Paul Laffoley called the Bauharoque, where our technology has changed human perceptions of space and time in ways that would have been unimaginable to people just a generation or two earlier.

7Karlstar
maaliskuu 22, 10:33 am

Vinge is one of the few authors I've met in person and one of only a few scifi authors to appear at the Library of Congress National Book Festival. Back then it was held outdoors on the Mall, he sat out in the sun and signed hundreds of books.

8lorax
maaliskuu 22, 10:38 am

dukedom_enough (#3):

I'm a firm believer in publication order, even for rereads. And frankly I'm not sure how the "weaponized hyperfocus drug" in Deepness will hit as the parent of a kid with ADHD.

9paradoxosalpha
maaliskuu 22, 11:01 am

>8 lorax:

Having read it recently, I think "drug" sells that "focus" technology short.

10Bugsydog
huhtikuu 25, 9:57 pm

New member but what a way to say hello by getting a chance to make some comments about how great Vinge was as an author. He really was the big deal with these magical realms inhabited by alien species that don't quite fit the normal Perspective. I have thoroughly enjoyed my time in his works and will revisit them again over the tears. I think I prefer The Deepness in the Sky just a little bit more than The Fire in the Deep. I find the "aliens" possessing a greater sense of humanity than the people they have to deal with but the same can be said with Tchaikovsky's treatment of the same "aliens" in his amazing book. RIP VV

11paradoxosalpha
huhtikuu 26, 7:30 am

I am currently about 70% through Children of the Sky. It was deeper down in the TBR pile, but got pulled to the top by Vinge's death, alas. I'm really enjoying it, of course. I just found out that a traditional Tine clown costume includes what our Earthly pet owners call a "cone of shame."

12dukedom_enough
huhtikuu 26, 8:17 am

>11 paradoxosalpha: The inter-Tine politics was my least favorite part of Fire, though it's my impression it's very popular with most readers. Is Children of the Sky all Tines politics, or is there something about the galaxy outside of the Tines' World?

13paradoxosalpha
huhtikuu 26, 8:57 am

>12 dukedom_enough:

So far, Children of the Sky is all on Tines World, focused within the community of human survivors, but extensively involving Tines politics. The larger galactic scenario of the Blight is still present as a driving motivation.

14Bugsydog
huhtikuu 26, 7:27 pm

I just now remembered that I do not have a copy of Children of the Sky. A problem that must be fixed.

15dukedom_enough
huhtikuu 27, 9:48 am

16paradoxosalpha
Muokkaaja: toukokuu 1, 12:27 pm

I finished The Children of the Sky and posted my review. Generally, I concur with other reviewers that this one fell a little short of the other books in the series.

17dukedom_enough
toukokuu 1, 12:59 pm

>16 paradoxosalpha: Good review. Convinced me not to read it for the time being. The reveal you hide behind spoiler tags was, IIRC, already in Fire Upon. Just once, during the battle of the Aniara Fleet, I recall.

18paradoxosalpha
toukokuu 1, 2:58 pm

>17 dukedom_enough: The reveal you hide behind spoiler tags was, IIRC, already ...

Likely enough. But Vinge constructs a whole page or two around it in Children, where it has received no prior mention in that book.

19dukedom_enough
toukokuu 1, 6:39 pm

>18 paradoxosalpha: Maybe too many readers missed it in the first book.

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